Approximately 57 percent of B-1B peak production tooling was retained in government storage and at Rockwell or suppliers; however, this retained tooling represents 80 percent of the total value (cost) of all B-1B tooling and includes all of the long lead time tooling. Additional tooling that may be required would only represent 20 percent of overall tooling value and this supplemental tooling required could also be made quickly and inexpensively (this category includes such items as work platform ramps around aircraft and large cargo containers for shipping major sub-assemblies). A total of 96,000 tools are currently available with 66,000 in Government storage; and 30,000 at Rockwell and suppliers.Brovane wrote:Is the tooling and jigs still around for the B-1B bombers?
It would take about 18 months to rebuild the production line with the first production aircraft rolling off the lines two years after that. That's assuming an all-hands-to-the-pumps exercise.
By the way, the USAF never throws tooling away if it can help it. There are 350,000 items of production tooling in storage at Davis Monthan including a complete F-84 and F-111 production line. The exceptions are where equipment was deliberately scrapped to prevent an aircraft being put back into production (SR-71, B-70 and F-14) and even then its rumored that some of the scrapped equipment was accidentally stored at Davis Monthan.
The new aircraft would be the B-1C and probably owe more to the B-1A than the B-1B