moooThe airline my brother flies for will have 298 seats in a 2-class configuration in the 787-9 series.
I thought Airbus was over their head when they first announced the A380. You see they were making the same mistake Ford made in the late 90s when they came out with the Excursion. Chevrolet had a monopoly in the large SUV market for many years with the Suburban, and Ford wanted a piece. However by the late 90s even Chevrolet was having trouble marketing the Suburbans, and Ford's Excursion had a short run since the market couldn't support two models.
Not to even mention that the A380 did not work at nearly any of the existing airports and infrastructure, and required airports around the world to invest heavily in new runways, taxiways, and terminals just to accommodate it.
7.3l Powerstroke Excursion... mmmmm... My dad always dreamed of owning one (he had an F350 7.3 instead) but my sister purchased a diesel excursion recently. Her and her husband love it and it works well for their family/farm.
I was really surprised that so many airports especially US ones spent the money to accommodate the A380. I would have refused to do so if I ran an airport. The potential for any real ROI for the airports was never there in my opinion. Wasted money.
mooo
It's called the 50-seat so-called regional jet. And it didn't really work out for the pax.Just think in a few years big airliners will be nonexistent and they will be downsizing to Cherokee 140s!
*just kidding*
It's called the 50-seat so-called regional jet. And it didn't really work out for the pax.
I think the airport managers were afraid they would lose an international flight to another airport if they didn't (and the PFC for 555 A380 passengers). Since major airports seem to have plenty of cash it was probably safer to upgrade than not.
You know...hindsight is always 20-20
Emirates uses the GE/Pratt Engine Alliance engines. I have a relative that worked on that program for GE.I'm not sure which engine Emirates uses on their A380s.
AW&ST has been predicting the shutdown of the A380 production line for over a year. This week's issue details the planned builds and purchases for 2017 and 2018. Other than Emirates, the demand for the aircraft has collapsed. Emirates has postponed their 2017 deliveries to 2018.
It's looking like Boeing made the correct call. They have lost money on the 747-8, but it's nowhere near the bleeding that Airbus will experience before it's all said and done.
Like Ted, I think the Excursion is a great vehicle. Mine is a 2001 V10 4WD with about 72,000 miles on it. The biggest concern I have is someone hitting me and causing significant body damage. There aren't any parts available except those from salvage yards.
Must be making up for something else.
Not to even mention that the A380 did not work at nearly any of the existing airports and infrastructure, and required airports around the world to invest heavily in new runways, taxiways, and terminals just to accommodate it.
mooo
I'd settle for my own box loaded on the ramp rather than a seat in cattle car class. Or did you miss that point?Actually, when 5 years ago a herd of 2500 cows was exported from ND to Kazachstan, it was done 100 head at a time in 747s. Each cow had their own box which it was loaded into on the ramp. They traveled first class.
Lack of snow
And the Emirates just bought the A380 because it is the biggest and they do like to do things big over there...
So how many were built????
I'd settle for my own box loaded on the ramp rather than a seat in cattle car class. Or did you miss that point?