▲ | rimunroe a day ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
I was responding to you saying we could make fridges which could easily last 40-50 years without maintenance (and somehow not cost much more). > Yes but how old are the B-52s? And how much maintenance? They get heavy, months-long maintenance where they replace major components (often including major structural ones) every four years. Presumably there is more frequent minor maintenance before then. I don’t imagine their age of 70ish years is really relevant since I assume they’re approaching Ships of Theseus at this point. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | bbarnett a day ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
I was responding to you saying we could make fridges Well OK, but you starting out by discussing the B-52, so I responded in kind. They get heavy, months-long maintenance where they replace major components Unless the documentary I watched was wrong, and of course it could be, that isn't "just replace things because". Instead, it's "if those components need replacement". Now, I do recall that sometimes they'll discover an early-wear component, and do fleet-wide upgrades to fix that flaw. But that's different than maintenance to replace worn parts, for of course all B-52s fly different missions, have different wear as a result. My point is, some of those B-52s are being inspected, but not having much done to them, where as others a lot more. I don't think you can really, fairly compared a long running platform like the B-52 with a newer aircraft. Not in terms of stability of the platform, because the concept here is "fixing engineering defects that exhibit early wear". Whenever I buy a car, I attempt to never buy the first year of a model revision. I wait until near the end of that run, often 4 or 5 years in, as car manufacturers constantly update assembly and build to deal with parts they've seen as early-wear. This isn't really debatable in a meaningful way, it's simply what's done. And that's my point. If you look at my original post, I specify that the way to get 'stable', is to keep the exact same platform, and improve early wear points. The post I responded to said: Wear-and-tear, particularly on a heavy lifting robot, would probably be their biggest cost and might always outweigh the cost savings. So you can see why I was specifying how this can be mitigated. But all of that said, we clearly know this really isn't true. While people will still use shovels, we now have backhoes for a reason. People could use horses, but we have cars for a reason. Mechanical replacements exist for almost everything, and the wear and tear is cost effective and worth it, even with the price of fuel, maintenance, and regular upkeep. And, even along with the fact that companies engineer for planned obsolescence and forced replacement. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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