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Boeing Moves Towards New Planes

maliabu writes "Boeing has named its new plane DreamLiner with plans for its future, which is set to fly in 2008. It'll be interesting to see how 'internet-ready' this 7E7 is. It can be very entertaining for all ages as you can brower the net, check emails, weather, watch movies (on demand), listen to music (on demand) or even cut codes some 30,000 feet in the sky! These articles also stated that "The 200-seat 7E7 is meant to replace [a faster plane called] Sonic Cruiser as Boeing's next new major commercial initiative" " I think most people following the airplane builders knew the Sonic Cruiser was dead before birth; but I still don't see how this plane is going to solve Boeing's sales problems.

291 comments

  1. yeah.. by floydman · · Score: 3, Funny

    i like to code when i am high, now i can do that without going to my local dealer..

    --
    The lunatic is in my head
    1. Re:yeah.. by JUSTONEMORELATTE · · Score: 4, Funny

      i like to code when i am high,
      Hey, I think I'm maintaining your code now, you smeghead

      --

  2. Sales? by ArsonPanda · · Score: 1, Funny

    Boing PHB1: Most of our major buyers are
    struggling to keep their heads above water,
    what should we do?

    Boing PHB2: I know, let's spend c130's full of
    money to design and build a new plane that no one
    will buy!

    *brilliant!*

    --

    --I don't want the world, I just want your half.
    1. Re:Sales? by drdale · · Score: 4, Informative

      Well, maybe it is. When you read the article you will see that one of the plane's selling points is greater fuel efficiency/lower operating costs. It is being aimed precisely at airlines that are being forced to become more efficient in order to stay afloat. And Boeing is expecting the first sales to be to Asian airlines anyway.

      --
      This post is dedicated to all of those /.ers who do not dedicate their posts to themselves.
    2. Re:Sales? by sql*kitten · · Score: 5, Insightful

      is being aimed precisely at airlines that are being forced to become more efficient in order to stay afloat. And Boeing is expecting the first sales to be to Asian airlines anyway.

      It's a gamble. Both Boeing and Airbus have realized that airlines want flexibility to cater to different passenger mixes on different routes. Airbus are going after the few-large-planes model: an A380 can sit 800 passengers in an all-economy configuration, or 550 in a mixed configuration that also includes entertainment facilites like shops (or casinos or bars or whatever). The stretch A380 will be able to seat 1000 in all-economy. It gives the airlines the ability to take advantages of economies of scale on busy routes for low fares, or to customize their aircraft into a premium service for people who are willing to pay. For example, when the economy picks up, it will be easy to attract investment bankers to fly from London to SF on a plane that has proper conference facilities (meeting rooms, comms, etc). Flat(ish) beds in business class are great for the redeye, but what if you could have showers too? And so forth...

      Boeing are going after a different kind of flexibility, the many-small-planes model. The idea behind Sonic Cruiser was a premium for a faster service on mid-haul routes. The Dreamliner may be meeting a need that doesn't exist; certainly Asian airlines are huge fans of large airliners, they have the passenger numbers and distances that justify them. But the Dreamliner is in a bit of a funny niche. It has some of the facilities on board that business travellers would pay for - but without the amenities that allow the airlines to generate revenue actually in flight. If they all come kitted out with the fancy comms, how do you cater to budget travellers, especially on short haul routes where no-one really cares about entertainment anyway? You might be able to use them profitably on some business routes (i.e. London to Frankfurt) where everyone on board is a business traveller, but for a mixed load of business people and vacationers (say London to NYC) does Dreamliner cater to all those budgets?

      I think that Airbus have the right idea, apart from the fact that the A380 standard - let alone the stretch - is so damn big that it will require upgrades to airport infrastructure to handle it. Everything from being able to board and deplane through existing terminals to just being able to park them in a hangar! But for mid to long haul routes, they're pretty compelling. I just don't see where Dreamliner fits in - too elaborate for short to mid, not elaborate enogh for mid to long and long.

    3. Re:Sales? by confused+one · · Score: 1

      The asians are the ones buying the planes right now... For every American plane in the air right now, there's one sitting on the tarmack that can be stripped for parts.

    4. Re:Sales? by cluckshot · · Score: 1

      If fuel economy was the issue... The Boeing team would have built a flying wing. Saves about 2:1 If Ease of loading was the issue they would build a flying box.

      If the real issue was discussed they would replace the management,... of the airlines and Boeing. They both represent unproductive costs outside of any reality.

      The bells and whistles are put on to prevent people from facing the fact that the Airlines are not responding to their passenger demands and as a result flying miles are seriously down. They also distract stockholders from looking at why Boeing management has crushed their earnings.

      --
      Never Politically Correct ~ I prefer the facts If you don't like what I say, get a life, or comment yourself.
    5. Re:Sales? by operagost · · Score: 1

      I think 1000 people is too many to lose in one plane crash. I wouldn't fly on one unless the flight crew was armed, since it would make a great terrorist target.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    6. Re:Sales? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      However many airlines are grounding their really big aircraft (Air Canada is grounding its 747's) as the move to smaller aircraft offering p2p flights is what the passengers want. Passengers don't like the hub/spoke system which involves changing planes, yet the big aircraft require hub/spoke in order to get the passenger volumes required.

    7. Re:Sales? by hedge_death_shootout · · Score: 1

      Plus, it's a big plane - handguns wont cut it.
      Better make sure there's lots of automatic weapons on the plane, just so we're all nice and safe ;-)

    8. Re:Sales? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed.

      I fucking hate connections.

      I was on an extremely tight budget for a trip to Europe I just did (backpacking, student tickets, etc), but I really considered the $300 upgrade. I would have been to flying a 777 direct to London from Denver instead of 737 to Newark, then 777 to London.

      Hub and spoke sucks ass. You lose a lot of time that way, not to mention that an airport is about the least enjoyable place to spend an extra hour or two. Disembark, find next flight, take walk or take train to terminal, check in, wait, wait, wait, get seated, shuffle around as people try and get on airplane, wait, wait, wait, wait, and finally get back to business. Yuck.

      I want more direct flights. For some reason I doubt that a few A380s are going to solve that. Instead, I hear the lowing of cattle as we're all hearded from one flight to another, towards the enormous airplane...

    9. Re:Sales? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would a Boeing PHB want to use a Lockheed Martin product to haul cash around?

    10. Re:Sales? by AlecC · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I don't think it is different models, it is different market segments. There was a (probably) market for one new huge plane, but not two. Building two A380 class machines would have guaranteed huge losses for both. So Boeing and Airbus arm-wrestled for about eight years to decide who would do it. But actually, it was a one-way bet: Boeing would be cannibalising the market for its 747, whereas Airbus had nothing to fear. The only worry was that Boeing, bysouping up the 747 one more time, could take enough off the bottom of the A380 market that it would not make the break-even volumes. But eventually Airbus jumped, and Boeing backed down.

      So where now? They tried the "faser" route, and tha answer was a big yawn. So now they try the cheaper route. Their 757 and 767 are already being beaten up by Airbuses A330/340. It doesn't look as if they would have much market left for those in, say, five years time. I think they are expecting to get something like 20% better mileage-per-seat than the Airbus products - and over the lifetime of an aircraft, that is a lot of fuel.

      The alternative, I suppose, would to have been to have gone down a size and replaced the 737 to compete with the Airbus A318/319/320/321 family. But I could believe that there is not so much economy to be screwed out of these short-hoppers by new technology. And if the killed the 737, they would risk losing the "single type" airlines such as Southwest to Airbus.

      If they can deliver what they promise, and if Airbus don't manage to retrofit the same technological improvements onto their products, I can see it working for Boing. But the next few years are going to be "Interesting Times" for the company.

      --
      Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
    11. Re:Sales? by geekoid · · Score: 4, Insightful

      " it will be easy to attract investment bankers to fly from London to SF on a plane that has proper conference facilities (meeting rooms, comms, etc). "

      at whet point do tehy relize if they can conduct business while in the sky, why do they have to go at all? ;)

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    12. Re:Sales? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      an A380 can sit 800 passengers in an all-economy configuration

      There's still the very much open question of whether world public opinion will tolerate the deaths of 800 people in a single crash. Remember, a single crash can destroy not only an airline but an entire airframe. When an A380 goes down, nobody knows what the response from the flying public will be.

    13. Re:Sales? by nutshell42 · · Score: 1

      That doesn't sound too convincing, I'd imagine ppl said the same thing about the 747, the first airplane with more than 100 seats, probably even the first with 10

      --
      Don't think of it as a flame---it's more like an argument that does 3d6 fire damage
    14. Re:Sales? by sql*kitten · · Score: 1

      There's still the very much open question of whether world public opinion will tolerate the deaths of 800 people in a single crash. Remember, a single crash can destroy not only an airline but an entire airframe. When an A380 goes down, nobody knows what the response from the flying public will be.

      You've got to remember that public opinion isn't rational in terms of numbers. For example, Hindenburg is still the air disaster that has the most notoriety, yet 2/3 of the passengers on board survived; the total death toll was 36. Yes, just 36 - yet Hindenburg is cited whenever anyone tries to use airships commercially, even nice safe helium airships, and even now 66 years later, despite their many advantages, no-one uses airships commercially.

      In 1988, the USS Vincennes accidentally shot down an Iranian airliner, killing 290 civilians plus the crew. Off the top of your head, without using a reference, can you even remember what type of airliner it was, or the flight number? And that's by no means the worst air disaster in history.

      So public opinion isn't as easy as that to predict. And if it were, I doubt the reaction would be substantially different if 400 people died (present day 747) or 800 (A380). Both will just be reported as "hundreds" by the press anyway.

    15. Re:Sales? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think it'll go over like a Lead Balloon. The crying need for one niche is the Cross-Pacific routes that are 99.9% over water. It is the Pacific that is crying for a high-capacity supersonic planes, not the Atlantic (where anyone can fly to across in under 8 hours subsonic) and the Asian/Australian/New Zealand markets already have tons of 767s, 757s, and 747s, all medium-high capacity long distance subsonic flyers. And Boeing thinks they can cut the maintenance and repair cost? How many miles will it take to breakeven in today's market...1 million miles...10 million miles?

      Also, many airlines today do not have a lot of quick cash nor are many of them a good credit risk at all for financing. Where is the money gonna come from to buy Boeings new plane?

      I think we could see AirBus finally and decided beat Boeing to the punch for a high value niche, high-speed/high capacity transoceanic flights, but AirBus so far has a significant record of not getting their stuff right the first time so I wouldn't count Boeing out just yet. But if Boeing goes ahead with this mistake, then the ball would be in AirBus' court for certain.

    16. Re:Sales? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For example, Hindenburg is still the air disaster that has the most notoriety

      By whose standards? Tenerife takes the cake, as far as I'm concerned.

      even now 66 years later, despite their many advantages, no-one uses airships commercially

      That has absolutely nothing to do with the Hindenberg. It has to do with the fact that airships are simply not cost-effective. They're too slow, too fuel-inefficient, and can't lift enough passengers to make them worth it.

      In 1988, the USS Vincennes accidentally shot down an Iranian airliner, killing 290 civilians plus the crew. Off the top of your head, without using a reference, can you even remember what type of airliner it was, or the flight number? And that's by no means the worst air disaster in history.

      It was an Airbus. I fail to see your point, though.

      The thing to remember is the DC-10/MD-11. It was a colossal failure because it had a reputation (not entirely unearned) for being unsafe. If (and that's a huge "if") the A380 gains the same reputation, then its failure, already a distinct possibility given the world market for jumbo liners, will be assured.

    17. Re:Sales? by Captain+Ed · · Score: 0

      This is not progress, IMO. I'm a retired Captain. Back in the 1970's I flew B-707's, 727's, 747's and L-1011's with 3 man crews that cruised at M.85. All these new aircraft have 2 man crews, and cruise at M.78 to M.80. You fly more cramped, longer. Don't let anyone kid you, a flight engineer is a handy man to have in any of these aircraft. The workload has increased to the point that I think it is dangerous. The last SST has been retired, and what did Boeing come up with? A new, slower, cheaper airplane with gimmicks aboard. Wunnaful. Composite construction - Remember the Airbus that fell apart departing JFK when it;s rudder came off? That's composites at work. What we need is a new SST. The technology exists to silence the sonic boom, which was the major drawback to the Concorde.

  3. Great... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    I can browse my favorite porn sites, receive emails from the penis enlarger, Jennie wants you now!, and get great mortgage rates, all while flying the friendly skies....

    Where's that flight attendant?! :)

  4. Travel Easy by canwaf · · Score: 4, Funny

    Now people can fill out their "Mile High Club" membership forms before landing...

    1. Re:Travel Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know, it used to be the "Seven Mile High Club." I think it changed right about the time all those of you who can't count that high started hearing of it.

      Apart from a few lucky Denver Broncos fans, no one seems to remember how high planes fly anymore.

    2. Re:Travel Easy by canwaf · · Score: 1

      Well, I see you've already got your card. You must be an upstanding anal retentive good standing member.

  5. No thanks by worst_name_ever · · Score: 5, Funny
    It can be very entertaining for all ages as you can brower the net

    Sorry, not interested in browering during a plane trip, but as soon as they install a brewery I'll be the first to buy a ticket!

    --

    In Soviet Rush, today's Tom Sawyer gets high on you.
    1. Re:No thanks by salimma · · Score: 1
      but as soon as they install a brewery I'll be the first to buy a ticket!

      What, the flight is that slow you have time to brew something up? :P
      --
      Michel
      Fedora Project Contribut
  6. Sales vs. Innovation by brucmack · · Score: 0

    Perhaps the sales slump will be a good thing as far as innovation is concerned... they really will have to develop interesting new features to interest buyers, and that could eventually result in cooler stuff for passengers. So long as they don't go bankrupt, of course :)

  7. The new layout by wowbagger · · Score: 4, Funny
    The new layout:
    • Each seat will have a computer and phone.
    • To provide privacy to the passengers, each seat will have a low wall between it and the next seat.
    • Each seat will be as small as is possible, in order to cram as many passengers as possible into the smallest space.
    • Despite the walls, each passenger will be able to fully "enjoy" the sounds and smells from his fellow passengers.


    In other words, the planes will be flying cubical farms!

    1. Re:The new layout by AndroidCat · · Score: 4, Funny

      I dunno about flying. More likely it'll taxi around in circles on the runway until it runs out of fuel or accidently takes off. In the event of a take off, the crew will have the option selling out to another airline and bailing for large amounts of money. In the event of a dot.bomb on board, all passengers will be abruptly fired off the plane.

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
    2. Re:The new layout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no funney here

    3. Re:The new layout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They don't have a moderation for +1 It's So True

  8. Neat, it is at the Paris Air Show. by will_die · · Score: 1

    I am going later this week, so will have to see it.
    If any thing decent will post.

    1. Re:Neat, it is at the Paris Air Show. by hype7 · · Score: 1
      I am going later this week, so will have to see it.
      If any thing decent will post.


      Next week?

      You're new round here, aren't you?
  9. Solving Sales Problems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Quoth the article:
    "The 7E7, whose main selling point would be 10% or greater fuel efficiency through the use of lightweight composite materials and advanced engine technology"

    1. Re:Solving Sales Problems by buzy+buzy · · Score: 1

      This 10% saving in fuel costs is quite an advantage to the costs airlines face.

      Don't forget many countries are considering removing the 0% tax status the aviation industry enjoys on aviation fuel.

      Just my â0.02

      --
      If you get modded down for a first post... What do you get for a last post?
  10. They have to by kamukwam · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Boeing has to come with something new. This year will probably be the first year that Airbus will sell more planes than Boeing.

    1. Re:They have to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wasn't it the only major US company at the air show? Talk about cutting off your nose to spite your face (not boeing, the rest of them)

    2. Re:They have to by tbaggy · · Score: 3, Informative

      So far, Airbus has a nice start...link

    3. Re:They have to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They have.

      A few years ago it was the advanced 747 - dumped.

      Then it was the Sonic Cruiser - dumped.

      Now it's the 7E7. Any bets on what "something new" Boeing will be promoting next year?

      Frankly Boeing's credibility has taken an awful battering through this period of vapourware and general stuffing around.

  11. "Cut codes" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Call me a noob, only having slung bits for 14 years...in what part of the world is "to cut codes" a slang prase for anything?

    1. Re:"Cut codes" by smoyer · · Score: 2, Funny

      "Cut codes" is an appropriate phrase to describe the Muncing (now there's a good slang) I do to remove the unnecessary complexity often found in "noobs" coding (and often the source of the bugs). "Simplicity is Elegance"

    2. Re:"Cut codes" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, think about what "to cut class" means. Same thing.

  12. Boeing Link by HowlinMad · · Score: 4, Informative

    Here is the link to the 7E7 site on boeing webpage. It has a few mock-ups so you can see what it looks like.

    1. Re:Boeing Link by mikerich · · Score: 1
      Oh what a shame, its so, so, so - dull...

      Yes I know its all a result of computer-aided design and the quest for efficiency, but don't all planes look alike these days? If they didn't put a label next to the cabin door you'd never know what you're getting on.

      Are we doomed to look-alike planes from now on? No more Comets or VC10s?

      Hell, even Concorde will soon be out of service - what a dull world.

      Oops I just realised all those good-looking planes were British, I'm sure America has produced a good-looking airliner - ummmm... ummmm... help! :)

      Best wishes,
      Mike.

    2. Re:Boeing Link by Detritus · · Score: 2, Funny

      The Comet? I prefer planes that don't fall out of the sky.

      --
      Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
    3. Re:Boeing Link by mikerich · · Score: 1
      Comet 1 - granted.

      But they went on to build the Comet 2, 3 and 4 and the Nimrod which is still in production and will likely be flying a hundred years after the first Comet took to the sky.

      Best wishes,
      Mike.

    4. Re:Boeing Link by rpjs · · Score: 1

      I'm sure America has produced a good-looking airliner

      Yeah, the Douglas DC-3. One of the most beautiful aircraft ever built, IMO.

    5. Re:Boeing Link by Warped-Reality · · Score: 1

      I would be wary of boarding a plane called the "Nimrod"...

      --
      This is not the greatest sig in the world, no. This is just a tribute.
    6. Re:Boeing Link by mikerich · · Score: 2, Insightful
      ?

      Must be an Americanism, over here on the right-hand side of the Pond, Nimrod is the name of a Biblical hunter.

      Best wishes,
      Mike.

    7. Re:Boeing Link by mikerich · · Score: 1
      Good point, that and the Constellation. But since then?

      Best wishes,
      Mike.

    8. Re:Boeing Link by pizen · · Score: 1

      Yes, in America it's a stupidity insult.

    9. Re:Boeing Link by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      Nimrod is no longer being built. The new Nimrods for the United Kingdom are rebuilds of the Nimrods that were flying.

      "British Aerospace was selected as the prime contractor in July 1996 to supply a complete package of 21 mission-equipped Nimrod 2000 aircraft, together with a training system and initial logistic support. A fixed-price contract was awarded in December 1996, under which existing MR Mk 2 aircraft fuselage and empennage structure would be re-lifed and reassembled, with redesigned wings and current technology BR710 turbofan engines."

      http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/eur op e/nimrod_mra4.htm

    10. Re:Boeing Link by TheAncientHacker · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Or, you could skip the link and just look at a 707, 757, 767 or 777. (Of course, if you look at a 727, 737 or 747 you'll see amazingly successful, innovative designs but Boeing doesn't do innovation anymore)

    11. Re:Boeing Link by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      777, 747, Marlin 130, Boeing 314, Boeing 307 Stratoliner, Lockheed Electra, DC-8. I've always liked the DC-9/MD-80 and 727

      Of the Airbuses, the only one that stands out for me is the A-340.

      The other Airbuses all seem much too plain when compared to the 737,757,767

    12. Re:Boeing Link by ceejayoz · · Score: 1

      In the US, "nimrod" is roughly equivalent to "imbecile", "idiot", or "dunce".

    13. Re:Boeing Link by rpjs · · Score: 1

      Indeed, I don't think the US in the jet age has produced any really *beautiful* airliners, like the Comet or Concorde. I've always liked the B727's looks, and the B747 is impressive, but not beautiful.

    14. Re:Boeing Link by jandrese · · Score: 1

      Personally, I never liked the look of the Concorde. It looked like a plane designed by a committee.

      I don't think we're going to see many supersonic airliners anytime soon. The Concorde has shown us just how much people hate daily sonic booms, plus the tickets were generally far more expensive than ones for more conventional craft, which is death in the highly competitive airliner industry.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    15. Re:Boeing Link by Cyberdyne · · Score: 1
      Indeed, I don't think the US in the jet age has produced any really *beautiful* airliners, like the Comet or Concorde. I've always liked the B727's looks, and the B747 is impressive, but not beautiful.

      The big ones are all the airborne equivalent of buses. From the right angle, 747s are pretty nice, but if you go for smaller jets, the Cessna Citation X is pretty nice IMO. Or the BBJ (Boeing Business Jet - a variant of the 737 Next Generation airframe), especially from the interior.

      I tend to prefer the ones I've flown myself, but that's probably just my inner control-freak talking. Ironically, the AFB I first trained at is now the civilian airport I use most often - it still feels a bit weird flying out of there in a 737. Not being military, the flights are less exciting, but most of the passengers probably prefer that ;-)

    16. Re:Boeing Link by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Although I agree with your sentiment, there are reasons airplanes look the way they do.

      The Comet you mentioned has two engines mounted in each wing root. Unfortunately, the design of the wing root fairing is absolutely critical to getting a low-drag airframe. Therefore, unless there's a really really good reason to put the engines there, locating them elsewhere greatly simplifies design.

      Underwing pod-mounted engines are a relatively low-drag solution, and are also very easy to service.

      Airliners with a canard planform could theoretically be more efficient than conventional airliners. However, many airport planners are concerned that handling such aircraft on the ground would be more complicated than conventional designs. This is not my area of expertise...I'm just parroting something I read somewhere. (I sure wish I had a bibliography for my brain...)

      In my humble opinion, supersonic airliners will never be efficient enough to be cost-effective. Yes, it's certainly possible to design a super-cruising supersonic jetliner (say Mach 1.6 or so), those engines would almost certainly be clean-sheet-of-paper designs, or repurposed military engines. The first option would be absurdly expensive, and the second would be difficult to maintain on airliner duty cycles.

      Professionally, there's no project I'd rather undertake than the design of a completely new airliner design. However, with the current state of civil aviation, it's not cost effective to do so. Bummer. : /

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    17. Re:Boeing Link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I'm sure America has produced a good-looking airliner "

      Original Boeing 707 and 720 and Convair 880? I always like the look of the Tristar as well (but wasn't there some British input into it via the old VC-10 team?)

  13. 7e7? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They're using hexa? Nerdy!

    1. Re:7e7? by hey · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Or perhaps hacker spelling... instead of 747, its 7E7.

  14. uh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    since when was boeing based in chicago?

    1. Re:uh... by DrRiffic · · Score: 3, Informative

      Boeing moved from Seattle to Chicago in 2000.

    2. Re:uh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Too close to Redmond ground-zero? Wise move.

  15. The main selling point by gringer · · Score: 1

    The 7E7, whose main selling point would be 10% or greater fuel efficiency

    [Argh... my point has already been observed]

    Okay, so maybe this is true for the people buying the planes themselves, but I would think being able to get bums on seats would be a better selling point.

    With a name like Dreamliner, I would expect, maybe, a good sleep on my next trip. Then again, I may also expect "dreamlike" services, being able to browse the Internet for no extra cost, or maybe even being able to use a cellphone on takeoff.

    --
    Ask me about repetitive DNA
    1. Re:The main selling point by AndroidCat · · Score: 2, Funny
      With a name like Dreamliner, I would expect, maybe, a good sleep on my next trip. Then again, I may also expect "dreamlike" services, being able to browse the Internet for no extra cost, or maybe even being able to use a cellphone on takeoff.

      You're dreaming.

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
  16. Boeing in trouble by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Strange - I was just reading on the BBC that Airbus is just overtaking Boeing and how Airbus has just won a $12.5bn deal.

  17. Backseat Pilots by FauxReal · · Score: 4, Funny

    You think they'll make a special "Fly along with your captain." version of MS Flight Simulator?

    1. Re:Backseat Pilots by whterbt · · Score: 1

      Parent was modded Funny, but this could actually be really cool! Imagine seeing the cockpit in real-time, letting you track the flight progress and seeing the landscape that you would see if there wasn't a 4000' overcast deck.

      Or hop in a companion plane next to the 'real' one and jet around to nearby airports as the trip goes on.

      Just make sure to chmod o-w /dev/flightcontrols on the server.

      --
      Too late to be known as Bush the First, he's sure to be known as Bush the Worst.
    2. Re:Backseat Pilots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course this will happen as soon as some three letter agency learns they can figure out bobby in 7G likes to run planes into buildings and gets busted on his way off the plane.

    3. Re:Backseat Pilots by Drathos · · Score: 1

      Screw MS Flight Sim.. I want the "take control of the plane in case of emergency" Excel spreadsheet.

      (reference to an old Dilbert comic - One of the gang tells the boss *not* to turn off his laptop so it can be used in case of emergency. As the plane is going down in flames, the flight attendant is yelling at him to turn off the laptop to which he replied "No! I have to save the plane! Can I do that in Excel?" - Wish I could find a link, but the Dilbert archives seem to be gone..)

      --
      End of line..
    4. Re:Backseat Pilots by sapgau · · Score: 1

      That would be REALLY cool.

      Insightful!!!!!!!

      Wonder if Boeing engineers read slashdot.

  18. How they plan to sell it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The 7E7, whose main selling point would be 10% or greater fuel efficiency through the use of lightweight composite materials and advanced engine technology..."

    Business Week says 20% less fuel consumption and 10% less in maintenance costs. In the airline industry that could mean the difference betweening staying in business and not.

  19. They'll sell it because it's cheap! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    The Sonic Cruiser idea was to take a bunch of process and technology improvements that Boeing have developed and at the SAME cost of operations, create a bigger/better/faster plane.

    Same Money, More Zing!

    But nobody wanted to buy it...

    SO! This NEW plane, takes the same new developments, and essentially creates a plane that fits in a current purchasing slot and (MAIN POINT HERE) costs 25% less to run.

    Airlines will buy this plane in droves because it will be SIGNIFICANTLY cheaper to run, saving a fortune in jet fuel. 25% decrease in costs means a realistic chance of getting your profits back, which given the current world situation, is a big selling point.

    The plane will sell itself. Stuff the internal features. That's just fluff.

    1. Re:They'll sell it because it's cheap! by JanneM · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The problem for Boeing is of course that the new Airbus models offer similar savings, and is substantially further along in orders and deployment. THe droves have so far failed to materialize.

      --
      Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
    2. Re:They'll sell it because it's cheap! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >The Sonic Cruiser idea was to take a bunch of >process and technology improvements that Boeing >have developed and at the SAME cost of >operations, create a bigger/better/faster plane.

      >Same Money, More Zing!

      >But nobody wanted to buy it...

      Actually, *everyone* wanted to buy it, no-one actually thought they could build it. In fact Virgin said "If you can build it we'll have 20".
      Everyone in the industry knew the Sonic Cruiser was PR bullshit as soon as we saw the story.

    3. Re:They'll sell it because it's cheap! by TheAncientHacker · · Score: 2, Informative

      Nope. The Sonic Cruiser sales were fine. American ordered the first two years total production just to make sure that they'd be the only ones flying the only distinctive plane in the sky.

    4. Re:They'll sell it because it's cheap! by geekoid · · Score: 1

      The path along technology is littered with corpses great ideas, devices and concept that will 'sell themselves'.

      The path along technology has given a great many pieces of fluff, crap, and stupid ideas that had someone sell then, and have made people millions.

      Nothing sells itself, ever.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  20. Ohhhhh...pictures by NETHED · · Score: 4, Informative
    --
    --sig fault--
    1. Re:Ohhhhh...pictures by asdhwesd · · Score: 1
      Another Boeing page with more pictures. Register and get the opportunity to download very large versions of these photos.

      http://boeingmedia.com/images/search.cfm?product_i d=805

    2. Re:Ohhhhh...pictures by hype7 · · Score: 1

      hmm... I've been programmed by too many action movies; as soon as I see a 3d plane, I half expect a missile to be coming up behind it...

    3. Re:Ohhhhh...pictures by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This looks like an inflatable plastic dolphin for pissing-pool usage by 4 year olds. Short BA.

    4. Re:Ohhhhh...pictures by kgp · · Score: 1

      Interesting the link says Photos but this plane doesn't exist as a physical object :-)

      These are images, simulations, whatever. They aren't photos.

  21. 7E7 by JaJ_D · · Score: 1

    7E7?? Wow, 7e7 being 70000000 :-]

    So we have a choice of large number or bad porn film rip-off of the Love Boat (DreamLiner). :-]

    Jaj

    1. Re:7E7 by agentZ · · Score: 1

      I just thought that Boeing was numbering planes in Hex: 727, 737, 757, 767, 777, 7e7, and so on.

    2. Re:7E7 by JaJ_D · · Score: 1

      I just thought that Boeing was numbering planes in Hex: 727, 737, 757, 767, 777, 7e7, and so on.

      Ya know what that is silly enough to be true! :^]

      Please note I assume you are being sarcastic!

      Jaj

    3. Re:7E7 by Fesh · · Score: 1

      Skipped a few digits, though, din't they?

      My question is, there was 707 and 727... Was there a 717?

      --
      --Fesh
      Kill -9 'em all, let root@localhost sort 'em out.
    4. Re:7E7 by rob+colonna · · Score: 1

      Was there a 717? Yes and no. The 717 is currently (or maybe it isn't, anymore) the newer incarnation of the venerable DC-9/MD-80 design acquired via the merger with McDonnell. The MD-90/MD-95 was rechristened the 717 with little fanfare. Not sure if they're still selling it. i think that there was a late-model 707 that they also considered calling a 717, in the '60s or '70s or something, but thought better of. So, there is one, but it's not really a new and interesting plane.

      Oh, wait, this answers my question and yours:
      http://www.boeing.com/commercial/717/flash .html

    5. Re:7E7 by paranoia2k · · Score: 1

      Skipped a few digits, though, din't they?

      My question is, there was 707 and 727... Was there a 717?


      Initially, no, but Boeing did make a 717 more recently (info here). It's a small 100-seater that started service in 1999. The 707 and 727, on the other hand, aren't in production anymore (AFAIK).

    6. Re:7E7 by operagost · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yes. It's a current model.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    7. Re:7E7 by AlecC · · Score: 1

      The designation 717 was originally reserved for the military version of the 707. But since the military wanted to call it the C-135 (with assorted prefixes), it was never used. And then, as others have posted, it was retrofitted onto the MD-80/90 range that it acquired when it took over McDonnell Douglas.

      --
      Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
  22. wont help? by sniggly · · Score: 0, Redundant

    How will this help boeing against Airbus A380? This new plane is a midsizer thatll just help you hop between midsized airports where you'll board the A380 for your final destination..

    --
    Of those to whom much is given, much is required.
    1. Re:wont help? by HowlinMad · · Score: 1

      Range: 7,200-8,000 nautical miles (13,334-14,816 km)

      Ripped from the Boeing page. So it can handle long range as well, and it is more efficient than its predecessors.

    2. Re:wont help? by Rolo+Tomasi · · Score: 1

      How can it be more efficient when you have to make three or four flights of 7E7s to transport the same number of passengers as an A3XX?

      --
      Did you know you can fertilize your lawn with used motor oil?
    3. Re:wont help? by HowlinMad · · Score: 1

      You are assuming that thye sell out every flight with a bigger plane, empty seats cost money. Also, they can make more frequent trips, which is nice for the traveler to have some choices, while still filling up the plane. Do you think the made up these statistics just for fun, or maybe they actually do know what they are talking about?

    4. Re:wont help? by ednopantz · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The idea is to move into markets which aren't served by massive jumbos and couldn't fill one anyway.

      Look at the Atlantic market. Used to be you had to go to NY or Boston to fly to the UK then into only London. Now 757s, 767s, and 777s leave from smaller US cities for smaller UK cities. (Phoenix to London anyone?)

      Boeing is betting that the Asian market will start looking more like the Atlantic market in the late 90s than the superhub hub dominated Atlantic market of the 70s and 80s. They figure that the A380 will be more jet than these markets need or want.

    5. Re:wont help? by AlecC · · Score: 1

      Because people don't all want to travel at the same time. With smaller planes, you can offer a bigger range of departure times, and people will par a bit more for a departure when they want it. The trand has been that way over the Atlantic for quite a while - 747s being replaced by 767/777 or their Airbus equivalents to get more departure times. 747s still needed on the dense routes like Lon-NY because (a) there are that many people and (b) the airports are slot limited, so you want the biggest palne you can get.

      --
      Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
    6. Re:wont help? by thogard · · Score: 1

      The airlines don't look at empty seats that way. They see one empty seat as a $2000 ticket that didn't show up on time. For an hour flight, that costs them $10 to $20 and they are willing to risk that for the $2000 they might have got.

    7. Re:wont help? by HowlinMad · · Score: 1

      Right and wrong. Why do they cut costs at the last minute? They are trying to pull in every dollar that they can. If a route is not selling, it is cut back, or just cut out period. Now they do not expect to sell out every single flight, but they do have a target percentage they want to hit.

      In general they will not lower the prices once they have reached this quota, as the rest is profit, but that percentage is pretty high. Also, they never ower the prices on first class, either some rich person will buy it, or they let people with iar miles upgrade - that keeps them happy.

      So yes, one empty seat is worth the risk, hell even 2, and so on, but you have to draw the line somewhere, or you will have 5 people on your flight.

  23. DreamLiner? by fohidac · · Score: 0

    it sounds like some dreadful, wishy-washy Spielberg project not a passenger jet. I expect macho airplane names.

  24. how... by volgers · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As someone working in the aerospace industry I cannot help but wonder: how do these guy expect to develop such a plane in such a very short time? Unless it is heavily based on an existing design. Usually it takes up to 10 years to bring a plane up to production.

    Anybody some information about that?

    1. Re:how... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Well, have a look at Airbus and Boeing's current products: they're all derived from common ancestors:

      Airbus A300 and Boeing's 767 (which was derived from the 747 which in turn came from the 707): there hasn't been a great breakthough in airliner technology since the 60's. Granted: materials are different (better, lighter, cheaper and stronger), control systems are now digital (miles of wire instead of hydraulic hoses), engines are much more efficient and quiet but the shapes are still very reminscent of what was state-of-the-art in 1958.

      So, this is just an educated guess but they'll probably use many parts from the 777 & 767 family to reduce cost and the time required for design.

      When you don't have time to re-invent the wheel, you just use it :)

    2. Re:how... by gringer · · Score: 1

      From The Dreamliner site:

      Program Milestones:

      Authority to offer: Late 2003/Early 2004
      Launch: 1st Half 2004
      Assembly start: 2005
      First flight: 2007
      Certification/Entry into service: 2008

      --
      Ask me about repetitive DNA
    3. Re:how... by WegianWarrior · · Score: 1

      Looking at the pictures and the "technical data" at boings site, the 'new 7E7 is basicly a 7whatever7 (ie; the same basic airframedesign they have streached, shrinked, expanded and elongated since the first 707 was drawn) with some new lightweight materials and some more efficent engines on the wings. So it's not as much a new plane as a rehash of an old one.

      On the other hand, it makes sence to base the design on a known, working design. Less cost in retraining aircrew and technical personell, known to work with existing airport fasilities, less time (and money) spendt on validating the design and so forth.

      On the third hand, this is the twentyfirst century. We should have daily flights to the moon-colonies by now, as well as hypersonic transport between major metropols. Whats the point of living in the future when it's just like the past, only more expencive?

      --
      Everything in the world is controlled by a small, evil group to which, unfortunately, no one you know belongs.
    4. Re:how... by sql*kitten · · Score: 1
      As someone working in the aerospace industry I cannot help but wonder: how do these guy expect to develop such a plane in such a very short time? Unless it is heavily based on an existing design. Usually it takes up to 10 years to bring a plane up to production.

      Some quotes:
      • Advances in materials are allowing the team to evaluate new composite and aluminum possibilities
      • the team is looking at incorporating health-monitoring systems that will allow the airplane to self-monitor and report maintenance requirements
      • It is expected that advances in engine technology will contribute as much as 8 percent of the increased efficiency
      • New technologies and processes are in development to help Boeing and its partners achieve unprecedented levels of performance

      In other words, it's based on a lot of assumptions that have yet to be proved. They haven't even decided what to make it out of yet, so no serious design studies can have been done. If this was a software product, we'd call it vapour. Perhaps this product is "vapour trail" :-)
    5. Re:how... by Surak · · Score: 1

      I know that in the auto industry, they have dramatically shortened the vehicle development process from 40+ months to about 18 months by doing more steps in parallel and reusing existing deisgns as much as possible. (Note that when I say 'reusing existing designs' this doesn't mean necessarily the whole design of the car, but of various pieces of the car, and manfacturing tools and fixtures and stuff.)

      I suspect that you could do similar things in the airline business. After all, the company I work for makes fixtures for both automotive and aerospace, so there are some overlaps.

    6. Re:how... by SerpentMage · · Score: 1

      It is a brand new plane. In Business Week they were saying that this will be the world's first entirely composite plane. There will be no aluminum whatsoever. THIS IS HIGH RISK boys and girls. But it might also pay amazing dividends....

      Who knows....

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    7. Re:how... by goates · · Score: 1

      Boeing designed and built the 747 in only 3 or 4 years.

    8. Re:how... by salimma · · Score: 1
      It is expected that advances in engine technology will contribute as much as 8 percent of the increased efficiency

      This thing is 10% more efficient, and 8% of it is due to new engines? Great, Airbus can just install the new engines on its planes and get almost all the benefits, then.

      This is just a normal plane. The A380 was hyped to boast a piano lounge etc., but of course that's at the discretion of the customer. I'm willing to bet most of the 7E7s would be as well equipped as most of the new A330/340 at the time, and not more.

      --
      Michel
      Fedora Project Contribut
    9. Re:how... by jbwolfe · · Score: 1

      Disagree. Boeing's most recent transport (777) was finished by 1995. Do you suppose the have been developmentaly idle in the past 8 years? Any efforts they spent on the sonic cruiser would be usable on the 7E7- just look at the similarities.

      --
      Have you ever noticed that anybody driving slower than you is an idiot, and anyone going faster than you is a maniac?
    10. Re:how... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's because they've already been working on it for a few years. You just didn't hear about it.

    11. Re:how... by sql*kitten · · Score: 1

      Do you suppose the have been developmentaly idle in the past 8 years

      No, but if they haven't decided what materials to make it out of, they don't know how much it will weigh, hence they cannot even know the area of its wings! That is why I say that no serious design studies can have been done - they are providing images on the website that can only have come from an artist's conceptual drawings, not an engineer's CAD workstation.

      I don't work in aerospace, but as a frequent flyer and a former mech eng, I take an interest in aircraft. Boeing have been treading water since the 747-400. They need something bold; Sonic Cruiser was a good concept but not in line with what anyone was buying (if the dotcom craze had continued, they'd probably have sold loads of them them). But Dreamliner is just another mid-size mid-haul airliner (altho' it does have transatlantic range), it's hard to see what the USP is.

    12. Re:how... by lildogie · · Score: 1

      > Usually it takes up to 10 years to bring a plane up to production.

      It took 10 years up to the first all-CAD plane.

      The 2nd all-CAD plane should be shorter, now that the kinks in CAD have been worked out with the first plane.

    13. Re:how... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      depend who owns the patent.
      And it could have been designed in such a way to prevent airbus from using it without an exceptionally costly retro fit.
      and 2% efficientsy gain in an industry as tight as the airline industry will cause someone to take a second look. Of cours eif it sells for 10 times more...

      elipses added because, frankly, I had no idea how to end that sentence.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    14. Re:how... by cailloux · · Score: 1

      They built this plane with the same set of design tools used on the 777 series aircraft (CATIA). It handles the CAD part of the design, resolving any conflicts that come about (i.e. running an electrial bus through a wing spar). Once the plane is designed, the CATIA design can then be dumped into the manufacuring side and can handle the acutal building of the aircraft (very nice and powerful software). Also leading to its fast introduction is its largely composite airframe design. This was met with some hesitation by the airlines, but Boing is installing sensors throughout all composite structures to diagnose any possible problems and lead to early troubleshooting.

    15. Re:how... by scotty777 · · Score: 1

      actually, no.
      "Airbus can just install the new engines on its planes" IMHO: true
      The composite structure improves costs in three ways: [1] greater structural efficiency (improved payload vs. structure weight PURPOSE: reduced fuel burn)[2] reduced parts count (lowered manufacturing costs, estimated to be only 60% as high as the 777 technology PURPOSE: reduced airlines capital costs) [3] corosion and metal fatigue problems of aluminum are history, so there's reduced structure inspection & maintenance PURPOSE: operational flexibility, improved capital utilization.
      Composites had some problems, but less so now: [1] cost per pound vs aluminum, but that's going down fast [2] water absorption by resin matrix, but there are new resins that overcome this [3] delamination, but finding and fixing delams is now cheap and reliable [4] resins broke down under UV, but new resins don't [5] some resins and pre-preg had to be stored cold, and cured hot at high pressure, but now there are pre-pregs that are room-temp, and some are cured with microwaves at normal pressures [6] layup was labor intensive but is now almost entirely automated (e.g. Boeing's JSF had only 70hr or so of manual composites work) [7] at first it was trial and error, now automated digital design / flexible tooling / digital manufacturing have made the processes extremely predictable and fast in very little floor space with very little equipment [8] nasty solvents and lots of scrap have given way to eco-friendly [9] cutting, drilling, and attaching cured components has become much easier, cheaper, and more repeatable.
      cheers

    16. Re:how... by theCobolGuy · · Score: 1

      There hasn't been new technology in the airline industry since the turbine replaced the piston engine.

      --
      Swedish Meatball
    17. Re:how... by tompaulco · · Score: 1

      Some of the regionals and many business jets are largely composites. I don't know of anythat are ALL composites. But then I doubt the 7E7 is either, despite what BW says.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    18. Re:how... by st.+augustine · · Score: 1

      The wings and tail are supposed to be all composite. The fuselage is still going to have a lot of aluminum in it.

      --

      -- Some things are to be believed, though not susceptible to rational proof.
    19. Re:how... by salimma · · Score: 1
      The A330/340 series use a lot of composites in their constructions anyway. I would grant Boeing that this is a step forward from their 757/767 series, but not much beyond the Airbuses really.

      After all the A320 is the first with an all-glass cockpit.

      --
      Michel
      Fedora Project Contribut
    20. Re:how... by salimma · · Score: 1
      depend who owns the patent.

      That would be curious indeed. Normally plane engines are interchangeable, you basically have engine manufacturers competing in every thrust classes. Rolls-Royce Trent vs GE vs Pratt&Whitney. Unless Boeing pays a fortune for an exclusive deal I don't see why the engine manufacturers would not sell to Airbus too.

      And if Boeing had an exclosive contract with one, there is nothing stopping the other two manufacturers from supplying Airbus with comparable engines...

      --
      Michel
      Fedora Project Contribut
    21. Re:how... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      "same basic airframe design" in terms of the fact that it's the same gross layout.

      Other than that, there is no direct association between the designs you mention. It's not just a matter of putting in fuselage plugs.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    22. Re:how... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      That is truly amazing. An all-composite aircraft that size would be a technological tour de force.

      I'm really eager to see what Aviation Week will have to say about this.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    23. Re:how... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Looks to me like a 767 with minor aerodynamic cleanups. Yawn....

    24. Re:how... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and they'd be crazy to go for an exclusive engine deal. Remember how the Lockheed Tristar was sunk by depending on the initially-troubled Rolls-Royce RB211?

  25. Simple sales strategy... by ShwAsasin · · Score: 1

    Every time a news station or reporter takes a picture, they'll claim that they've broken the DMCA and demand money!

    In reality, it'll be interesting to see how they can persuade buyers to those planes over others. Many airlines use planes that are from the 70's and 80's because of the costs in purchasing (and leasing) the aircraft these days and because of all the issues flying these days.

  26. The big questions... by arvindn · · Score: 2, Funny

    • Will it incorporate the iLoo?
    • Will it do IPv6?
    • Will passengers have "elbow room"?
    • Are passengers allowed to run a server up there? (mmmm... imagine slashdotting a boeing)
  27. LOLZ I MADE A FUNNY ONE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't hope these New Planes are some codename for buildings.

  28. Re:But will it bring down a building? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't know, let's test it: What's the address of your junior high school?

  29. Marketing at it's best by Domino · · Score: 5, Interesting

    There is almost nothing new with this airplane. Its baiscally a modernized 757/767 with more fuel-efficient engines and light-weight material. Similar materials are used on the Airbus A380. I am not an airbus fan, but something like the A380 is just way more spectacular than this. Even the new 747-800 that was just announced is a way cooler airplane.

    E for e-enabled? Come on! Conexxion by Boeing can be put into pretty much every Boeing and probably most other major aircraft as well. I had a lot of fun on Lufthansa LH418 surfing the net 30000 feet above Iceland and I would really like to see this on every long-haul flight. But there's no need for a new airplane to offer this, its already there. Lufthansa will soon offer this on most of their trans-atlantic flights.

    They rely on marketing to make this plane look like something so spectacular that it deserves a "real" name (not sticking to the 7x7 tradition). But the technology is plain boring. I can understand their decision, given the current market situation, but trying to sell this as something extraordinary is prettty dumb.

    1. Re:Marketing at it's best by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      There is almost nothing new with this airplane.

      "There is almost nothing new with this operating system. It is basically a modernized Unix with more resource efficient and light-weight thread support. Similar materials are used on Windows XP. I am not a Microsoft fan, but something like Windows XP is just way more spectacular than this. Even the new FreeBSD release that was just announced is a way cooler operating system."

    2. Re:Marketing at it's best by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is almost nothing new with this airplane. Its baiscally a modernized 757/767 with more fuel-efficient engines and light-weight material

      Nothing new. Well you already pointed out that it is modernized.... mean new stuff in it. And it is more fuel efficient.... hmm that sounds new to me. I guess you just dont know what the world new means.

    3. Re:Marketing at it's best by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So let me guess. YOU want to go flying on this plane with all sorts of new gizmos and shit which have never even seen the air with a radical design which looks really nice on paper?

      I'll take the modernized 767 which is based off of a PROVEN design model.

    4. Re:Marketing at it's best by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
      There is almost nothing new with this airplane.

      Well, let's see... airplanes are generally divided up into three main parts: airframe, propulsion, and controls. The 7E7 is an all new airframe (likely of primarily composite construction for the first time in a commercial aircraft), will use all new engines (significantly more efficient than any existing engines), and will be only the second Boeing aircraft to use fly-by-wire controls (previously used by Boeing only on the 777). In other words, in comparison to the 757 and 767 which it will be replacing, you could hardly be more wrong. It may not be a sexy or cool airplane to you, but airlines and aircraft manufacturers don't make money or stay in business by pursuing what geeks think is sexy or cool. Boeing's 7E7 makes very good business sense (or at least it would if the airlines weren't in such financial trouble) by being a significant, evolutionary improvement over existing aircraft in a well-defined and profitable niche.

      In comparison, the Sonic Cruiser or Airbus' A380 are designs that can only succeed by creating a new market niche. If Airbus is lucky in that gamble, they'll do ok; but they are at high risk of falling on their faces -- even if you think their plane is cooler.

  30. This seems like vapor ware by BreadMan · · Score: 2

    This company is annoucing plans for a product that does not exist. I'm guessing they're doing this so that other airlines don't order from Airbus in the next few years before this plane is ready. This sounds like the game some technology companies played and lost big. Think Osborne.

    Since a lot of companies are moving away from hub and spoke systems, it's going to be tough for Boeing until they have more offerings outside the long haul market.

    1. Re:This seems like vapor ware by kentheman · · Score: 1

      Anouncing planes before they exist is standard procedure in aviation. A plane will not be built unless there are enough orders for it. Just like the 747 and the A380.

      --
      ... sometimes I fly with the white swan to my Liffey home.
    2. Re:This seems like vapor ware by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the software world however this tactic is used to delay people buying the current offerings with the promise of new and better ones. It is also illegal in the US (for software).

  31. New Meaning to 'Crash' by Apparition29 · · Score: 1

    Ok, this is from a tech support view point, but can you imagine letting all these people do all these things on a system, and trying to keep it running? Sounds like a support nightmare.

    Also,if a 'flyer' is doing 'business critical' email and his station crashes, he/she loses work. This person now sues Boeing because they were told they could use these services during the flight, and now they can't. *shudder at the thought*

    Cool idea? YES! Practical impementation? Unlikely.

    1. Re:New Meaning to 'Crash' by AndroidCat · · Score: 1

      I can just imagine the next airplane thriller movie: "Mid-Air Tech-Support Call".

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
    2. Re:New Meaning to 'Crash' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Caller: So I was making an ascent to 30,000ft and then the flight computer was all *beep* *beep* *beep* and it was a really good ascent but now we're descending at 5,000ft a minute!

    3. Re:New Meaning to 'Crash' by Fesh · · Score: 1

      Tech: Have you tried rebooting the computer?

      --
      --Fesh
      Kill -9 'em all, let root@localhost sort 'em out.
    4. Re:New Meaning to 'Crash' by ray-auch · · Score: 1

      Reply: thank you for calling tech support, your call is held in our queuing system and will be answered as soon as one of our operators is available, in the meantime here is some light music...

    5. Re:New Meaning to 'Crash' by AndroidCat · · Score: 1

      Caller: The cockpit windscreen blew away and all the crew was sucked out. What are we going to do?
      Tech: Okay, first .. re-install Windows ...

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
    6. Re:New Meaning to 'Crash' by operagost · · Score: 1

      And then the plane crashed! It was a really good plane!

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
  32. No more Sonic Cruiser? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    They'll give you 8 hours on the entertain-net instead of the usual 8 hours of bad movies and sitcom... Funny, I don't see much improvement in this trade-off as I'd much rather reduce the 8 hours to a mere 4 for the same trip.

    No matter how E-nabled this plane is, I just don't like to be packed tight in a flying sardine box for a long time!

    1. Re:No more Sonic Cruiser? by AlecC · · Score: 2, Interesting

      One of the features of this aircraft (from other sources) is that the top half of the fusalage (passenger bit) is slightly bigger that the bottom half (cargo bit), rather than a perfect circle (777) or symmetrical double bubble (767). That gives you an inck more seat width per passeger - which, from a tall fat git, matters. Of course, they can also use those inches to give wide aisles for faster turnaround...

      --
      Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
    2. Re:No more Sonic Cruiser? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's say that it 8" wider than what we have right now... 6 seats wide.... Hmmm....

      Now, let's say that seat are 20 inches wide, with a 30 inch wide alley.

      So, that's:
      6 X 20 + 2 X 30 = 150 inch wide + 8 =188 inches wide.

      Noew, let's reduce the alley's width (who needs it anyway!) to 27 inches.

      This gives you 14 inches remaining.

      20 inch wide seats huh?

      Go for 19 inch wide seats!

      There you have it: your new "Dreamliner":

      2-5-2 arrangement instead of the 2-4-2. A dream for the airline industry. A nightmare for the average american and no chage for the smaller people!

  33. ASS TO ASS! ASS TO ASS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Boeing and Airbus - ass to ass! Ass to ass!

    1. Re:ASS TO ASS! ASS TO ASS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Requiem for a Dream... that was a damn good movie ;)

  34. Ah, memories by CaptainZapp · · Score: 2, Informative
    [...] but as soon as they install a brewery I'll be the first to buy a ticket!

    Not that it was quite a brewery, but the now defunct Swissair did roll a barrell of beer into the first - and business class cabin on a flight to Chicago.

    Not that I really needed a beer at that time, but the concept was so intriguing, that I er! topped off my slightly intoxicated state.

    --
    ich bin der musikant

    mit taschenrechner in der hand

    kraftwerk

  35. Sales problem? by Spudley · · Score: 4, Interesting

    How can anything solve Boeing's sales problem when there's whole fleets of aircraft sitting idle in the desert?

    I'd have thought the airlines will bring those back into service before they start buying new planes.

    --
    (Spudley Strikes Again!)
    1. Re:Sales problem? by JanneM · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Many of those older aircraft are too expensive to fly today. Factor in the cost of bringing those planes up to scratch, retrofitting them to comply with steadily tighter emissions and noise regulations, the higher fuel consumption, and the added costs for each plane type you have in service (you need pilots and mechanics current in each aircraft type, for instance). It turns out it's cheaper to buy new planes instead.

      Most of those aircraft will never fly again. /Janne

      --
      Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
    2. Re:Sales problem? by confused+one · · Score: 1

      A lot of those planes are older. A lot of the idle planes are also being scrapped (used) for parts. But, a lot of those planes are modern units that are simply idle due to reductions in air travel (fewer people flying since 9/11 and new restrictions in place...)

    3. Re:Sales problem? by jbwolfe · · Score: 1

      Two types of aircraft have moved to the desert: those too old and those too expensive to operate. Most are too old- 737-100's and 200's, DC-9's, 727's, DC-10's, etc. Some (mostly 747-400's) have leases negotiated under stronger economies and are no longer cheap enough to operate, but a trip to Ch 11 can make the lease terms improve.
      The older aircraft were destined for the desert long before Sept. 11, but ended up all going there at the same time because of the dramatic economic changes. The newer ones will return soon...

      --
      Have you ever noticed that anybody driving slower than you is an idiot, and anyone going faster than you is a maniac?
    4. Re:Sales problem? by DrinkDr.Pepper · · Score: 1

      Are you talking about Marana, AZ?
      Here's a photo.

      --
      0xfeedface
    5. Re:Sales problem? by DrinkDr.Pepper · · Score: 1

      I think you must be refering to Marana, AZ.
      Here is a photo.

      --
      0xfeedface
    6. Re:Sales problem? by jbwolfe · · Score: 1

      Victorville, CA. is one where most of ours have gone. The photo's of Marana and DM are 747 SP (Special Performance) that were retire before 1994.

      --
      Have you ever noticed that anybody driving slower than you is an idiot, and anyone going faster than you is a maniac?
  36. IM Your Last Will and Testament by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tell your love ones what you really think of them as you hurdle to the earth in a giant fireball

    1. Re:IM Your Last Will and Testament by dmanny · · Score: 0, Troll

      s/hurdle/hurtle/

      --
      All my previous sigs now look like this one, I wish they were permanetly recorded when used. :-(
  37. Airlines still have not much business by thelandp · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I work for Qantas, and right now the forward bookings for the next six months are down approx. 60% compared to previous years (because of Terrorism, SARS, SLOPS (severe lack of perspective syndrome)). Not sure we'll be needing new planes anytime soon.

    --

    -- the only thing we have to fear is really scary things
    1. Re:Airlines still have not much business by Sharkford · · Score: 1

      Au contraire; a downturn in business can drive new aircraft purchases as surely as an upswing, because the old planes don't fit the new strategies. With lighter passenger loads there might be routes that lose money in 747's but turn a profit with newer (smaller, more efficient) jets.

      Qantas maybe doesn't have a market that lends itself to hub-and-spoke operations ("I have *how long* a layover on Easter Island?") but the desperation in N.Am and European markets has sold lots of Bombardier's RJ. 'Course, any alumnus of a web development shop can tell you what happens when all your clients are bankrupt...

  38. 'cut codes'? by kahei · · Score: 5, Funny

    'cut codes'? You mean 'write computer programs'?

    Am I getting old? Or have you just been reading wayyy too many cyberpunk novels?

    --
    Whence? Hence. Whither? Thither.
    1. Re:'cut codes'? by confused+one · · Score: 1
      Naw, it's apparently a translation of a northern european slang term...

    2. Re:'cut codes'? by hedge_death_shootout · · Score: 1

      'north european' - is that a language? I didnt notice they standardised that!

    3. Re:'cut codes'? by confused+one · · Score: 1
      Very true. When viewing the other side of the pond, I tend to paint in larger brush strokes...

      Actually, since I only speak a little French; and, since I don't know the actual origin, I suspect, by it's grammer, that it's slavic. However, since I'm admittedly not an expert in language, it could easily be from Italian, Chinese, or Ancient Egyptian (using them big pyramid sized computers).

      I just remember working with a German gentleman who used the same phrase.

      With foot planted firmly in mouth, I will now shut up.

    4. Re:'cut codes'? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      'codes' is slang for 'costs' in some north European Island nations and their former colonies where typing is considered more of an artform than a skill.

  39. But does it come with bribes? by Desolation+Row · · Score: 3, Interesting

    According to the current issue of the Economist, it's not what you build, it's how you bribe.

  40. Terrorists by Cackmobile · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Now that I have used the scary word to get your attention. I hope the don't run windoze up there. All the terrorists would have to do is send in a bit of a virus or blue-screen it. imagine all geeks are terrorists.

    But really, don't bother with any of this stuff. Just amke them bigger and more comfy. As a 196cm (6'4" - i think thats how u do it) guy planes are pretty cramped places.

    --
    -- Karma Karma Karma Karma, Karma Chameleon - Boy George
    1. Re:Terrorists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Wow, your entire post consisted of:

      Haw haw haw WINDOZE SUX BOY IT SURE LOVES TO CRASH A LOT.



      That's impressive. Also, you're a fucking idiot.

    2. Re:Terrorists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Be afraid, be very afraid.

      On a recent A330 flight from PHL to LGW, the MS Windows based video system did crash about an hour into the flight. They were never able to revive it, even with the usual power cycle.

      And you're right that is sucks to be 6'4" and fly alot. Until you get enough miles to upgrade every flight.

    3. Re:Terrorists by Cackmobile · · Score: 1

      Thanks!!!

      --
      -- Karma Karma Karma Karma, Karma Chameleon - Boy George
  41. Innovation Needed by eugene_t00ms · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It seems to me that maybe Boeing is producing too little too late. As the Airbus representative said, "This is a market where we already have an airplane." And weâ(TM)re talking 5 YEARS away from rolling off the assembly line. They havenâ(TM)t even chose a site for manufacturing yet!

    So it seems to me they have a few things to get ironed out if they have any chance of competingâ¦.

    A) Tall people on 20-hour trans-Atlantic flights NEED MORE LEG ROOM! (Iâ(TM)m 6â(TM)3â or 195 cm) Iâ(TM)d WEEP FOR JOY and never ride in a competitorâ(TM)s plane again if I stepped aboard and found that I could comfortably plant my ass in a seat without having to put myself in uncomfortable positions to accommodate my long legs.

    B) Some sort of ACTUAL reclining would be nice. Iâ(TM)m sure its possible to allow just as many people to board a flight and provide a little comfort without the fear that youâ(TM)re cramping the passenger behind you even more.

    C) Iâ(TM)m sure all those 6 figure a year making brainy-boys out at Boeing could do a little tinkering and figure out SOME way of allowing passengers to use assorted electronic gadgetry on flights without causing nose-dives and fiery apocalyptic deaths for everyone on board. Perhaps some sort of array of jacks on the back of the seats that would allow all outgoing and incoming transmissions from said gadgetry to be channeled through a single antennae or array that could be monitored and checked against the data coming to the pilot in the cockpit, thereby avoiding disaster and making customers happier.

    D) Do something about the food. Good lord you could excavate a TV dinner from the 1970s out of a landfill, heat it up and it would be more palatable than the garbage they serve on some flightsâ¦*cough cough* United *cough cough*

    In my infinitely humble opinion, if Boeing would catch on to consumer demand and implement a few or all of these suggestions theyâ(TM)d be able to truly revolutionize the airline industry and make a few billion in the process and thus enhance shareholder confidence along with personal assets!

    --
    Belief that Perspectives matter more than Facts = Mark of the Truly Ignorant
    1. Re:Innovation Needed by eurostar · · Score: 1

      agreed, I find Air France to be the best deal here.

    2. Re:Innovation Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I find Air France to be the best deal here

      Sorry. We don't fly anything French. Let freedom ring!

    3. Re:Innovation Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "D) Do something about the food."

      order special meals, like vegetarian. i found the quality of the food an immense improvement

    4. Re:Innovation Needed by spagiola · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Most of what you ask for is decided by airlines, not aircraft manufacturers. Leg room is a function of spacing between seats. And that's something the airline decides, not the manufacturer. The manufacturer affects the width of the seats, because that's constrained by the width of the fuselage tube (the reason that seats on Boeing's narrowbodies like the 737 and 757 are an inch narrower than on Airbus narrowbodies like the A320 is that the 737 fuselage is still based on that designed for the 707 in the late 1960s, when the reference ass width was narrower than it is now). But leg room depends on how many seats the airlines choose to squeeze in, up to a maximum set by certification limits (which depend on the number of exits etc). So if your legroom is limited, complain to the airlines, not Boeing or Airbus. Note, for example, that American has adopted a marketing strategy of offering "more space in coach" by setting seat pitch (the distance between seats) an inch more than that of its competitors.

    5. Re:Innovation Needed by eugene_t00ms · · Score: 1

      I stand corrected because I hadn't thought about implications like airline reps standing in front of Boeing reps kicking the tires on a 7E7 like hapless suburbanites checking out the new Chrysler Minivan and demanding more ticketsales for less cost and overhead.
      HOWEVER, if Boeing were to specifically design and market their planes around the suggestions i made, they still might pull off a coup and manage to please passangers while enticing the airlines into investing in larger yet more comfy planes.

      20 hours is a long time to spend in a metal tube. I don't know about you but i'd pay at least double for a ticket if i were assured in writing that i'd have Internet and Mobile phone access for the entire flight, a truly reclining and comfortable seat, and enough space to comfortably fold my legs into.

      --
      Belief that Perspectives matter more than Facts = Mark of the Truly Ignorant
    6. Re:Innovation Needed by Xcruciate · · Score: 1

      I didn't think they served food on flights anymore. They would have to give you plastic eating utensils which could be used as weapons to hijack the plane. Can't you just see some crazy trying to spork a flight attendant to death?

      --
      It's like "looking busy" at your employment - it's actually easier to do real work than to fake it. - bmo
    7. Re:Innovation Needed by watzinaneihm · · Score: 1

      Its not really fair to blame boeing for the seat pitch and reclining. The standard seat pitch that the airlines order seem to be 30 inch in economy. Boeing can change the seat pitch if you specify it when you order it.Privatair runs a fleet of 737s with a seat pitch of 55 inches IIRC (read it sometime ago on boeing website) . It just happens that your "ultra-cheap" airlines order the lowest possible one. If you have a serious problem you can fly first or business class (39 inches pitch, i think), and you send a message to the airliners that you are willing to pay more for the "luxury" of strectching your legs.
      And Boeing really cant do anything about airline fooed either
      Your third point is interesting though. IIRC the US AWACS runs on a boeing. So if they can put a whole big Radar on top of an airplane and still have no problems, I really cant understand how a puny cellphone can wreck the plane.

      --
      .ACMD setaloiv siht gnidaeR
    8. Re:Innovation Needed by jbwolfe · · Score: 1

      re:...allowing passengers to use assorted electronic gadgetry...

      I still don't know why this is an issue. Other than a few anecdotal tidbits about unexplained aircraft performance deviations, I can think of no reason for the prohibition of the use gadgets. I think its just that no one wants to put the time in to disprove the assumptions or be accountable for saying their use is OK.

      --
      Have you ever noticed that anybody driving slower than you is an idiot, and anyone going faster than you is a maniac?
    9. Re:Innovation Needed by eurostar · · Score: 1

      Hmm... I think that the French don't need to fly American, seems like a good thing for Airbus that US firms didn't appeared at Le Bourget this year: http://fr.biz.yahoo.com/030616/85/399nd.html plus, freedom ringing in the US has an awfully dead tone to it...

    10. Re:Innovation Needed by slykens · · Score: 1
      I don't know about you but i'd pay at least double for a ticket if i were assured in writing that i'd have Internet and Mobile phone access for the entire flight, a truly reclining and comfortable seat, and enough space to comfortably fold my legs into.

      Unfortunately it's a little more than that, and that's just to get into business class.

      I've travelled to India a few times... Coach to India from the US is typically about $1500, Business is at least $4500 these days, and First, well, let's say its cheaper to buy a Round the World First fare for about $7500.

      If you fly to a place like India where international fares are cheap consider buying a one-way ticket there and buying your return tickets there, in the end you can save at least $1500 per round trip. Round the World business on Star Alliance from India can be had for about $4000 as opposed to $6500 or so in the US and round trip business from India to the US can be had for as low as $3000 on BA. (note: Not Air India!)

    11. Re:Innovation Needed by AlecC · · Score: 1

      The seats are on rails running fore-and-aft, so the airlines could increase/decrease seat pitch on a literally day-by-day basis by taking out a row or two of seats and easing the rest apart. The seat width is determined by Boeing, and as I posted elsewhere, the 7E7 has the space for an extra inch of width per passenger.

      --
      Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
    12. Re:Innovation Needed by thogard · · Score: 1

      There is more to it than that. Remember those o2 masks? They have to be respaced as do the overhead lights and air vents.

    13. Re:Innovation Needed by sexylicious · · Score: 1

      There is this thing called MIL-STD-461 which governs how much EMI a device aboard an aircraft can generate. It gives strict limits on how much EM leakage and susceptibility you can have... even for something as seemingly benign as a wire bundle. MIL-STD-462 governs how the devices should be tested. The other thing is that pretty much ALL personal electronic devices are class B devices (according to the FCC). So they can't generate interference onto other devices... Problem is that almost no personal electronic device has EM shielding, eddy current dissipation methods, or a way to attach to the plane's common ground. Personally I'd rather not have people using their cell phones or whatnot. Besides the noise, I'd rather not trust those $1 (US) RC filters used to dampen eddy currents.... which are actually just a 2 cent capacitor and a 2 cent resistor, but because it's validated against a specification it costs a LOT more. So as long as the FAA regulates that MIL-STD-461 has to be used, there is no way around the rule against certain electronic devices.

    14. Re:Innovation Needed by sulli · · Score: 1
      the 7E7 has the space for an extra inch of width per passenger.

      Catching up with, but not improving over, Airbus.

      --

      sulli
      RTFJ.
  42. I just saw the first line of the source code.... by Boss,+Pointy+Haired · · Score: 2, Funny

    #include "/plane_stuff/fly-by-wire/777.h"

  43. Woohoo!! by SlashdotLemming · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    My lifelong dream has always been to brower the net, weather, and cut codes!!
    Thank you Boeing!!

  44. Probably cheaper... by psoriac · · Score: 1

    Yeah, but going to your dealer is probably cheaper than buying a plane ticket every time you feel like coding.

    --
    I browse Slashdot at +3, Funny
    1. Re:Probably cheaper... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...and have you seen the prices airlines and their providers charge for these services? Talk about sky high!

  45. Rationale for 7E7 design. by MtViewGuy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I think Boeing has identified the following rationales for the 7E7 design:

    1. A lot of older widebody twin-engine airliners are going to have to be replaced before 2010. The older Airbus A300B2/B4 models are starting to be phased out from airline fleets, as are the older production 767's dating from the early to mid 1980's.

    2. The plane's very modern use of aerospace materials will mean relatively low weight of the plane carrying 200-250 passengers, lowering the fuel burn on a seat-mile basis. This means lower fuel costs on routes anywhere between 2,000 to 7,500 nautical miles.

    3. Because the 7E7 will use contemporary aerodynamic research, the plane could actually fly faster than the 747-400, if the right engine design can be found. This means the possibility of Mach 0.89 to 0.90 cruise speed, which offers most of the benefits of the Sonic Cruiser with far technical risk in terms of new technology needed.

    4. The plane will offer Boeing's Connexion broadband Internet access system as standard on the longer-range models. Imagine being able to access the Internet at minimum one megabits per second download speed in flight.

    I think you'll be surprised how many airlines actually DO want a more efficient medium to long range 200-250 seat airliner with reasonably high cruise speeds. While the Airbus A330-200 has been a sale success, the plane is still too heavy and big for many airlines and its cruise speed still can't keep up with the Boeing 777-200ER's and 747-400's that dominate longer range flying today.

  46. Different market, but Boeing are playing catchup by Moderation+abuser · · Score: 1

    It'll really be up against the A320/A330 rather than the A380.

    Boeing are however playing catchup. Airbus have been pushing lower costs, better efficiency and quicker turnarounds for the last decade or two and as such have been gaining market share especially with the new low cost airlines which have sprung up.

    e.g.
    http://www.easyjet.com/EN/about/aircraft.h tml

    --
    Government of the people, by corporate executives, for corporate profits.
  47. 7E7 hex is 2023, when the plane will actually fly by Opiuman · · Score: 2, Funny

    Because the 7E7 is Boeing's latest vaporware. Yes, vaporware exists in other industries, not just I.T.

  48. Boeing's New Business Plan by Pionar · · Score: 0

    1. Spend kajillions on research for a new plane that none of the bankrupt airlines can afford.

    2. ?????

    3. Profit!

  49. Personally by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I don't care if the A380 might have a better "concept". Airbus engineers take shortcuts in their design of metal-composite joints that are just plain Bad Engineering, and I'm going to avoid flying on an Airbus jet if at all possible after what I've heard regarding their tail designs from someone familiar with the industry.

    I refer you to the Brooklyn crash a few months after 9/11 where the tail of an Airbus plane basically fell apart...

    --
    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    1. Re:Personally by SerpentMage · · Score: 1

      Yes that is right. They had composites. But you think Boeing is better?

      Come on, there was a time when Boeing planes kept falling out of the sky for one reason or another (about five years I think).

      The point I am trying to make is that both Boeing and AirBus have it hard. Each tries to one up the other and tries different ideas.

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    2. Re:Personally by mikerich · · Score: 4, Informative
      I refer you to the Brooklyn crash a few months after 9/11 where the tail of an Airbus plane basically fell apart...

      Erm no it didn't; the tail was recovered in two pieces, the main structure of the tail and the rudder itself. What was unusual was that the rudder had cleanly separated from the tail.

      The tail of that airliner passed all airworthiness checks and has been found to have exceeded its design requirements.

      Flight 587 had flown into the wake turbulence of a JAL 747, the pilot followed normal procedures and tried to stabilise his aircraft using the ailerons, which is standard procedure.

      When that failed, he used the tail rudder five times to add extra force to his corrections. These imposed enormous strains on the tail structure which was torn off of the aircraft.

      Again, the tail did not fail because of any structural weakness, it failed because a load was imposed on the structure that lay outside of the design parameters. Such loads had never been anticipated during the design process, nor had they been experienced before this crash.

      American Airlines and Airbus are still fighting over who is to blame. AA claim that Airbus withheld information about the upper limits of forces that can be applied to their airliners, Airbus say that AA did not train their crews correctly.

      However, guidelines have been sent to all airlines and the operators of all types of airliner informing them of the possibility of failure of the tail during excessive rudder movements.

      And remember that Airbus aren't alone in discovering unexpected behaviours in their airliners. The Boeing 737 seems to have suffered a number of crashes resulting from excessive or abberent rudder movements; notably United flight 585 in Colorado and US Air flight 427 in Pennsylvania.

      Best wishes,
      Mike.

    3. Re:Personally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i read that report. it concluded that american pilots were being trained badly (being told to put too much strain on the rudder).

      specific clarifactions were issued on rudder use by Airbus AND BOEING.

    4. Re:Personally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Airbus is a fly-by-wire plane. Isn't the fly-by-wire computer supposed not to let the pilot perform actions that are outside the specifications for the airframe?

    5. Re:Personally by sql*kitten · · Score: 1

      I don't care if the A380 might have a better "concept". Airbus engineers take shortcuts in their design of metal-composite joints that are just plain Bad Engineering, and I'm going to avoid flying on an Airbus jet if at all possible after what I've heard regarding their tail designs from someone familiar with the industry.

      Well I've flown in Airbuses for years and I've never had a tail fin come off :-)

    6. Re:Personally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try this (or for the sarcastical-comment-comprehension-challenged DON'T !):

      Drive at 55mph on the highway.
      Violently jerk your steering wheel from left to right stop and back 5 times in a row.

      Enjoy the sensation.

      This is the equivalent of what AA trained their pilots to do. Bummer.

    7. Re:Personally by jbwolfe · · Score: 1

      And you know because you've been through this training?
      The NTSB report has not been finalized, but I suspect the pilots use of rudder was not "typical". Nonetheless, up until this incident, transport pilots in general had not been taught to avoid such rudder inputs even though such avoidence might be presumed to be intiutive.
      Incidentally, it has been reported that this aircraft had a previous rudder repair. We will find out when the investigation is finished what bearing this had on the accident.

      --
      Have you ever noticed that anybody driving slower than you is an idiot, and anyone going faster than you is a maniac?
    8. Re:Personally by aero6dof · · Score: 1

      Hmmm... I don't mean to be too critical, but you're comment doesn't quite hang together... So it wasn't a failure but a "design parameter" exceedance. Sounds like a weak argument to me - especially when the rudder movements were applied by a pilot trying to maintain control of the aircraft. And, if the movements were so far outside the design parameters, why did the flight software allow those inputs to be applied?

      However, I realize that aircraft design is extremely difficult. Especially when you're in an area where accidents are in an regime there is a low statistical probability of occurence with imperfect reconstructablility of the events.

    9. Re:Personally by mikerich · · Score: 2, Insightful
      And, if the movements were so far outside the design parameters, why did the flight software allow those inputs to be applied?

      The A300 isn't a fly-by-wire aircraft, the more modern A320 onwards would have prevented such an action.

      Best wishes,
      Mike.

    10. Re:Personally by uradu · · Score: 1

      Actually no, that's not at all an analogy for what happened. The steering system of the car would most likely not fail, you would just flip the car. I talked to an experienced jet pilot and he said that aircraft have published specs for how many successive lock-to-lock rudder deflections are allowed. No passenger jet could withstand more than a few such successive deflections, regardless of manufacturer. The thing about Airbus planes is that they have fly-by-wire rudder control and for a pilot inexperienced on such a system it requires no great physical effort to flap the rudder back and forth repeatedly. Conventional cable controls tend to require quite a bit more force, and that alone makes it less likely for a pilot to do that sort of thing.

      Think about how forces are transmitted as the rudder is deflected: the air hits the deflected rudder, which transmits a force through the rudder attachment points into the vertical tail surface, making the tail want to move in the opposite direction to the rudder deflection. The whole tail and rudder structure basically behaves like one fan or propeller blade, with the tail end of the airframe acting as the hub. The whole airframe section there would experience a twisting force during rudder deflection. Now deflect the rudder in the opposite direction, and the tail will twist the airframe into the other direction. Repeat this processs again and again, and eventually this will weaken the tail attachment points to the airframe. Eventually something will fail. And if you think that only Airbus planes have this problem, maybe Boeing is building their tails out of the same material as the black boxes. Just ask them.

    11. Re:Personally by Submarine · · Score: 1

      The Airbus that fell over Brooklyn was a A300. The A300 is an old design which, as far as I know, does not have fly-by-wire controls (they were introduced on the A320, a later model).

      The fly-by-wire controls of the A320, A330 and A340 have hard limits imposed by the computerized controller. This means that the system will refuse to exceed the manufacturer's limits, no matter what the pilot does. In comparison, the fly-by-wire controls on the B777 have "soft" limits - the pilot can exceed them by pulling harder. Whether soft or hard limits are better has been for long a point of argument: basically, some say that hard limits are better because the pilot is not allowed to destroy the plane, even if acting erratically under the stress of an emergency, while some say soft limits would allow the pilot to get out of acute emergencies.

      Now, guess what? I heard from people in the air industry that the "composite" materials some blamed for the failure of the rudder were not used on the A300, which is too old of a design! :-)

    12. Re:Personally by uradu · · Score: 1

      > The A300 is an old design which [...] does not have fly-by-wire controls

      It actually was an A300-600, which according to some information does have FBW. Event Airbus' website it inconclusive about these details. Regardless, supposedly even in the A320 and later the rudder has mechanical linkages (as a backup, not all controls are FBW), so my suggestion that FBW could lead to excessive rudder use couldn't have been the issue.

      > In comparison, the fly-by-wire controls on the B777 have
      > "soft" limits - the pilot can exceed them by pulling harder

      It's not a matter of pulling too hard, though--the problem wasn't that the pilot deflected the rudder too much, but rather that he fully deflected too often. Imposing software limits on this type of thing is trickier; what do you do, refuse full deflection after X times? That might be doable given enough thought, but you'd want to make sure that some level of control is still allowed. Alternatively you could introduce some kind of "recharging" paradigm, where the pilot could perform one or two full lock-to-lock deflections, after which the system would issue a warning and only allow 50% deflections for the next few seconds or whatever (kind of like waiting for a gun to recharge in a shooter game). I don't know whether this five full deflections limit is within a given time interval (say, within a few seconds), or within a service interval (i.e. before the next plane maintenance). If you're just not allowed to exceed a certain rate of full deflections, my suggestion might work. If OTOH the whole structure is weakened after five deflections and needs servicing (bolt retightening etc.), that of course wouldn't help.

      > the "composite" materials some blamed for the failure
      > of the rudder were not used on the A300

      I believe the A300-600 that crashed did have composite components. From what I remember, that was one of the reasons the whole model family was grounded, to examine if lacking understanding of composite fatigue was to blame.

  50. And for an example by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

    Of how Boeing does things right, look up the Gimli Glider.

    The only reason that plane was able to land was because Boeing engineers were so damn conservative and had backups for every possible contingency, including dual-engine failure (Which the airline industry and Boeing considered a near impossibility, but included a backup for anyway.)

    --
    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    1. Re:And for an example by ray-auch · · Score: 2, Informative

      Airbuses glide too: link - landed at night as well.

      There are no backups for multiple engine failure on any dual-engine airliner - one engine backs up the other, and that's it. Having a backup engine wouldn't help anyway if you've run out of fuel, which (believe it or not) is the main cause of all-engines-fail on big airliners (and it isn't considered near-impossible, there are many documented occurences).

  51. Sales problems, conflict of strategic interests by mike449 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I am not sure if Boeing is currently supplying anything major to the USAF, but there is probably still an internal conflict of interests.
    To sell more commercial jets, they need world peace and real (not percieved) end to terrorism. They can pursue this by lobbying and puching the US administration in the direction of sanity.
    However, if their military contracts bring more money, there is more profit in pushing in the opposite direction.

    1. Re:Sales problems, conflict of strategic interests by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, as if it was US military that made flying unsafe ....

      You sure are either completely fucked up or simply highly resistant to reality.

    2. Re:Sales problems, conflict of strategic interests by Keeper · · Score: 1

      McDonald Douglas is owned by Boeing, which builds military aircraft. When I was living in St. Louis, I remember one of the congressman pushing through some spending bill to have the plant there build more jets to keep people working ... I'd assume that they're still building them. :)

    3. Re:Sales problems, conflict of strategic interests by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is another option - peace with the potential for war. How do they lobby for that? :)

  52. Airline operating margins are unbelievably slim by DaRat · · Score: 1

    Airlines operate on incredibly slim operating margins (2-8% of revenue). A fleet of planes that costs 25% less to run could result in a huge increase in profits.

    Similarly, just implementing a good revenue management system could result in a 4-8% increase in revenue which could make the difference between profit and loss. Revenue management systems are the reason that ticket prices are so crazy sometimes.

    Of course, if the personnel costs are too high (like United), nothing will help.

    1. Re:Airline operating margins are unbelievably slim by jbwolfe · · Score: 3, Informative

      re:Of course, if the personnel costs are too high (like United), nothing will help.

      Have you looked at those costs lately. Have you looked at them throughout the century. Do more homework than just reading USA Today. Just so you know, I'll be working half again as many hours for 45% less money. I'm not complaining- just want you to know some facts. It seems common practice to bash (rightly sometimes) labor and ignore (wrongly most of the time) management's missteps. Can't think of any examples of management misdeeds? How 'bout a recent one: American's senior mngt greed got Carty fired about a month ago. Another one: Delta's CEO Leo Mulin was pretty well compensated for an unprofitable airline screaming about need of labor savings- even the politicians thought so. There's much more but I've most likely lost your attention. Do a Google search, but remember how slanted towards business the big media are.
      Go here: http://www.alpa.org/ for a different perspective.
      Lastly, be careful what you ask for. If you pay chump wages, you'll get chump product. This goes for software as well as pilots and mechanics. Do you really want the guy flying you somewhere to be a novice who quits for better pay just at the point where his experience becomes valuable to your safety? Flying is very safe, but its not because of management's drive to reduce costs and put pesky labor in its place!

      --
      Have you ever noticed that anybody driving slower than you is an idiot, and anyone going faster than you is a maniac?
    2. Re:Airline operating margins are unbelievably slim by uradu · · Score: 1

      > A fleet of planes that costs 25% less to run could
      > result in a huge increase in profits.

      Precisely. And that's why I would consider the 25% nothing more than marketing fluff. Just wait for that figure to shrink more and more as the plane nears release (if it ever does), and to end up being something like 5-6%. Still not bad, but that doesn't grab you like 25% at the vaporware stage. Also, as someone else pointed out, what exactly prevents Airbus from using the exact same engines and achieve the same savings?

    3. Re:Airline operating margins are unbelievably slim by tompaulco · · Score: 1

      It take too long to get new engines type certified on an existing aircraft. Ever wonder why the 747 hasn't scrapped their old engines for more efficient modern engines?
      Also, efficiency of engines is only one point. There is also the efficiency of the airframe itself, and much of that comes down to the wing.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    4. Re:Airline operating margins are unbelievably slim by uradu · · Score: 1

      > It take too long to get new engines type certified on an existing aircraft

      As opposed to building a whole new plane from scratch??? Get real!

    5. Re:Airline operating margins are unbelievably slim by tompaulco · · Score: 1

      Yes. You would have to redesign much of the airframe in order to make it work properly with the engine anyway. Then you would have to get it certified. Might as well just build a new airplane.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
  53. Huh? Airbus don't make smaller planes? by Moderation+abuser · · Score: 4, Informative

    A320 A330 ranges etc.

    The difference is that Airbus have been giving their customers what they are asking for and Boeing have been giving customers what they've got.

    EasyJet are a prime example of a company switching to Airbus A319s over 737s because the operating costs are significantly lower.

    http://www.easyjet.com/EN/about/aircraft.html

    --
    Government of the people, by corporate executives, for corporate profits.
    1. Re:Huh? Airbus don't make smaller planes? by saden1 · · Score: 0, Troll

      Oh please, AirBus is give customers 20% discounts. Their planes are dirt cheap and they are being subsidized by European government aid. Plus they aren't making a profit that is for sure.

      --

      -----
      One is born into aristocracy, but mediocrity can only be achieved through hard work.
    2. Re:Huh? Airbus don't make smaller planes? by JanneM · · Score: 1

      Actually, critical looks at the airplane industry show that Airbus and Boeing (and the other, smaller outfits) all receive about as much backing - economical and otherwise - from their governments. The form of backing differs slightly, but the amounts are about the same (which is one reason no government has made a big fuss about it - they're all in the same boat).

      And last time I looked, Airbus was profitable.

      --
      Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
  54. Your complaints are more about the airlines by Moderation+abuser · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The planes from both Airbus and Boeing have "economy", "standard" and "luxury" seating configurations. Guess which configuration gets used by the airlines most.

    --
    Government of the people, by corporate executives, for corporate profits.
  55. Will it sell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think most people following the airplane builders knew the Sonic Cruiser was dead before birth; but I still don't see how this plane is going to solve Boeing's sales problems.
    Only time will tell if it will sell. However, with air travel down and the airlines in trouble, the selling point of this aircraft is that it is much more fuel efficient, which can reduce the operating expenses for the airlines. Reducing operating expenses is good when times are tight, but will also be appealing when (if) air travel picks up again.

    As technical people, we like to look at what technical innovations a new plane has. However, most people who travel view it as a fast, airborne bus, and not how technically advanced a plane is. Do you know anyone who will change their plane reservations to fly on a 'cooler' airplane? I actually know a few, but this is a miniscule niche. More efficiency is likely to be a bigger win for the airlines than the 'cool factor'.

  56. New Models == Virtual Competition with Airbus by Bravo_Two_Zero · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why? Why? Why?

    Simple. Boeing spent already paid for the new design software that allows them to build without prototypes in the 777 program. Yes, it seems like waste of money to go through the process to design an aircraft that, at the moment, most airlines aren't likely to use. Maybe it is, but it's a gamble, as an earlier poster pointed out.

    Consider this. Your primary competition is subsidized by Europoean governments. They've been touting a 747-killer (the 4xx program) for a couple of years now. Believe it or not, the 747 was (and is, depending on the routes) an extremely profitable aircraft for the airlines. Most of your money comes from cargo on overseas routes. 777s and 767ERs can't match that, though they do have a lower per-seat operational cost.

    You have to have a practical edge to sell to your customers, even when the market is bad. You own the small/midsize market around the world and even in Europe. Sure, the subsidized company takes a bite of your sales. What you can't have is Airbus eclipsing your technological superiority.

    As an added issue, you can't wait until the market appears for the new aircraft. You have to gamble, because modern airliner programs take years to produce a big, soaring hard part. If you wait, Airbus will step in with a new, closer-to-production product, and the preliminary orders will go to them.

    Could Boeing do a better job? Well, sure. Any company can. But don't forget that Boeing created the affordable jetliner era (707), the jumbo jet market (747) and the long-range Pacific-certified twin market (777). McDonnell Douglas gets the nod for the small jet market (DC-9), but they're now part of Boeing. So, they don't have an awful track record at picking markets. The added benefit is that Airbus tends to follow the Boeing lead, so they have to spend money on similar design programs in case Boeing hits paydirt.

    --


    Amateurs discuss tactics. Professionals discuss logistics.

    1. Re:New Models == Virtual Competition with Airbus by Submarine · · Score: 1

      Hum...

      As far as I know, Airbus had a large success with the A300 because 1/ contrary to is Boeing competitor, it could load standard cargo pallets 2/ it used less gas, in an era where airlines were still hit with high oil prices.

      Airbus tend introduced the first fly-by-wire airliner (the A320). It took years before Boeing caught up with the B777. This probably means that Airbus leads the way at least in some areas.

      As for subsidies, let us set the record straight:

      * Boeing is a major US military contractor. It is well known that US military procurement is a major source of corporate pork (as well as pork for the various constituencies of the US senators).

      In contrast, Airbus is not, at present, a military contractor. It has projects for a A400M military transportation plane, but so far this plane only exists in paper; furthermore I doubt it will be as profitable as the huge array of military jets that are sold by Boeing. One of the Airbus parent companies (EADS) has some military businesses (missiles) but it is smaller than Boeing's.

      * Airbus does not get straight subsidies. Instead, it gets refundable loans. Arguably, these loans save Airbus money because it gets them at prices inferior to commercial loaners and it does not risk not being able to repay them.

      * Airbus also benefits from government-financed research and development. I think this is also true of Boeing (watch the DARPA research grants).

    2. Re:New Models == Virtual Competition with Airbus by Bravo_Two_Zero · · Score: 2, Informative

      Those are more than a fair points to make, and I'd certainly have a hard time disagreeing about Boeing having some significant government support from defense contracts. I'd completely forgotten about the A300 and the standard cargo palette issue.

      And, I certainly wouldn't want to fly in a world where only one multinational company made all the planes. In retrospect, I could have been more clear that I was looking at the issue from a Boeing perspective, and they certainly see new model development as more of a gamble, given the fact that the failure of a commercial airliner program could mean thousands of jobs in Everett and significant losses that shareholders alone must cover (which is never good for that executive career path ;). Even if the bottom line can be padded by DoD sales, the executives in charge of the commercial airliner unit have to be in the black, at least as far as the shareholders are concerned.

      I thought about the fly-by-wire issue when writing my first post, but the thought that popped into my head was the (not unusual for any new development) crash of the A320 in Paris during its debut. It's not fair to view the A320 program based on that one incident, but the risk in development of non-traditional control linkages is why Boeing avoided the issue. In that regard, they didn't gamble, but that's as much a fear of irritating the FAA as much as anything. Heck, I also recall that there was nearly a wholesale pilot union revolt across the U.S. carriers with the 2-man crewing trend. I think Boeing felt they were already pushing the comfort level enough.

      And in the interest of equal time, I hope Boeing chooses something besides the brittle, flammable insulation on its electrical wiring in future projects. It's the Hindenburg all over again (TWA 800 == Hindenburg... Kerosene vapor == Hydrogen... burning insulation == doped-up zepplin skin, which were both the real and deserately-hidden causes because they pointed to a significantly larger design flaw).

      --


      Amateurs discuss tactics. Professionals discuss logistics.

    3. Re:New Models == Virtual Competition with Airbus by wdebruij · · Score: 1

      "Consider this. Your primary competition is subsidized by Europoean governments."

      well, according to
      the Economist.com article:

      "[...]
      For years, as they steadily lost market share to the European challenger, the Americans have been outspokenly critical of Airbus. In the 1980s the beef was the huge subsidies that European governments poured into the industry. Now that Airbus repays such launch aid, that is less relevant, especially as Boeing receives indirect subsidies through America's defence budget and space programme.
      [...]
      "

      Airbus is actually having to repay previous loans, while Boeing is still getting a steady cashflow by working for the US military.

      Your statement used to be true, however its validity date has long passed.

  57. Re:Different market, but Boeing are playing catchu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    It'll really be up against the A320/A330 rather than the A380.

    Exactly. Boeing is no more playing catch-up than Airbus is. Airbus was way behind the 747 in the big, long-haul market. Boeing's older 757 and 767 have been losing ground to the newer A330 in the midsize, mid- to long-range market. Airbus is trying to leap-frog Boeing with the A380, while at the same time Boeing is trying to leap-frog Airbus with the 7E7. Either there will be increased competition in both markets, or the market positions will be reversed. Who comes out ahead overall depends on whether the big plane market or the midsize plane market is larger.

    My money is on Boeing. They know the big plane market and its possibilities like no one else. They looked very seriously at building a newer competitor to the A380 and decided that a new, efficient midsize made much better market sense. Expect to see A330 sales take a big hit once the 7E7 is available, and Airbus to be in big trouble if their A380 market projections turn out to be wrong.

  58. Cut Codes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd rather not have cut codes at 30,000 feet or see someone browering the net.

  59. Airbus sales are way up... by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1

    Airbus was expecting to sell 175 aircraft this year. It's now revised its estimates upwards, to 300, despite the major downturn in the air travel business. Clearly, it's winning a lot of business and some of that business is being poached from Boeing.

    The twin-deck, four-aisle A380, which can sit 800 passengers in an all-economy configuration or 550 in a mixed configuration, is already flying off the shelves (if you'll pardon the pun) - Emirates, one of the Middle East's biggest carriers has just ordered 41 of the aircraft in what should be a $12.5 billion deal, as reported by the BBC today.

    No doubt that the Emirates deal will come in at lower than that figure (in bad times, aircraft manufacturers discount from their book prices) but it's a major win for Airbus and a major loss for Boeing at the same time.

    Not only is Boeing trying to compete with what many consider is an inferior product but it's also having to compete in what's increasingly a hostile market - the recent war in Iraq, which was opposed by the majority of the world, won't have improved the chances of American firms trying to win business in the Middle East and elsewhere.

    It might be time to dump your Boeing stock if you haven't already.

    --

    "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    1. Re:Airbus sales are way up... by jbwolfe · · Score: 2, Interesting

      re:Not only is Boeing trying to compete with what many consider is an inferior product...

      IMO,
      If you mean Boeing's products are inferior, I have to strongly disagree. I have flown both and find that on the issue of quality, Boeing has a significant advantage. Boeing also have a better approach to automation. However, Airbus are more afordable and cheaper to operate and maintain because they have achieved commonality (training, maintainence, parts) across models that Boeing have yet to achieve.

      --
      Have you ever noticed that anybody driving slower than you is an idiot, and anyone going faster than you is a maniac?
    2. Re:Airbus sales are way up... by Weh · · Score: 1

      How do you judge the quality of an airliner by being a passenger on one? The interior (i.e. comfort) of the plane is largely decided upon by the interior the airlines choose. I've flown a lot, mainly on Boeings but I've been on a few Airbuses, Fokkers, smaller craft (even a DC 3) too. I find that the comfort mainly depends on the weather and on the interior (e.g. leg-room, seat comfort, service levels. etc.)

    3. Re:Airbus sales are way up... by jbwolfe · · Score: 2, Informative

      Good question. I would say the answer to that is the same as for a user of any product, be it an airplane or even a software application. Any user can be a judge of the quality of the product in question simply by using it. The relevance of their opinion can be assessed by their perspective, training and experience.
      To elaborate on my previous comment, I was speaking not from the perspective of a pasesnger but from that of the pilot. I have flown (piloted and passengered) both Boeing (737,757,767,777) and Airbus(A319,A320) and I stand by my opinion that Boeing build aircraft of a higher quality, and furthermore, are less difficult to operate (pilot).

      --
      Have you ever noticed that anybody driving slower than you is an idiot, and anyone going faster than you is a maniac?
    4. Re:Airbus sales are way up... by Ben+Hutchings · · Score: 1
      Emirates, one of the Middle East's biggest carriers has just ordered 41 of the aircraft

      They ordered 41 aircraft, but "only" 21 A380s.

  60. Bah, I say by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They made a big fuss about the 777 in my high school engineering class in the mid-90s.

    Number of times I have flown on a 777? Zero.

    OK, so they're new. How about the older ones? 767? Nope. 757? Once, and that's because I was on the first leg of a flight that kept going from Philly (where I got off) to somewhere overseas.

    I have a feeling that most people are just flying on updated versions of the 737s from the 70s. If you fly Continental or Southwest most of the time like me, then it's a sure bet you'll get something like that. The only possible exception is that Continental has a few MD-80s (I think) in the fleet that pop up now and then.

    Maybe if you're rich and do the globetrotting thing, then you'll get to see these nifty planes. The rest of us are stuck in the same old cramped, noisy, wobbly planes that have been flying for years.

    1. Re:Bah, I say by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sheesh. I typically fly on United, although I've done Delta and Lufthansa a few times in the past. I've flown on:

      A320
      A340
      737
      757
      767
      777
      747

      (and, in the past)
      727
      DC-8
      DC-9
      DC-10

      I guess you just gotta pick your airline and routes. If you're going somewhere not too terribly far away, like short hops within the country, you're probably going to be on a 737 or A320. That's the market those planes are designed for.

      Also, the low budget airlines tend to get one low-cost model and stick with it, for instance Southwest with their 737s or JetBlue with their A320s. It reduces their operating overhead costs if they only need the equipment and training for one particular airplane, allowing them to charge less for their services.

      Skimp on service too and you've got a recipe for a low-cost, no-frills airline... but you can't really do overseas or long-haul flights in one of those little planes.

  61. Re:DIRRTY DIRRTY DEVELOPERS! by oni · · Score: 1

    the nose in that artist's rendetion is very distinctive.

  62. Possible 7E7 sales to USAF? by MtViewGuy · · Score: 4, Informative

    I think one possibility is that Boeing may be pushing for sales of airplanes based on the 7E7 design to the USAF.

    This means air-refuelling tankers, 2-3 VIP transports, a combination AWACS/JSTARS airborne radar platform and Electronic Intelligence/Signals Intelligence (ELINT/SIGINT) planes to replace the aging RC-135W/X fleet.

    1. Re:Possible 7E7 sales to USAF? by goates · · Score: 1

      Actually the USAF just ordered 100 tankers based on the 767. Boeing is also developing a replacement for the AWACS/J-STARS based on the 767. The 767 is a proven design, which makes it a much safer choice.

    2. Re:Possible 7E7 sales to USAF? by MtViewGuy · · Score: 1

      However, Boeing has yet to fully commit to production of 767-based tankers and the new AWACS/JSTARS plane based on the 767-400ER.

      I can see Boeing producing 70-80 767 tankers to the USAF, then production switches over to a 7E7-based tanker for as many as 200-250 planes. The current KC-135 fleet is aging rapidly, even with the re-engining of much of the KC-135 fleet to F108 (CFM56) engines in the KC-135R configuration.

      The combo AWACS/JSTARS based on the 767-400ER is still in the study phase, so there is still time for Boeing to design a 7E7 variant that can fill this role down the road. A more intriguing possibility is a 7E7-based plane for ELINT/SIGINT operations like those performed by the RC-135's in the Cobra Ball configuration; the new plane will offer more overall space for sensors and data-processing equipment to analyze hostile RF emissions just for starters, not to mention more comfortable acccommodations for the 25 or so crew members the plane will likely carry.

  63. ground effect by Hard_Code · · Score: 1

    Do any major airplane manufacturers envision any ground-effect models? Just curious.

    --

    It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
  64. 757 & 737 replacement by EQ · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "I still don't see how this plane is going to solve Boeing's sales problems."

    Consider that 800 737s are in the air worldwide at any given time. One 737 takes off every 6 seconds on average world-wide (per the NTSB). Its become the DC-3 of the latter quarter of the 20th century and first decade of the 21st.

    Also consider that the 737 is coming to the end of its design lifecycle with the -700 series. And the 757 has been partially superseded by the 767, yet nothing quite fills its old niche (737 too small, 767 too big).

    Airlines are looking for cheaper to operate, more fuel efficient aircraft that will lure back the business traveler, in the 180-210 passenger size (which probably constitutes a majority of the revenues for regional and US carriers).

    The 7E7 fits that description quite well. So thats why they are spending the money - theres a market for this aircraft, the same market Boeing has dominated with the 737/757, and one that will be opening up by the time this aircraft becomes operational. The biggest gain is in operating efficiency (modular electronics, easier crew servicing of aircraft, etc) and fuel efficiency.

    As an example, if United could drop its operating and fuel costs both by 10% annually, it would be profitable to the tune of several hundred million dollars, instead of in bankruptcy court.

    --
    Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo! http://goo.gl/J9bkO
    1. Re:757 & 737 replacement by MtViewGuy · · Score: 1

      I think Boeing's next airplane project after the 7E7 will be developing a replacement for the 737-600/700/800/900 series.

      It will probably be a revival of the 7J7 project from the late 1980's, but instead of a propfan engine (though I think modern technology could make a propfan viable again) the new plane could use uprated CFM56 or V2500 engines. The plane will likely seat about 120 to 170 passengers, sport a wider fuselage, will likely use the same composite-heavy structural design being planned for the 7E7.

    2. Re:757 & 737 replacement by Oswald · · Score: 1

      As I recall, the propfan was phenomenally fuel-efficient. Can the improved turbojet engines you mention approach the propfan's thriftiness?

    3. Re:757 & 737 replacement by thogard · · Score: 1

      Fuel costs aren't that major. A typical 737 burns about 2.5 tons of fuel for an hour flight and the inital climb is a large part of that. The fuel cost is only about $10 to $20 per flight for the short hops. Changes in their catering can have a larger effect on the cost the flight than the fuel. What is odd is that profit per area used for 1st class is now lower than cattle class. Makes me wonder why I'm subsidizing 1st class.

    4. Re:757 & 737 replacement by MtViewGuy · · Score: 1

      Yes, propfan engines can be very fuel-efficient, but first they have to correct the noise problem that plagued early propfans like GE's UDF. I think that can be done by switching from eight to ten blades per spinner and very careful design of the fan blade itself. If it works, the result could be as much as 20% fuel savings over today's A320 or 737-800 jets, something that a LOT of airlines are interested in given that fuel costs are a large fraction of the overhead costs of running an airline.

  65. Electronic Flight Bag by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    The really cool thing that this article does not
    talk about is the changes coming for cockpit
    instrumentation. One of the things Boeing was
    showing off at the Paris airshow was the new
    Electronic Flight Bag, which is basically a
    multi-function flatpanel display which could
    ultimately replace a variety of fixed function
    displayes and paper charts. Unlike previous
    displays, this one is an 'open architecture'
    that can be loaded with new programs and features
    over time. Of course the EFB's operating system
    and any programs loaded on it will likely still
    require FAA certification, which last I checked
    required careful auditing of every line of source
    code. This begs the questions: What operating
    system does this thing run? :)

  66. Re: Metric by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know this is way off topic, but I just thought you ought to know that 6'3" is actually 190.5 cm.

  67. Flying off the shelves by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since when is that a pun? It's an expression.

    KnockTurn Alley, that's a pun

  68. Re: Metric by eugene_t00ms · · Score: 1

    am aware of that...but decided to round down and not appear anal...

    *blink* *blink*

    --
    Belief that Perspectives matter more than Facts = Mark of the Truly Ignorant
  69. Airbus, Boeing and the WTO by Hittite+Creosote · · Score: 1
    Oh please, AirBus is give customers 20% discounts.

    On the list price. No-one ever pays the list price, no-one is ever expected to pay the list price.

    Their planes are dirt cheap and they are being subsidized by European government aid.

    Hello? Illegal US tax breaks for exporters mean anything to you? The ones that they give to big companies like GE, Boeing and Microsoft?

    Plus they aren't making a profit that is for sure.

    In this market? No. Boeing suffered a first quarter loss of $478m, and they get plenty of nice, fat US military orders. EADS (major shareholders of Airbus) have reported a first quarter loss for 2003 of 93 million Euros, so they appear to be doing rather better.

  70. Answers by ordord00 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I think most people following the airplane builders knew the Sonic Cruiser was dead before birth; but I still don't see how this plane is going to solve Boeing's sales problems.

    The main problem Boeing is facing is that Airbus has the most efficient long haul carrier as of right now. The 7E7 is expected to be ~20% more efficient than Airbus' long hauler.

    Several people here have asked a couple of questions that I think need to be addressed:

    1) How is this going to solve Boeings sales problems?

    Well, this is not expected to be a cure all for Boeing. Being 20% more efficient than Airbus' best long haul carrier will go a long way to making inroads for sales. Other things being done by Boeing include redesigning the 737 (a short range carrier) with winglets and new composite materials to reduce weight and creating new version of the 747 (the 400ER). The first 400ER was just delivered to Korean Airlines this week.

    Internationally, there are other reasons Boeing has a hard time competing.

    2) How can Boeing design a plane in such a short time?

    I saw someone answer that large reuse of old designs, such as using the same general airframe and what not, made it possible. The problem is that the 7E7 does not use the standard 7x7 airframe. The standard is usually called a double bubble and if you look at any previous 7x7 you will see what I mean. The 7E7 will have a single bubble airframe. This is a new design for Boeing.

    How will they develop the plane so fast? Two ways: First a large portion of the electronics and other interior assemblies are being contracted out to other companies. Boeing will act as a large system integrator. Second, Boeing learned how to overcome the prototype manufacturing problems that crop up when moving from paper to the "real thing" with the 777. Using Catia and some other CAD programs Boeing can assemble a plane on computer before assembling it in real life thus allowing them to fix all the pieces that do not properly fit before manufacture. This used to be a major factor in the time to market for planes.

    3) How internet ready will it be?

    Probably as internet ready as some of Boeings other planes.

    1. Re:Answers by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It is true that Airbus has problems with corruption, but it is completely hypocritical to say "poor Boeing has trouble competing with corrupt Airbus".

      Fact is Boeing is every bit as corrupt as Airbus. See for example this (http://www.pogo.org/p/contracts/ca-020509-bailout .html) where they tried lease some planes to the govt for 9 billion more than it would cost to buy them.

    2. Re:Answers by ordord00 · · Score: 1

      I never said "poor Boeing." I said they had trouble competing internationally. That article makes it clear that Boeing was doing the same things as Airbus until the FCA was passed in the USA. I was in no means was trying to defend Boeing. I am just presenting the facts that I know about their commercial airliner business.

      The issue with the tankers is not so clear cut corruption as Airbus' bribing government employees is. If the US government had been willing to sanction that deal, it would have been considered a very bad business move for the Dept. of Defense...but corruption? Please. This is a capitalist society. Any company can sell/lease whatever it wants at whatever price. The government does not have to buy it. If they needed tankers that bad and could not get the deal they wanted from Boeing, I am sure Lockheed could have come up with some sort of competitive offer.

      PS: I am biased as I work for Boeing (but certainly don't speak for them). And I work in Integrated Defense Systems/NASA Systems, not the Commercial Airplanes.

    3. Re:Answers by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 1

      The airforce and some senators were trying to push the deal through without congressional approval.

      Well it is such a bad deal that frankly corruption is the only explanation why it was supported by the air force.

    4. Re:Answers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Well, this is not expected to be a cure all for Boeing. Being 20% more efficient than Airbus' best long haul carrier will go a long way to making inroads for sales. Other things being done by Boeing include redesigning the 737 (a short range carrier) with winglets and new composite materials to reduce weight and creating new version of the 747 (the 400ER). The first 400ER was just delivered to Korean Airlines this week.


      Wrong...The first 747-400ER was delivered to Qantas in November 2002
  71. 7E7? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are they going to change their existing planes' model numbers to 7.77E2, 7.67E2, etc?

  72. Re:I just saw the first line of the source code... by S.I.O. · · Score: 2, Funny

    Hey, this new aircraft is internet-enabled!
    So it will look like this:

    #include "boeing/obsolete/777.h" /* new headers for 7E7 */
    #undef FLIGHT_SECURITY
    #include "windows.h"

  73. Mod by geekoid · · Score: 1

    +1 Brillant

    Patent that baby!

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  74. White Bread Airplane by chriswaco · · Score: 1

    What a boring, piece of crap, 1960's vintage airliner Boeing is designing.

    Oooo....it's 10% more efficient. Who cares? Everybody hates flying now because the airlines have made the experience worse than going to the dentist.

    How about they design a cool, comfortable airplane that people actually WANT to travel on?

    The year is 2003. We should be flying at Mach 1 or 2 by now. I guarantee you that people would pay 10% more to save 2 hours on a 5 hour flight. Plus, you'd get more passengers per day on a single plane and each pilot would be able to do an extra flight a day too.

    Boeing is taking the boring, safe, dull approach that all big companies take when they become risk averse. Unfortunately, the cost of entry into the airplane industry is so high it's unlikely that another company is going to step in with bold new designs.

    So for the next 30 years - and probably the rest of my life - we'll be flying at the same speed in the same uncomfortable seats as we did 20 years ago. feh!

  75. swooooosh! by butane_bob2003 · · Score: 1

    I think this plane missed the internet boom by about 3 years. I try to spend my time on a plane in quite repose, a short and much needed break from the connected world. No really, how long will it take for them to ban first person shooters during flights. Seriously. If my buddy is about to be sniped by a Georgian rebel in Ghost Recon, you can bet I'm going to shout "Turn and BURN! You got one on your ass! Shoot that M* F*!" really loud. The I'll remember Im on an international flight and not in the Ural mountains on a recon patrol. So will there be strict rules about gaming on flights?

    --


    TallGreen CMS hosting
  76. Funny Salon Piece about the Dreamliner name by Frankus · · Score: 1

    Patrick Smith, an out-of-work pilot that writes for Salon, encouraged people to vote down the Dreamliner name that the French apparently overwhelmingly approved of.

  77. Who Builds What by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Boeing has little to do with the seats or entertainment systesm (MAS, Rockwel/Colins, etc). Sure they have a company that also sells Internet access (Conextion), but the cabin is outfitted as an aftermarket add-on by the airlines.

  78. Re: Metric by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    '195' is rounding down from 190.5? I'll keep that trick in mind next time a girl asks me how well endowed I am... ;)

  79. The customer is killing the airlines by xdroop · · Score: 1
    The planes from both Airbus and Boeing have "economy", "standard" and "luxury" seating configurations. Guess which configuration gets used by the airlines most.

    This is because the pursuit of the lowest fares is driving service out of the business.

    Think about it: you are going to fly somewhere. You can do it for $600, or $275. Which are you going to take? Which are you going to force your employee, flying on your nickel, to take? Right!

    The result, airlines cut costs (and undoubtadly corners) in an effort to keep the seats filled, while playing silly games with travel agents, web sites, and walk-up to ensure that those who can be suckered into paying more, do so. Everyone has to play the same game, because price wins. They are driving themselves out of business in an effort to avoid being driven out of business.

    Eventually, taking an airplane will be about as glamorous as taking the bus. And everyone will whine about missing the good old days, when you got a decent meal, planes ran on time, and the flight attendants were perky. They will forget that their airfare back then was three times what it is now, but will still wonder why there is no service and airlines are going out of business.

    --
    you should read everything on the internet as if it had "but I'm probably talking out of my ass" appended to it.
  80. Great... by 159753 · · Score: 1

    Just what we need, computers on planes so that people can hack them. However, I do like the MS Fligh Sim idea. 10 bucks says that they will charge you every minute you use the internet. Also, you wont be able to use it on certain parts of the flight. Personaly, I think the internet idea is stupid. 7E7? "e" this, "i" that, give me a break...

  81. so true, and also.. by scotty777 · · Score: 1
    Boeing are going after a different kind of flexibility...

    Boeing also favors twins, rather than quads for long range

    Twins have a better cheaper flight profile: long range twins get to altitude much faster than quads. a twin needs to be able to take off with an engine out, so the normal "excess thrust" is 50%. With 4 engines, an engine out leaves you with 3 engines, so each engine is not 100% of the needed take-off thrust, rather it's 33%. That means that the excess thrust with all four going is much less. when we compare the A340 to the 777, at the same range, weight, payload etc, the excess thrust of the 777 is 3 times as high as that of the A340. Excess thrust is the source of altitude gains and acceleration. So the 777 usually gets up to cruise speed / altitude in 1/3 of the time. in a Singapore to Europe situation this is 30 minutes vs 90 minutes.

    For long-range aircraft, which are optimized for cruise, this has a huge impact on fuel burn. On some routes, the block fuel per passenger for the 777 is 60% of that taken on by the A340!

    The twin noise signature is less, too. Noise near airports is also vastly reduced, because the twin climbs out very steeply.

    Engine maintenance costs are also reduced, since the number of engines maintained dominates costs, not their thrust.

    cheers

    1. Re:so true, and also.. by sql*kitten · · Score: 1

      For long-range aircraft, which are optimized for cruise, this has a huge impact on fuel burn. On some routes, the block fuel per passenger for the 777 is 60% of that taken on by the A340!

      That's an excellent point, but some airlines (like Virgin) have said that they find that customers prefer quads for long haul; they feel safer. Be interesting to see whether that really offsets the cost of the fuel.

  82. Re: replace the 737 by scotty777 · · Score: 1
    Why replace the 737?

    [1] the structural efficiency of 737's when compared to the equivelant 318-19-20-21 is 15% better!
    [2] the wing has a better l/d ratio
    [3] the cockpit is much more flexible, which keeps 737 training/cross training costs lower.
    [4] the bagage & freight space is much greater in the 737 too!
    [5] for the passengers, the bagage bins are larger, too

    Not only have more new-generation (737-600,700,800,900) 737's been built than A318/19/20/21s, but the most profitable airlines all fly 737's. I read not long ago that somone calculated that 85% of worldwide airline profits were coming from 737 operations!

    cheers

  83. An e-Boeing??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Could someone please tell Boeing the dot-com bubble is over?

    Thanks in advance

  84. Re: get bums on seats... by scotty777 · · Score: 1
    The three main reasons that people fly (or don't) are: PRICE, PRICE, PRICE
    The main reason folks choose one airline over another is: PRICE
    Secondary reason for frequent flyers is flyer miles.
    Secondary reason for others (90% of seats sold) is: schedule (frequency) or non-stop vs. connection

    The 747's, DC10's, and L1011s were very successful because the engines had much better fuel consumption (lower cost) than the DC8 and 707.

    Boeing's guess is that if the seat/mile cost is the same for the 7e7 and the A380, then the load factors will be higher on the 7e7. Why? Because they can fly many long routes in thinner markets that can't fill up a A380. And when the you have 2000 people/day on route, with a single A380 flight, and 3 7e7 flights, folks will prefer the schedule choices that the 7e7 flights offer. All of which leaves just a few "mega" corridors where it's possible to run 380's.
    cheers

  85. the brave new world of flying by 73939133 · · Score: 1

    It can be very entertaining for all ages as you can brower the net, check emails, weather, watch movies (on demand), listen to music (on demand) or even cut codes some 30,000 feet in the sky!

    All while being curled up in a fetal position in the amazingly "space efficient" seats.

    But don't worry, the butt-sensors in the seats will tell you if your leg has merely fallen asleep or whether you are dying from deep vein thrombosis. And with its Internet connectivity, they'll have the ambulance right at the airport when you arrive, without pilot intervention even. Isn't technology great?

  86. bull puckey! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This bird will be digital from design to rollout. That reduces costs in a huge way.
    It also reduces manufacturing and order lead times in a big way. Final assembly is expected to take no more than three days, down from 30 days for the typical aluminum bird.
    It will also be much easier to tweak the airframe design for variants. Again, that affects cost in a huge way.
    What's more, the reduced labor hours in the building process is a path that Airbus can't go down, since its real origins are a make-work program.
    The 380 us just another French prestige project, like Concorde! The "contracts" they have on their "order books" are unlike anything the industry has ever seen. Customers can cancel orders up to the day of delivery, with no penalty! It remains to be seen how much money they actually get paid for them.

  87. fly-by-wire systems by Submarine · · Score: 1

    Fly by wire systems are very large networks of numerical filters with feedback. I would not be surprised if they included such constraints. Still, as you rightly point out, such constraints are hard to "get right".

  88. This is the beginning of the End for Boeing. by Dolemite_the_Wiz · · Score: 1

    Boeing still hasn't figured out that their one-dimensional business plan for commercial only aircraft was severely at risk after September 11th.

    As a result, 33,000 people were laid off from Boeing since Sept 11th.

    Boeing needs to come up with a different business that IS NOT aircraft, aerospace or military related. The People that live in the Cities where Boeing plants are at are tired of this 'every 10 or so year' layoff cycle.

    Dolemite
    _________________

    --
    Save the World! Use a Quote!
  89. not so by scotty777 · · Score: 1
    The first glass cockpit was the 757 / 767 cockpit. The chief engineer was none other that the current head of Boeing Commercial. This was not only a cockpit with glass displays, it was the first non-military (commercially certified) digital cockpit. The design work was done in the 70's and the planes were in went into commercial service in 1980 or so.

    As to the use of composites in Airbus products, there has been a steady trend towards increased use of composites in commercial aircraft everywhere, and Airbus has not led this trend by any strech of the imagination. First they were used in fairings, then floors and in some non-critical flight control surfaces such as spoilers, later in primary flight control surfaces, and later as skins in the tail sections. Primary structure such as spars started with the 777 tail. Boeing is now going to build both the fuselage barrel and the wings out of carbon fiber composites. This is very definitely a leap forward!

    By the way, Airbus is kind of moving in the same direction with the A380, because the top skin of the body will have some fiberglass glued to the aluminum skin! They call this technical leap "GLARE". Look it up, it's a big advance they say.

    But seriously, the highly automated design/build that Boeing is embarking on is the real advance. It will drop Boeings costs to such a degree that they will easily keep whatever share of the market they want, while remaining highly profitable. Boeing Commercial is makeing a 10% return on investment (ROI) even in todays market.

    Airbus makes safe airplanes that are comparable in many ways to Boeing airplanes. Remember that the purpose of technology is not to get laid. An engineer may make beautiful things, but what he ALWAYS does is to "make something for a shilling, that any fool can make for a pound". (quote by the British engineer / author Nevil Shute).

    Cheers

    1. Re:not so by salimma · · Score: 1
      The first glass cockpit was the 757 / 767 cockpit.

      Ah right. Must have gotten my facts wrong then - read it so many years ago I could not remember. Would the A320 be the possessor of the first fully fly-by-wire control system then?
      But seriously, the highly automated design/build that Boeing is embarking on is the real advance. It will drop Boeings costs to such a degree that they will easily keep whatever share of the market they want, while remaining highly profitable

      Good for Boeing. It is about time to produce a replacement for 767 anyway - if the market for A380 were to take off though, Boeing executives would be kicking themselves. Then again Airbus did OK for two decades without a 747-class aircraft.
      --
      Michel
      Fedora Project Contribut
    2. Re:not so by scotty777 · · Score: 1

      A320 be the possessor of the first fully fly-by-wire control system

      I think that may be right. Bear in mind though, that fly by wire, like composites, has crept into commercial service bit by bit, starting in the mid 1960's. I believe that the Concorde had some sort of fly-by-wire. Fly by wire was analog back then.

      Even the A320 was only introduced with fly-by-wire in the aerodynamic flight controls. The full authority digital engine controls (FADEC) came later. Even today, I believe that the back up for gear extension may be a manual crank back in the cabin.

      cheers

  90. whatever... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't want internet, food or even a comfortable seat. All I want is a bathroom and the cheapest fare possible, shit I want the airplane equivalent of the Maharashtra express.

  91. "Dreamliner" indeed! by KC7GR · · Score: 1

    Ok... Fair warning, fellow slashdot readers. This is a rant. I make no bones about it. If that's not the kind of thing you want to read, then it's probably best just to move on.

    I know exactly why they called it the 'Dreamliner.' Because it's probably just the kind of aircraft that the current crop of Boeing execs dream about in terms of continuing to outsource design and subassembly manufacturing, thus worsening the unemployment rate in the Puget Sound region even further.

    The 7E7 will be a Great Thing, yes... Assuming that you want to live in Russia, China, Japan, Chile, or one of the other locations where Boeing has "Global Partners" (spit!)

    Don't believe me? I was with Boeing for six years before being laid off. In that time, I saw several "Buy/Build" charts for the current crop of aircraft, like the 737, 757, and others. It was outright scary to see how many parts of those planes were designed or built overseas, and shipped in for final assembly here (at least 30% by my estimate).

    Don't even get me started on the horror stories I was hearing from friends on the assembly line, shortly before I left, about out-of-tolerance parts causing more assembly delays and problems than had been seen in the last five years.

    I think, given the current corporate mindset of short-term gain over long-term survival, that it's only going to get worse. Yes, I could be way wrong, and I will be the first to admit that I'm more than a little biased, thanks to seeing loads of my would-be colleagues in all levels of engineering get the boot (myself as well).

    However, I might be less bitter if the company hadn't (a), moved their corporate HQ to Chicago for no good reason that I (or a lot of other folk) could see; (b), Sent most of the engineering services to Russia; (c), Hung out the final-assembly location of the 7E7 like a carrot on a stick, and invited various states to bid on it like some third-rate auction prize.

    Boeing has, IMO, long since forgotten or destroyed the values that made it the great company it once was. They've been in a tailspin ever since that disaster of a merger with McDonnel-Douglas, and I would be very much surprised if there were anything other than the defense & space side left in business ten years from now (if that long).

    Vent completed. I feel a bit better now.

    --

    Bruce Lane, KC7GR,

    Blue Feather Technologies

  92. Crash prevention... by evilviper · · Score: 1

    When is it that manufacturers are going to get off their asses and build planes with redundant systems? It was some time ago that a problem was announced that said turning one direction, then sharply the other direction, will result in the tail breaking off completely! WTF? Why in the hell aren't there duplicate systems? It's not like it would be difficult at all to stick a second tail on a jumbo jet... So why does no-one do it? Imagine how many people will be happy to pay more for a ticket on a plane that just doesn't ever crash, even if the tail falls off!

    I think the same thing also needs to be implimented for the primary set of wings... Have a second set that isn't too near to the mains, and have all the controls completely independent. In fact, just so there is no single point of failure, why not have a second (one-manned) cockpit at the tail of the plane so that the plane can be flown even if the entire control system malfunctions?

    Come on now... People don't fly, primarily because they are afraid of crashing. Improve the safety, and you'll improve the number of flyers. It would help if they could decrease check-in times as well, but that's an entirely seperate issue.

    The only real alternative to improving the reliability of large jets is to improve the effeciency of small jets. The problem there is just that the salary for the flight crews can't be made more effecient by much, so it'll always be more expensive than mass air transit. Then again, traveling buy bus or train isn't very popular, so I guess people are willing to pay more for more convient transit... Of course, it just happens to be safer as well.

    --
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  93. Re: get bums on seats... by salimma · · Score: 1
    Boeing's guess is that if the seat/mile cost is the same for the 7e7 and the A380, then the load factors will be higher on the 7e7

    True, but using smaller planes leave you more hostage to pilot strikes? Probably a small factor though, especially considering that if all the pilots strike it does not matter anyway.

    Maintenance costs might be higher for 3 planes instead of one as well, no matter how reliable. Similar to the mainframe vs. PC server argument.

    --
    Michel
    Fedora Project Contribut
  94. Re: get bums on seats... by scotty777 · · Score: 1

    Sure, all other things being equal, an airline prefers to maintain 1 aircraft, rather than three. What really impacts costs though is numbers of types in a fleet. The smaller planes / fewer types model offers scheduleing flexibility, training cost reductions, parts cost reductions, more markets, improved frequencies, lower noise (big planes make more noise), and so on.

    Note that the only really profitable carriers these days are those with a single type. The carriers with the most types are the worst shape. Imagine a low cost intercontinental carrier that operates like Ryan Air, or Southwest! That would really hammer the big guys. Small planes, high frequency, flexible scheduleing, serving markets like London - New York by flying from Stansted to Laguardia or Newark, or even that new Southwest destination out on Long Island! Or Seattle to Chitose or Pusan!

    3D GPS approaches and free flight (no airways) will also drive the industry in that direction.

    Cheers

  95. Swissair reborn by idontneedanickname · · Score: 1

    A new company, swiss, has replaced swissair. There is a rather large discussion about this replacement, and if it's going to work (I.e. be profitable, be able to stay aloft), in Switzerland.

  96. Re: get bums on seats... by salimma · · Score: 1
    Note that the only really profitable carriers these days are those with a single type.

    I concur on that. Although, what carriers settle for now seems to be one type per class, and preferably one make for the whole fleet.

    Southwest in USA and Ryanair in Europe get away with just operating B737s, but these are short-haul carriers. The new Boeing 7E7 is still a medium-size long-haul plane, so airlines would still have to fly at least two models to make ends meet.

    --
    Michel
    Fedora Project Contribut