knigh7 escreveu:Carlos Lima escreveu:
Algo que diga de passagem não vamos adicionar muita coisa em função do expertize sueco de adicionar cadeiras extras aos seus biplaces... "B"... "D".
Mas para o Brasil isso é uma façanha técnico/industrial.
É subestimar muito a capacidade da Embraer, em detrimento do que eu pergunto? O acordo aparecer 'melhor' na fita? Mais 3 slides?
Vai entender.
[]s
CB_Lima
Eu escrevi que a versão biplace do Gripen é 80 cm maior entre outras diferenças . Depois eu coloquei aqui na página o PDF da Saab na qual mostra as dimensões. E mesmo assim a Saab só colocou 1 vaga a mais...
Desisto.
Insistem nisso só para teimar que não vai haver desenvolvimento da versão biplace do NG....
A Embraer pode dispensar a tecnologia da Saab. Porém a Boeing tem outra opinião.
http://aviationweek.com/paris-air-show- ... cost-curve
Boeing, Saab Joint Work On T-X Trainer Will 'Break Cost Curve'
Jun 15, 2015 Bill Sweetman
Boeing (Chalet 321-324) and Saab leaders sound optimistic about their collaboration on the U.S. Air Force’s T-X competition, aimed at producing 350 new trainers to replace the Northrop Grumman T-38.
Boeing Defense, Space & Security president and CEO Chris Chadwick has been talking consistently about “breaking the cost curve” – the Swedish company’s mantra – since the partnership was announced in late 2013. In the case of the trainer, Chadwick says, Saab’s expertise in creating new designs on tight budgets makes the Boeing offering more competitive against off-the-shelf and modified aircraft. “Saab has been very, very successful,” he said. “They design differently, and in a very efficient manner.” Chadwick puts it down to a single main factor: the Swedish budget doesn’t allow the job to be done any other way.
Phantom Works President Darryl Davis calls the team “a truly fantastic partnership – not only are we both learning from each other, but it allows us to go faster.” Boeing’s “immersive development” doctrine has lined up with Saab’s “model-based systems engineering” to accomplish two goals: reducing the number of change and redesign actions, and extending the working day because the engineering team members located in Linkoping and St. Louis, 7 hr. apart, are working in the same virtual environment with the same all-digital product definition.
The Boeing-Saab T-X project is “extremely innovative,” according to Saab Deputy Chief Executive Lennart Sindahl, who sees potential for further collaboration between the two companies. “We can see new areas where we can combine existing products and technologies that can rather quickly get to the market,” Sindahl told a media group in late April.