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Sophisticated Eurofighter Jets Have A Manufacturing Fault

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Apr 19, 2012
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A manufacturing fault has been discovered in the Eurofighter Typhoon warplanes, Germany said Tuesday, announcing it was suspending deliveries of the sophisticated jets.

The news was another blow to the troubled and costly Eurofighter programme -- and raised concerns over the use of the planes.

According to Germany's defence ministry, the defect discovered was in the rear fuselage of the twin-engine multirole fighter.

As a result, Berlin has decided to cut the time its Eurofighters spend in the air each year in half, from 3,000 hours to 1,500 hours.

The news website Spiegel Online reported that, in the worst case scenario, the fault could result in the plane's hull becoming unstable.

It said Britain's Royal Air Force first detected the defect and also decided to halve the annual flight hours so as not to overstress the jets.

Germany and Britain each have more than 100 of the Eurofighter Typhoons in service. Spiegel said Germany's air force operates 109 of the jets.

The Eurofighter is built by a consortium comprising European airplane maker Airbus, Britain's BAE Systems and Finmeccanica of Italy.

Germany and Britain had already halved their initial orders for 250 the fighter jets each, and several export bids have fallen through, prompting the head of Airbus's defence division to say production could cease in 2018 if no more contracts came through.

In June, a Eurofighter crashed while coming into land in southwest Spain, killing its 30-year-old pilot. The cause was unknown.



Read more: Sophisticated Eurofighter Jets Have A Manufacturing Fault - Business Insider

@sancho @Abingdonboy @sancho @Bratva

@scorpionx

fortunately, we chose rafale.

@Chak Bamu @Horus @DRAY
 
Last edited:
A manufacturing fault has been discovered in the Eurofighter Typhoon warplanes, Germany said Tuesday, announcing it was suspending deliveries of the sophisticated jets.

The news was another blow to the troubled and costly Eurofighter programme -- and raised concerns over the use of the planes.

According to Germany's defence ministry, the defect discovered was in the rear fuselage of the twin-engine multirole fighter.

As a result, Berlin has decided to cut the time its Eurofighters spend in the air each year in half, from 3,000 hours to 1,500 hours.

The news website Spiegel Online reported that, in the worst case scenario, the fault could result in the plane's hull becoming unstable.

It said Britain's Royal Air Force first detected the defect and also decided to halve the annual flight hours so as not to overstress the jets.

Germany and Britain each have more than 100 of the Eurofighter Typhoons in service. Spiegel said Germany's air force operates 109 of the jets.

The Eurofighter is built by a consortium comprising European airplane maker Airbus, Britain's BAE Systems and Finmeccanica of Italy.

Germany and Britain had already halved their initial orders for 250 the fighter jets each, and several export bids have fallen through, prompting the head of Airbus's defence division to say production could cease in 2018 if no more contracts came through.

In June, a Eurofighter crashed while coming into land in southwest Spain, killing its 30-year-old pilot. The cause was unknown.



Read more: Sophisticated Eurofighter Jets Have A Manufacturing Fault - Business Insider

@sancho @Abingdonboy @sancho @Bratva

@scorpionx

fortunately, we chose rafale.

@Chak Bamu @Horus @DRAY


3000 hours? THAT IS TOO DAMN HIGH.
 
All that Meticulous testing for many years of all the 5 companies paid off, our parameters were met and we chose Rafale instead of Eurofighter,good choice India,otherwise we would have to face this problem in future.
 
A manufacturing fault has been discovered in the Eurofighter

The media hypes the issue to more than there actually seems to be:

Google translated:

Mystery of faulty holes in the Euro Fighter

For over ten years the Euro Fighter is produced in series. Good 410 copies of the fighter jets have been delivered since then. But now shaken a quality problem, the industry consortium of four European countries. The British company BAE Systems only now found a manufacturing defect in numerous holes on the rear fuselage of the jet. The holes were "insufficient deburred", ie not treated the well properly. Affected are all previously delivered as contained in the production aircraft of all Euro-Fighter Nations, according to a letter from Defence Secretary Mark Gruebel, the present of the "world"...The error was not discovered by the customers, but obviously by the manufacturer...
Google Übersetzer

No operational issue or so, but a minor quality issue of BAEs production line as it seems, since the holes are correct but not propperly treated.
 

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