This purchase I was told was done at the VP level. It was after all $750k a piece. I'm sure the brain childs got a hefty bonus for the projective savings. :mf_boff:
Looks like a "Brother inlaw deal" to me.
This purchase I was told was done at the VP level. It was after all $750k a piece. I'm sure the brain childs got a hefty bonus for the projective savings. :mf_boff:
You're out of order Brother...How dare you expect to have someone with authority apply common sense to an issue? 😛 😛
We are being told that the testing of the goldhofer will continue next week. I guess they won't be satisfied until they get the results they want.
We are being told that the testing of the goldhofer will continue next week. I guess they won't be satisfied until they get the results they want.
That's one way of looking at it, but perhaps you should step back a second, and consider that perhaps the company is just as fed up with them as you guys are?... They don't want to pay out money for a product that can't do what it was supposed to do any more than you would.
There are contractual steps the company has to take to prove to Goldhofer that they're not working as promised. They can't just go by the reports alone.
Based on what you guys have said, and the failed test last week, it shouldn't take much more to get them replaced or removed with a refund. Hopefully, nobody else gets injured, and they don't take out a nose gear in the process (although, AA could probably benefit from the hull insurance claim...)
We should ask one of the consulting firms to make a decision on this one.
... because nobody without an A&P could possibly understand the complexity involved in picking a piece of adequate ground equipment ...
I certainly hope you're being facetious here - it's been my experience that two A&Ps couldn't agree on the shape of a table due to their egos (not all are that way but more than a few are).
Let's use some reasoning here; using any machine like these blessed Goldhofers to drag an aircraft around by its nose gear sounds like a good idea and would work just dandy IF the towing machine's capacity isn't exceeded.
Gee - I wonder how the manufacturer came up with these towing maximums; did they actually test with real weights or did they pull arbitrary numbers from a hat?
Did the manufacturer think it would be OK to take chances on running in front of aircraft approaching while running WFO, hoping the entire rig would stop using only tug braking? That's quite a bit of mass with a huge amount of stored energy behind it. Does anyone really believe a friggin' tug will negate all that energy?
Regardless of the size, neither the Goldhofers (nor any other tractor) are designed to do what the controller required and the mechs did. Kinda like one of those jacked-up 4WD trucks that run around town - they may be able to move but they don't stop any quicker, regardless of how high they are.
Mother Nature is really a ####, isn't she?
Are you saying that the incursion and the test unit were one and the same? Is it actually possible that the problems are related to just one of the units?...
They would have recommended the Douglas TBL-400... it's rated for a 744.
TUL could have also asked the guys at HDQ-GSE. They were recommending the Douglas-Kalmar when it first came out in 1990.
But, it appears M&E has decided to operate as their own company within the company once again, because nobody without an A&P could possibly understand the complexity involved in picking a piece of adequate ground equipment...
We should ask one of the consulting firms to make a decision on this one.