• Air Force Targets $50M Savings With Apple iPads

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    NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- Apple (AAPL_) iPads may be commonplace in homes and offices, but the popular tablet is now a key weapon in the U.S. Air Force's battle for efficiency. The lightweight Apple tablet has opened the door to more than $50 million in cost savings over the next 10 years, according to the military.

    Last year the Air Force's Air Mobility Command (AMC) awarded a $9.36 million contract for up to 18,000 iPads as part of an ambitious project to replace flight manuals with state-of-the-art tablets. Contractor Executive Technology clinched the deal to deploy the so-called Electronic Flight Bags (EFBs).

    AMC, which provides Air Force cargo, passenger transport, refueling and aeromedical evacuation services, aims to boost efficiency and save millions of dollars through the tablets. For a typical aircrew, this means doing away with dozens of manuals containing literally tens of thousands of pages of information.

    Air Force Targets $50M Savings With Apple iPads

    "We're saving about 90 pounds of paper per aircraft and limiting the need for each crew member to carry a 30 to 40 pound paper pile [of flight manuals]," said Major Brian Moritz, EFB program manager, in a phone interview. "It adds up to quite a lot of weight in paper."

    The weight savings vary by aircraft across AMC's vast airfleet, from as much as 250 pounds in a four-person C-17, up to 490 pounds in a hulking C-5 with its 10 crewmembers.

    This journalist saw one of these iPads in action during his recent embed with the U.S. Air Force. In addition to easing the physical burden on aircrew, who no longer need to haul heavy flight manuals, the Department of Defense is also making big financial savings.

    "By removing all that paper, AMC will capture about $750,000 in fuel savings [annually] just based off the decreased weight," said Moritz.

    Removing the need to print and distribute thousands of flight manuals, however, equates to an even greater cost saving. "It comes out to just over $5 million a year," noted Moritz. "With fuel savings, it comes out to $5.7 million annually in pure cost. When you look at $5.7 million a year, over 10 years, that's well over $50 million."

    Some 16,000 of the third-generation iPads are now being used by AMC aircrew, with the contract's remaining 2,000 iPads deployed across other Air Force units. The device's 9.7-inch display, its user interface, and the ability to access information rapidly were all key selling points, according to Moritz."

     

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