Fly Away, the web's number one source of flight simulator downloads and news.
Subscribe to the free Fly Away Newsletter!
Email address:  
  Create an account Home  ·  Topics  ·  Your Account  ·  Forums  ·  Flightsim Downloads  

Site Menu
· Home
· Forums
· Free Flight Simulator
· Flight Sim Store
· Flight Simulator X
· CFS3 Downloads
· FS2004 Downloads
· Train Sim Downloads
· Flight Tracking
· Contact the Team
· Content
· Flight Sim Links
· Flight Simulator Downloads
· Free Web Hosting
· Link Exchange!
· Screenshots Gallery
· Statistics
· Stories Archive
· Surveys
· Top 30 Pages
· Topics
· Your Account

Advertising

Random Image
Flight Simulator screenshot, click to enlarge
Check out the Flight Simulator Screenshots and Aviation photos gallery

Upload images

User Info
Don't have an account? Register now!
Login

Membership:
Latest: Emanamus
Standby: 254
Overall: 119120

People Online:
Visitors: 576
Members: 13

Forums

 problems
 Lockheed Martin F-16 Installer doesn't work
 Erick Cantu's L1011 Vistaliner
 Air Force One fsx
 Question about how to successfully trap on carrier landing

Fly Away Simulation, Flight Simulator #1 Forums


Support Fly Away
Donate To us
It takes lots of hard work and money to keep one of the web's largest Flight Simulation sites running. Your donations are greatly appreciated, donations received will be put back into expanding, improving and paying for Fly Away.

News:

Airbus unveil new Superjumbo A380

Posted on Tuesday, January 18 @ 21:28:57 GMT by darklord

Aviation News
 Airbus showed off its giant A380, a double-decked behemoth that could revolutionize long-haul flying, at a lavish ceremony Tuesday with European leaders gathered for the first official look at the world's largest passenger plane.  Click on Read More or here to read the full story.

Airbus is betting its newfound status as the world's leading jet maker on the "superjumbo" that has a 262-foot wingspan, a tail as tall as a seven-story building and which cost $13 billion to develop.

French President Jacques Chirac, as well as the leaders of Britain, Germany and Spain Airbus' other three government backers and CEOs from the 14 airlines and freight transporters that have so far ordered the A380 attended the elaborate ceremony at company headquarters in Toulouse, southern France.

Chirac called the A380 "a veritable liner of the skies" and said its debut "is for all of us a moment of emotion and pride."

"Your adventure is a great success for Europe," he told Airbus workers.

The show before almost 5,000 guests debuted with music, clouds of dry ice and dancers in the hangar where A380s are assembled, one of the largest enclosed spaces in Europe. Projected images of planes from the Airbus range sped across the hangar walls and dancers suspended on wires appeared to walk on thin air.

Children tugged on white cords to pull down a curtain, unveiling the plane lit in blue behind.

The launch of the A380 seemed certain to become a milestone in civil aviation history alongside the 747 and Concorde. Unlike the supersonic Concorde, however, whose claim to fame was how fast it crossed the Atlantic, this latest fruit of European aerospace cooperation will ultimately be judged on how fast it makes money.

Airbus has already taken 149 orders for the $280 million plane, "which for a plane of this size that has not yet flown is an extraordinary commercial performance," Airbus CEO Noel Forgeard said.

Airbus says companies have options on dozens more and that the program will break even after 250 sales an objective it hopes to reach within three years.

In all, the company expects to sell 700-750 aircraft; "It's a plane that will fly for 30 to 40 years," Forgeard said.

Airbus trailed Boeing Co. until 2003, when it delivered more planes than its U.S. rival for the first time a feat it matched last year, with 320 deliveries to Boeing's 285, and is likely to repeat this year.

Sustaining that lead will depend partly on the outcome of Airbus' audacious bet on strong demand for the A380. Airbus plans the first test flight of the 280-metric ton (308-ton) plane sometime before March 31.

In a three-class cabin layout, the A380 will carry 555 passengers 33 percent more than the plane it is designed to displace, Boeing's veteran 747. The A380 has 49 percent more floor space leaving additional room for features such as on-board shops, bars, casinos or even nurseries.

On a full tank, it will also carry passengers 5 percent farther than Boeing's longest-range jumbo, Airbus claims, producing costs per passenger that are up to one-fifth below its rival's.

How the plane's extra space is used will be left up to airlines, whose A380 cabin designs have remained closely guarded. In the future, low-cost carriers could operate the A380 with a single economy-class configuration accommodating as many as 800 passengers.

Virgin company chief Richard Branson said his airline, which has ordered six A380s, will offer private double beds for first-class passengers and casinos.

The chairman of Dubai-based carrier Emirates, which is so far the largest A380 customer with 45 orders, said the plane was a "key element in our future growth" and offers "the widest cabin of any aircraft in the world."

"It provides lower seat-mile costs and carries more passengers further and consumes less fuel than its competitors," Sheikh Ahmed bin Saee Al Maktoum said.

Chew Choon Seng, CEO of Singapore Airlines, said the A380 would increase passenger and cargo capacities "without increasing aircraft movements and without congesting the skies and adding to congestion on airport taxiways and runways."

Singapore Airlines will begin using the plane for services to London and Sydney when it becomes the first carrier to carry commercial passengers aboard the A380 in mid-2006, he said.

Airbus hopes to sell 750 superjumbos to airlines operating services between the busiest airports, mainly in Asia, which serve as hubs, or stopovers between connecting flights.

Boeing, on the other hand, sees demand for only 400 jets larger than its 747 over the next two decades, as air passengers increasingly gravitate toward direct flights aboard a new generation of smaller, long-range jets like its planned 7E7.

The superjumbo's entry into service next year is a challenge to already stretched airport infrastructure.

London's Heathrow airport says it is spending over $800 million, providing everything from double-decker passenger ramps to enlarged baggage conveyors capable of processing 555 passengers on one flight.

Other airports are spending billions more on similar improvements, but there is concern that some may not be ready in time.


Talk about this article in the discussion forums

Not a member of Fly Away Simulation? Sign-up for a membership here!

Important notice:
Please note that a lot of our flight simulator and aviation news articles are submitted by our users. We are not responsible for the content posted. Any offending and abusive articles will be removed by our administrators when they become aware. Any copyrighted works will also be removed immediately upon request. If you think that this article is copyrighted, please use the contact the team link on the left to make us aware of this.



 
Other links

Related Links
· Aviation Forum
· More about Aviation News


Most read story about Aviation News:
Airbus unveil new Superjumbo A380


Article Rating
Average Score: 4.56
Votes: 41

stars

Please take a second and vote for this article:

Excellent
Very Good
Good
Regular
Bad



Link to this article
Webmasters you can link to this article using the following html code:

Options

 Printer Friendly Page  Printer Friendly Page



3D Glasses
You can syndicate our news using the file backend.php
Fly Away Simulation - ©2009
Privacy | Terms

Fly Away International
Fly Away English Fly Away Deutsch Fly Away Simulation Wordpress Blog

Page Generation: 0.151 Seconds