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Tuesday, June 16, 2020

Corporate Chairman Summary Board Notes, Winging It


Pocket version: Andrew Boydston

Chairman Boydston:

I said Alfred E Newman take the lead, and here we are at the next board meeting leading with the airport kiosk sprinkled near CHAIRs filled with huMANs awaiting the next flight.


let's say "pandemic" in unison and then make a point. The clue is out and it makes a point.

  • The 777X will save Boeing
  • the 737 Max is going to fly off the shelf in 2020
  • Boeing's corporation is run by idiots where employees suffer the executive malaise.


Executive Malaise and Fatigue:

fatigue often occurs along with malaise. When experiencing malaise, you will often also feel exhausted or lethargic in addition to a generalized feeling of being unwell.

Like malaise, fatigue has a large number of possible explanations. It can be due to lifestyle factors, illnesses, and certain medications.

Monday, June 15, 2020

IF I WERE BOEING'S CEO

The order book for Boeing is about to turn a corner. It took on 9 new orders during May. It shipped 4 freighters to its customer when for many months it was in a nosedive on both sides of its accounting book revenue and payables. Making Boeing a smaller Entity                              
       Alfred E Newman Chief Executive Organizer: 
                                Winging It
 
However, there is light at the end of the tunnel of an embattled balance sheet. Looking at declining orders resulting from 737 Max cancellations and a declining market place from over-all pandemic fear. Boeing shows a heartbeat at this time, with its paltry commercial airline results. 

Soon the 777X will come into its entry into service, and the 737 Max will begin its journey from the bottom of the mountain back to the top. The Covid-19 will be understood, and the market place will stabilize to the new normal meaning for "E(A)...ffective and Efficient for aerospace's world function. The Max will emerge as much as the 777X family of aircraft. Freight service is awakening the sleeping giant from a deep two-year slumber. 

Up first is the 737 Max. Even though it is a tired design from the 1960s and flawed design from its airplane balancing act. The first Max iteration to the Market-place stomps on all engineering sensibilities into a place where; "clean sheet" is the battle cry for corporate greed, "and not the Max" for a sensible market place tilt. Boeing must reorder its airplane line, not by corporate decree but by winning the battle of who has the best plan for any emerging Airline customer.

It's about your customers' BOEING.

Second, on the things-to-do list is the 777X.  Passenger and freight are a player's gambit. Boeing has to make an exceptional effort into its 777X frame, allowing airlines to battle rival transporters. Airbus must be always second to the trough of success. The 777X can carry 400 passengers and tons of freight having recombinations of passenger loads and freight loads for the same flight. It must swamp the market place with the 777XF first and continue as a 777-300-ER renewal secondly. But its entry into service is a simultaneous event for both passenger and freight.

In the end, the output of Max and 777X unifies the Boeing goals from all its types it makes. Including its Embr' through 777Xs.


Sunday, June 14, 2020

What's Next? F-51 Mustang II!


Long ago,  back in 1995, there was an F-22 idea. Now in 2020, there is a sixth Gen possibility because of the F-22, and F-35 Lightning II. The tale of the tape reports  there are 168 F-22 assigned to the military, one crashed and two in a storage status while having 13 USAF to play with if need be in storage. The total comes 185 (186 built) F-22's for the last 20 years. The F-35 Lightning II is a strong spin-off for the F-22 all-purpose warfighter. It gets its roots from the WWII P-38 Lightning which was unparalleled, during WWII. It chewed up the Pacific and then the German ground movement not prepared for defense from its own ME 109's. The P-38 was that significant.

Now we are the 6th generation threshold where CAD computers can tough it out with a new breed superseding the F-22. MY proposal is simple:


Build 300 F-51 Mustang II's for the USAF(200) and (Navy's 100) a few (?) with a lift mechanism for the UNSMC austere capability for its amphibious force offloading ships from the USS 6 America class Landing Ship Dock without an amphibious deck included. It would have the capability of the world's toughest fighter not unlike the F-22's own chops. Invisible to radar imaging and exceptional situational awareness and having extreme offensive capabilities when like to all other weapon systems in the battlespace. If a prototype was built now it would be just in time by 2030. Of course new engines!