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Airbus Launches 800 Passenger Jumbo Jet 776

voma writes "Airbus, the world's largest planemaker, will unveil its A380, a $16 billion wager that airlines will order giant aircraft to ferry passengers between major airports over the next 20 years. The double-decker A380 plane has a wing span of 80 meters (262 feet), almost the length of an American football field. It's 73 meters long and weighs as much as 569 tons (1.2 million pounds) when fully loaded for takeoff. It will have a range of 8,000 nautical miles."
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Airbus Launches 800 Passenger Jumbo Jet

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  • by AtariAmarok ( 451306 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @08:32AM (#11384503)
    Where's the American version, that holds 400 jumbo passengers?
    • by medraut ( 136992 )
      Will that be supersized?

      With all that space I sure hope they managed to find a better place for the multimedia boxes they put under the seats in Cattle Class. If you're anything over 6ft, you suffer.

      Medraut
    • On hold (Score:2, Funny)

      by paranode ( 671698 )
      It was put on hold until the in-flight McDonald's could be properly integrated with the cabin.
    • by EinarH ( 583836 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @09:07AM (#11384770) Journal
      It's the cargo version, Stupid.

      Why do you think UPS ordered [nwsource.com] it?
      ;-)

    • by NardofDoom ( 821951 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @09:21AM (#11384890)
      Okay, let's cram you in a seat with six inches less legroom than you need for four hours with screaming children, crappy food and a worse movie and see how much you like it! After, of course, you're scrutinized like a criminal, forced to partially disrobe at a "security checkpoint" and herded through loading like an animal.

      I hate flying.

      • Re:American version (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Linker3000 ( 626634 )
        Having just 'done' a conference in Orlando and now flown back to the UK I have to say that the security 'experience' wasn't as bad as expected from all the wailing noises made by the UK press.

        Have to agree though, the airline food (Virgin Atlantic) was 'the usual stuff' - and they considered a carb-laden brakfast of banana + fruit tub + Orange Juice to be a 'diabetic meal'; I soon put them straight on that - and down came an omlette, sausages and ham from first class!
  • Airline Industry (Score:4, Interesting)

    by N8F8 ( 4562 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @08:32AM (#11384509)
    I though the problem with the airline industry wasn't plane capacity but the more nimble competitors cherrypicking the mist profitable connections.
    • Re:Airline Industry (Score:5, Interesting)

      by R.Caley ( 126968 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @08:50AM (#11384637)
      I though the problem with the airline industry wasn't plane capacity but the more nimble competitors cherrypicking the mist profitable connections.

      The long haul routes are hard to cherry pick, because they are, in general, handed out by governments, so they go to whoever buys the most politicians.

      AIUI, airbus is gambling on lower cost per seat per mile being attractive to the companies who have been handed some of those routes since it allows them to increase profit (or in the case of US airlines, lose less money:-)).

      That may give the big operators spare cash to compete on the short-haul and internal routes, or they may give up on those routes as not being worth the candle.

      Then there is the charter market. A big tourist operation may be able to fill one of these monsters per day to each of the the big destinations, again increasing the margin over having to put on a couple of jumboes.

  • Wings (Score:5, Interesting)

    by basingwerk ( 521105 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @08:33AM (#11384520)
    The wings for this plane are so big that they are floated out to see on a huge barge down the Dee Estuary in Wales, and taken by ship to be assembled with the reat of the plane in Toulouse, France. On the way, the wings pass on a special vehicle through several hunred yards of farm land and cross a main road. Thise Europeans know how to do big engineering projects.
    • Right, but .... (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      The plane is also the same kind of dimension as the B747, so that no US airport can "refuse" landing ;-)

      European industry has learnt a lot from the Concorde failure where the US air lobbies has successfully limited the airport landing slots.
      • Re:Right, but .... (Score:5, Informative)

        by Detritus ( 11846 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @09:01AM (#11384711) Homepage
        It wasn't the "air lobbies" that doomed Concorde, it was environmentalists and other citizens who didn't want supersonic flight over populated areas, or Concorde's excessive noise and air pollution. They also helped to kill the Boeing SST.
      • Re:Right, but .... (Score:5, Informative)

        by volsung ( 378 ) <stan@mtrr.org> on Monday January 17, 2005 @09:07AM (#11384765)
        The wingspan of the 747-400 is 64.4 m, and the wingspan of the A380 is 79.8 m, not to mention that the max takeoff weight of the A380 is 50% more than a 747. Airports are definitely going to need to do some checking to make sure those extra 15m and 400,000 lbs aren't going to clip or crush something in the taxiway.

        That said, LAX was quoted in one news source (can't find article now) as already planning to make the necessary upgrades for an A380 to land.

        • Re:Right, but .... (Score:4, Informative)

          by marc_gerges ( 561641 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @09:44AM (#11385060)
          In terms of pure weight on the tarmac the A380 actually isn't 'worse' than the 747. It's been specifically built with enough set of wheels to be 747 compatible in that respect, so that hardly any 747 serving airport will need work.

          Gate distances are compatible as well, however to make the bird turn around reasonably quick there's a need for double level terminals and jet bridges. That way one can move passengers in and out without forcing them through the bottleneck of the aircraft stairs. These facilities (as well as large enough immigration areas/multiple baggage carousels etc) is what some large airports are still missing.
        • by MtViewGuy ( 197597 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @10:16AM (#11385327)
          San Francisco International Airport is one of the few airports around the world that is more or less ready to accept the A380-800.

          I cite these reasons:

          1. The two longest runways at SFO (Runways 28R/10L and 1R/19L) were widened recently to accommodate the wider stance of the plane. They've also checked these two runways to make sure it can handle the sheer weight of the plane.

          2. They've widened a number of taxiways to accommodate the A380-800.

          3. Most importantly, SFO's vastly-expanded International Terminal that opened at the end of 2000 was designed and built just when Airbus was finishing its design work on the A380. As such, the International Terminal has gates with 80 x 80 meter gate spacing and high-capacity Federal Inspection Service (Customs and Immigration) processing areas to handle the deboarding of multiple A380's easily.

          There is still an issue of taxiway spacing, but SFO officials are working out taxiing procedures for getting the A380-800 on and off the runway quickly to avoid congestion problems, especially during the middle of the day.
    • maybe they could get always to make the wings?
    • Re:Wings (Score:5, Funny)

      by caluml ( 551744 ) <slashdotNO@SPAMspamgoeshere.calum.org> on Monday January 17, 2005 @08:59AM (#11384700) Homepage
      Thise Europeans know how to do big engineering projects.

      Don't include us English in that. We can fuck up any big construction scheme. The French, however... Did anyone see that bridge that is higher than the clouds [bbc.co.uk]? That's worthy of a Slashdot story in itself.

  • by gmailflows ( 787787 ) * on Monday January 17, 2005 @08:34AM (#11384529) Homepage
    The trend towards super duper jumbo jets comes at the expense of the smaller regional jets which were all the rage 5 to 10 years ago. Companies like Bombardier and Embraer have run into trouble selling their small and mid sized jets as the airline market in general has tanked post 9-11. The only real growth area of the airplane manufacturing business is these jumbo jets, as their sheer volume (with the 555 seats) allows them to keep individual prices lower given the cut-throat pricing that discount airlines can provide. The moral for the consumer is that the quality of air travel will continue to decline. I personally prefer to fly in a small jet where I can feel less like cattle, screened, and herded into these flying apartment buildings that rather than afford greater space just pack in more and more people so as to struggle to make a profit in what is essentially a state-subsidised market in crisis... :P
    • by Albanach ( 527650 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @08:52AM (#11384648) Homepage
      I personally prefer to fly in a small jet where I can feel less like cattle, screened, and herded into these flying apartment buildings that rather than afford greater space just pack in more and more people so as to struggle to make a profit in what is essentially a state-subsidised market in crisis.

      You might like small planes, but these are why the market in the US needs state subsidies. Take a look at the UK / Ireland and their low cost opperations. All the flights are on 737s or their equivalent. The big operators are Easyjet and Ryanair. This is real no frills stuff, but we're flying across Europe for under $100 return while Americans are paying more than that per leg. These airlines are posting profits too ($226 million Euros for Ryanair in 2004). Maybe folk need to ask why the US government is willing to subsidise a business model that is so obviously flawed?

      • We have a few regional carriers that make money. It's just the government still wants to subsidize the big, bloated carriers.

        For instance, The U.S. government has a law (The Wright Amendment) to protect the American Ailines from competition with Southwest.

      • by mikael ( 484 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @09:45AM (#11385073)
        If you book well in advance, your air tickets are less than 1 pound per flight . I was able to fly from Edinburgh to NW France via Luton (EasyJet and Ryanair) for 2 pounds total - The airline duty taxes and airport taxi fairs amount for another £45 pounds). It's only when you book at the last minute that the prices rocket up to something like 120 pounds per flight. Fortunately, most flights are less than 1 hour in duration (Edinburgh to London is around 400 miles - about the same as SF to LA) - By train this takes 6 to 8 hours.
        Ryanair operate by avoiding the big city airports (London Heathrow/Gatwick, Paris) and using provincial airports. They used to do deals with the local airports, where in return for running a regular service, the airport would upgrade their facilities using local government subsidies. But this was ruled illegal under EEC laws.

        The other important thing is to check in at least two hours before departure, as you are given a seating priority number based on order of check-in. While there aren't any seat reservations on the flights, order of entry is based on being disabled, having children with you, and then priority number. It really sucks being the last on the plane, as the only lockers left remaining for hand luggage are about 10 rows away from whatever seat you find. Easyjet actually herd their passengers into separately fenced queues based on priority number.
      • by JimBobJoe ( 2758 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @10:01AM (#11385202)
        Maybe folk need to ask why the US government is willing to subsidise a business model that is so obviously flawed?

        Because the large airlines run their own (very expensive) pension systems which are insured by the federal government.

        It's far cheaper to give the airlines support in the tens of billions of dollars to keep them afloat than to let them...hehe..crash and burn, and then have to cover pension liabilities in the hundreds of billions of dollars.

    • Hey, I don't care if I feel a little bit like cattle if I can get a direct flight across the US for under $200 on a major airline or to London for under $300.

      Sometimes the price could make the whole difference between flying or driving or taking the train. And I just hope I'm not sitting next to a passenger who takes 1.5 seats.
    • by standards ( 461431 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @09:08AM (#11384777)
      The trend towards super duper jumbo jets comes at the expense of the smaller regional jets which were all the rage 5 to 10 years ago. Companies like Bombardier and Embraer have run into trouble selling their small and mid sized jets as the airline market in general has tanked post 9-11.

      Airbus is clearly gunning for the 747 market - the 747 series of aircraft have the basic design and efficiencies of the 1960s. Boeing has let the 747 become a technical laggard, and Airbus has poised itself to shut down the 747 production line with a much more modern aircraft in terms of cost. (many thanks to Boeing's poor management - where are the institutional shareholders when you need them?)

      Big planes are great for reducing costs between large cities - say, New York to Tokyo. Or SF to London. Instead of two flights using two birds and two crews, you can do it once. And with modern, efficient, and quiet engines. And that's a huge cost savings all around.

      And to get carriers to unload their 747s, you've got to make it compelling. A much more efficient plane with even more capacity is bound to result in airlines unloading the 747. It costs a lot of money to operate per passenger mile. The 747 expense has become too great.

      But many flights these days are regional, and will remain that way. All of those 737 flights between cities will remain, and will continue to grow. Why have a 500+ passenger jet fly that can go 5000+ miles fly a 1500 mile vacation route that serves only 320 passengers? A couple 737 flights sounds better in that application.

      So the smaller jets aren't going away - it is the 747 that's leaving commerical passenger service.
      • I think Boeing also realized the market for larger than 747 passenger aircraft, but I expect they saw that Airbus was designing a plane to meet that market, and they didn't think the passenger market would be big enough to support another one. So rather than design one, and have both Boeing and Airbus loose money in the market, they just shelved the idea for now.

        On the other hand, a Boeing insider tells me that they are considering making a very, very large cargo plane, one that could transport a number o

  • 555 not 840 (Score:5, Informative)

    by Red_Winestain ( 243346 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @08:38AM (#11384556)
    Although the maximum capacity is 840 (in sardine mode), the typical configuration is about 555. Compare to the typical configuration for a 747 of 416. [Reference [bbc.co.uk]]
    • Re:555 not 840 (Score:5, Interesting)

      by dave1791 ( 315728 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @08:55AM (#11384670)
      Look, Airbus is showing us images of bars and water fountains inside these planes. Boeing did the same thing when the 747 first came out 35 years or so ago. I have flown in a lot of 747s and have NEVER seena bar.

      I expect to be seeing 800 seat flights in the next few years that are just going to suck becasue the gates, customs and baggage handling have not caught up. As it is, I already prefer to take a 767 or 777 over a 747 for becasue the stampeede is smaller.
      • I have flown in a lot of 747s and have NEVER seena bar.

        They had to take them out, seeing the pilots at the bar kept making the passengers nervous.
      • Re:555 not 840 (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Tom ( 822 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @10:05AM (#11385242) Homepage Journal
        I'm sure the bars etc. exist - in special planes. Likewise, some engineers are already planning custom-order A380s. Yes, there are people with enough money to buy one as their private plane. One idea I happen to know about is building a bowling lane into the lower deck.

        And no, swimming pools are not realistic. You can't keep that much water under control in turbulences. Which is the same reason I doubt one with a fountain was ever actually built.

  • In comparison, (Score:3, Interesting)

    by dj245 ( 732906 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @08:40AM (#11384565) Homepage
    Boeing 747-400 [aerospace-technology.com] has a wingspan of 211ft 5in (64.4m), max takeoff weight of 412,770kg and a maximum range of 8,430 statute miles.
  • Unveil! (Score:2, Funny)

    by F4Codec ( 619560 )
    I imagine wrapping this up to unveil will probably be the hardest part of the event.

    • Sticky tape - check,
    • String - check,
    • very large finger to put on the knot - check,
    • Ribbon, who has the ribbon??...
  • by caitsith01 ( 606117 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @08:43AM (#11384585) Journal
    Things should get really interesting here. As I understand it, Airbus and the European aerospace industry in general has been gradually overtaking Boeing and the US industry for a decade or more now. This plane is sort of symbolic - after 40-odd years as the only game in town, the 747 is suddenly no longer the biggest passenger plane suitable for regular use.

    This seems to be just another chapter in a gradually emerging rivalry between the EU and the US. Other chapters have included:
    - the great banana and steel trade war
    - Freedom Fries vs french fries
    - the EU vs Microsoft
    - Germany and France vs the US over Iraq (although that may have had something to do with sanity vs idiocy too)
    - the Euro vs the Dollar, especially in major oil and currency markets
    - snooty French people vs loutish American tourists
    - the new european GPS equivalent (Magellan?) vs GPS
    - everyone on Earth lead by the EU vs the US over Kyoto
    - the european vs US approach to Israel and the Middle East
    - increasing secularism (EU, see for example banning of headscarves) vs increasing evangelicalism (US/Jesusland)

    Anyway, all this adds up to something quite interesting over the next 20-50 years. We have one very old, very industrialised bloc of about 500 million people who have finally decided to stop killing each other for the first time in history and cooperate. Across the atlantic we have 250 million odd people who have been undisputed leaders of the world for several decades now. Other factors of great interest include the massive US military budget compared to Europe's relatively small one, and the big question of who will adapt better to a world without oil and with a powerful China and India in it.
    • Good point. The EU US air trade wars will continue. The Boeing / Airbus row over govermne tsupport and subsidies is just on hold at the moment - not finished. Both sides operate protectionist policies which are ultimately bad for the consumer, and bad for global competition.

      The REAL downside, though, is that even if ChinaBus or IndoBus or AfricaBus were out there with a Jumbo beater - the EU / US war gets so much subsidy from rich goverment that they wouldn't have a look in. SO really the EUUS is just prot
    • by dago ( 25724 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @09:07AM (#11384766)
      This reminds me of an old Newsweek (europe) cover a few years ago, this was about Netherlands and sayed something like "Gay marriage, drugs, euthanasia : are the Netherlands showing the future of europe ?"

      So, you can add those 3 things to your agenda, and also
      - International Court of Justice
      - landmine ban treaty
      - America's cup 2007

    • Things should get really interesting here. As I understand it, Airbus and the European aerospace industry in general has been gradually overtaking Boeing and the US industry for a decade or more now. This plane is sort of symbolic - after 40-odd years as the only game in town, the 747 is suddenly no longer the biggest passenger plane suitable for regular use.

      You have to account the end of the cold-war, which meant the drastic reduction of the huges disguised subsidies to Boeing and Douglas and Lockeed whe

    • increasing secularism (EU, see for example banning of headscarves) vs increasing evangelicalism (US/Jesusland)

      It's not clear there is significantly increased secularism in Europe. The headscarf thing is more an instance of the long standing level of French institutional secularism (paranoid bordering on religious-from-the-other-side) being applied to Islam, which has become much more visible in recent decades.

      The current UK governemnt is slipping away from secularism. The level of protection given to th

    • The biggest problem America faced in the demise of Boeing Market leadership was inertia. Airbus tried to be cost effective from the start, it started in a business environment where aerospace could not charge what it wanted, but was being forced to cut prices by the airlines. Aircraft manufacturers are doing the same. Working for a supplier for both major players I see this with each month further cost reduction targets are put in place. Boeing was slow to react to this, having lots of money it could affor
    • Works for the whole world eg canada

      have included:
      - the great banana and steel trade war
      Canadian cattle ban and softwood lumber war
      - Freedom Fries vs french fries
      Well perhaps poutine :-)
      - the EU vs Microsoft
      Haven't seen anything here - but it could happen.
      - Germany and France vs the US over Iraq (although that may have had something to do with sanity vs idiocy too)
      Canada as well didn't join.
      - the Euro vs the Dollar, especially in major oil and currency markets
      Canadian dollar is up 40%
      - snooty French people
    • Many of your points - the US-side of them, isn't real. It's manufactured propaganda.

      Do you think more than 5% of Americans are really dumb enough to ask for "Freedom Fries" at McDonalds?

      The Airbus/Boeing rivalry is somewhat silly - but when you look at what it implies: That Boeing has trouble competing in a global market with Airbus. . . "therefore, we must allow Boeing to merge and merge with competitors until it's big enough" - - and soon, there's no more competition in the domestic commercial aerospa
  • by Xpilot ( 117961 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @08:43AM (#11384589) Homepage
    almost the length of an American football field

    How many volkswagon beatles lined up side by side would be needed to encircle the Earth 12 times as is needed to match the height of stacked A380 planes from here to the moon?

  • Big is Beautiful? (Score:3, Informative)

    by Starfinder ( 836161 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @08:44AM (#11384594)
    It seems the airline industry is going in two separate directions. Airbus is going for capacity while Boeing is going for distance. The problem with this airbus is that is is so big, it will only be able to land at the major hubs. This will take traffic away from the smaller airports and increase the load placed on the major airports. Boeing's 7E7 seems to be a better idea to me. Personally, I would rather fly Concorde!!
    • Hmm... (Score:3, Insightful)

      by CaptainZapp ( 182233 ) *
      Airbus is going for capacity while Boeing is going for distance.

      So does one exclude the other? I wouldn't think so.

      Well, admitted. It's probably somewhat hard to cram 550 odd people into a 7E7, but where does it say that the A380 has a smaller range?

      Personally I think Boeing started to lose it after the 747. Granted, the 767 was successful, but at the cost of a lot of lost 747 sales. I think they didn't sell a single passenger version of the 747 since 2002.

      What I believe lead to Boeings "demise" was wh

    • Re:Big is Beautiful? (Score:5, Informative)

      by Richard_at_work ( 517087 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @09:25AM (#11384929)
      Airbus is going for both capacity and range:

      767ER (10,500km range carrying 245 passengers)
      747-400ER (13,500km carrying 420 passengers)
      777ER (13,500km range carrying 365 passengers)
      7E7 (15,350Km carrying 250 passengers)
      A340 (15,750km carrying 313 passengers)
      A380 (15,100lm carrying 550 passengers)
      • Re:Big is Beautiful? (Score:3, Interesting)

        by ednopantz ( 467288 )
        Keep in mind that the A340 is a 4 engine aircraft, wheras Boeing is focusing on 2 engine jets. The 777 had to comission new insanely huge engines in order to acheive that.

        A relative who works for United says it makes a huge difference in maint times. 4 oil changes instead of 2. 4 engine overhauls instead of 2. etc.

        Range: There are very few destinations that are more than 10,000 km apart. What are we talking about? 15 flights per day worldwide? Only so many people want to fly betwen Sydney and New Y
  • Bloomberg = IE (Score:2, Informative)

    by realkiwi ( 23584 )
    Nice link that does not work in Firefox, very helpful...
  • by gtoomey ( 528943 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @08:47AM (#11384615)
    according to this Wikipedia entry [wikipedia.org]

    The aircraft is set to have "relaxation space, bars, duty free shops". We shall see.

  • 7E7 (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Skidge ( 316075 ) * on Monday January 17, 2005 @08:49AM (#11384627)
    In somewhat related news, Boeing recently unveiled a prototype section of its 7E7 Dreamliner:

    http://www.thenewstribune.com/business/aerospace /s tory/4440746p-4194580c.html

    From that article:

    The 22-foot-long fuselage section represents the fruit of years of development by Boeing engineers in composite technology. At 19 feet in diameter, it is the largest pressurized composite airliner fuselage section ever built by Boeing or any aerospace company....

    The huge structure is just one piece, not the thousands of pieces of aluminum and fasteners it would have been had Boeing made it of metal.
    • Re:7E7 (Score:3, Interesting)

      by borne ( 170410 )
      yeah, you beat me to presenting this article [chicagotribune.com] from last week. so much for "Boeing has no plan for a competing aircraft."
  • I'll be curious (Score:4, Interesting)

    by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @08:51AM (#11384646) Journal
    to see how the flying public reacts to the first accident or near accident on one of these things.

    Personally, I welcome our massive economy-fare overlords. I fly constantly, but rarely have ever ridden in a 747. If they can take the bulk hub/hub passenger loads, I hope that will drive down prices across the network.

    Even simply debarking from a full 747 from an unfavorable seat can take seemingly forever. This one will take a significant amount of time.
  • The double-decker A380 plane has a wing span of 80 meters (262 feet), almost the length of an American football field. It's 73 meters long and weighs as much as 569 tons (1.2 million pounds) when fully loaded for takeoff. It will have a range of 8,000 nautical miles.

    That is an impressive list of superlatives for a vehicle vulnerable to someone with a laser pointer and a grudge.
  • almost the length of an American football field

    And its cargo deck is equivalent to... how many Congress Libraries?

  • by Nalez ( 556446 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @09:00AM (#11384709) Homepage
    Airliners.net [airliners.net] has some good information on the A380 aircraft, and the history of the devlopment.
    You can also see tons of pictures [airliners.net] of the A380, both the ground test aircraft and the first flight aircraft.
  • by Richard_at_work ( 517087 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @09:05AM (#11384747)
    A A380-800 carrying 550 passengers costs $270million.
    A 747-400 carrying 436 passangers costs $215million.
    Both work out at roughly $0.5million per passenger.
    The Airbus requires the same length runway to takeoff and land, but it requires wider runways. Most airports can take the A380 currently, with only some having to expand runways or taxiways to fit.

    The 747-400 has a range of 14,205km, with a max fuel capacity of 63,700gallons.
    The A380-800 has a range of 15,100km, with a max fuel capacity of 81,900gallons.

    That gives the 747-400 a rate of 0.2km/g.
    And the A380 a rate of 0.18km/g.

    Or, based on passenger numbers, the 747-400 has a rate of 1.02 gallons of fuel per 100km per passenger. The A380 has a rate of 0.9 gallons of fuel per 100km per passenger. (work all that out myself, phew). This gives the Airbus a more efficient fuel cost when carrying a full passenger load.

    The A380 will be used mainly on the longhaul hub routes, such as LA to Hongkong, London to Hongkong, London to Sydney, London to New York, New York to Hongkong etc. You will see it on other routes tho, its just as good for those.

    So far Airbus have sold 139 A380-800 aircraft, half of what it needs to break even.
  • 7E7 vs A380 (Score:3, Interesting)

    by havaloc ( 50551 ) * on Monday January 17, 2005 @09:08AM (#11384782) Homepage
    Boeing and Airbus have different philosophies regarding air travel. Airbus sees big planes going hub to hub, while Boeing envisions smaller planes going point to point. With more point to point travel, you can avoid so called mega hubs such as Chicago O'Hare and Atlanta.

    It's also to important to note that Southwest Airlines is one of the more profitable airlines today, and they run a mostly point to point network. Guess which system the legacies run?

    If you are looking for more amusing Boeing vs. Airbus threads, be sure to check out airliners.net [airliners.net].
    • Re:7E7 vs A380 (Score:5, Insightful)

      by killbill! ( 154539 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @09:25AM (#11384923) Homepage
      I think Airbus was right to bank on large planes.

      Why?
      • Rising oil prices. Megajumbos should use less fuel per passenger (I think, gotta google that). If fuel prices keep rising (peak oil and stuff), the smaller commuter planes suddenly make less sense.
      • Chinese / Indian economic boom. At the rate things are going nowadays, Asian airlines will be using those for short-range direct flights. Just like the Japanese do with the 747. Distances are huge in China or India, and both the rail and road systems suck.
      • Re:7E7 vs A380 (Score:4, Interesting)

        by JimBobJoe ( 2758 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @11:10AM (#11385778)
        Megajumbos should use less fuel per passenger

        Yes, they do, but the breakeven point is obviously much higher. Depending on fare structure, it's entirely reasonable for a 767 and a 747 have a breakeven point of 65% maximum passenger loads. However, for the former, that's 143 passengers (assuming 220 total) and the latter that's 240 passengers (assuming 370 total.)

        There isn't really a "gravy point" with economy class seating at discounted pricing. A great example of that is Continental airlines flying 757s across the atlantic. Continental doesn't give a rats ass about what's in economy, because, for instance, on the Cleveland to London flight, a half full first class one way pays for the entire flight both ways. Everything else in the back cabin is either profit or an expense, depending on average price paid (and the 757 is a smaller aircraft overall that's cheaper to fly than a wide bodied aircraft. There are other routes on which Continental could fly a 757, but fly a 767 or 777 instead...why? Because those routes get lots of profitable cargo, which the 757 doesn't have room for. For this reason transatlantic flight routes are best chosen based on their ability to attract first and business class passengers, plus cargo regardless of the quantity in economy.)

        Super Jumbos are inherently inflexible on this point...since it takes a lot of first class passengers/cargo on such a big plane to pay off its costs. If there is a mad rush of economy passengers for a particular route, the airline is in a far better position to raise fares on 150 economy passengers than have 100 economy seats given away for free. It's not about quantity, it's about revenue per seat quality.
  • by nazgul000 ( 545727 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @09:32AM (#11384976) Journal
    Lots of great pictures of the A380 are accessible from this search page [airliners.net]. Pictures cover part shipment by barge and truck, as well as the build and rollout of the first two A380s (#1 an engineering test platform that won't fly, and #2 that WILL fly).
  • by managementboy ( 223451 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @09:37AM (#11385012) Homepage
    I find the article at Airbus v. Boing [economist.com] (pun intendet) a lot better. Cheers
  • by EEBaum ( 520514 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @11:14AM (#11385831) Homepage
    AirFrance A-380 Flight 3842 to Paris will now begin boarding rows A39 to A57 at gate 34. Passengers not already in line are advised to enter the end of the queue, located in terminal G, just past the third McDonald's on your right.
  • by charlie ( 1328 ) <charlie.antipope@org> on Monday January 17, 2005 @01:25PM (#11387357) Homepage Journal
    Speaking as a European, I'd like to congratulate the United States on its latest airliner [netcomposites.com].

    Seriously. 50% of the A380 subassemblies come from the USA. Boeing is playing the "it's an evil foreign plot to topple American dominance of the aerospace industry!" card, but that's just self-serving FUD. Remember, for each $280M A380 that sells, American companies pick up 50% of the assembly work. Similarly, large chunks of Boeing's products come from EADS, BAE systems, and other non-American contractors.

    So let's get over the jingoistic flag-waving and evaluate this rather impressive piece of hardware on its actual merits, shall we?
  • by theolein ( 316044 ) on Monday January 17, 2005 @08:51PM (#11391226) Journal
    I've seen the usual round of slashdot trolling in this thread, that happens every time some piece of new technology is invented or some scientific landmark is achieved outside the US. Likewise, there's a good number of anti-American trolls here who like to have a good laugh when something fucks up in the US.

    Then there's the rest of us.

    I see that quite a few Americans, when feeling nationally challenged because the biggest civil aircraft in the world is no longer American, like to point out how the Boeing 7E7 is more comfortable, takes less time to board and exit, and is more practical, in that it can fly between smaller airports, than the A380.

    At the same time, the European pundits point out that the A380 can fly huge amounts of passengers over a longer distance, etc.

    And a good number of pundits try to paint this as a clash of philosophies, in that the efficient small craft versus the huge megajumbo craft is what will happen in the future.

    I think they miss out the point: These two craft are aimed at significantly different markets. No one will buy an A380 to fly from Paris to London (a few hundred kilometers) or buy a 7E7 to fly from Singapore to London. Sure, long haul routes with low passenger frequencies, such as from Buenos Aires to London will probably not see an A380 and some high frequency long haul non hub routes will not see an 7E7, but that is the general aim of the market. These aircraft do not really compete.

    The real competition to the 7E7 is still to come, and has been announced, in the form of the A350, which is a modernised A330, with newer non bleed engines like those of the 7E7, new wings and more composites.

    And this is where the real compeition between Airbus and Boeing is being fought: The family of planes.

    One of the major reasons that Airbus has been so successful is that it has built almost all of its planes in modularised form in order to optimise components, which means that Pilots trained on an A318 can fly the whole small Airbus family - A318, A319, A320 and A321. It also means that technicians can service all of these planes if trained on one, and that spares etc are shared amongst all of them, lowering the cost to both airlines and manufacturers.

    There is a similar thing in the A330 and A340, and even the A380 uses a similar cockpit layout to the A340. And the A350 will be usable by those who have used A330s in the past.

    I think a large amount of Boeing's marketing criticism against Airbus is simply because Boeing missed the boat on the new large market. They were actually doing design and market studies togethr with Airbus in the mid 90's until they pulled out because British Airways, their supposed launch customer, wasn't interested. Boeing then went on with a number of utter rubbish campaigns, from the idea of stretched 747X [aol.com] which was then shelved when it failed to garner enough attention, to a ridiculous Sonic Cruiser [boeing.com] concept, which was more of a marketing exercise to take attention away from the A380, until they finally realised that they had to come up with a new product and started the far more realistic and achievable 7E7.

    Airbus's planes have been less spectacular than Boeing's, but they offered real advantages in cost (Training, maintenance, spares). Boeing's leadership is where the blame lies for spending so much time on hairbrained campaigns and FUD instead of doing some real product development.

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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