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Airbus A380, Once the Future of Aviation, May Cease Production (nytimes.com)

The days may be numbered for the world's largest passenger aircraft. An anonymous reader shares a report: Airbus, the European aerospace group that makes the A380 superjumbo, said on Monday that it would have to end production of the plane if its only major customer, Emirates, did not order more (Editor's note: the link may be paywalled; alternative source). The admission by John Leahy, the company's chief operating officer, was the latest indication that Airbus miscalculated more than two decades ago when it bet that clogged runways would create demand for larger planes that could deliver more people with fewer landing slots. Instead, airlines bypassed the major hubs and ordered midsize planes that could fly directly between regional airports.

[...] When Airbus started delivering the A380 a decade ago, after spending $25 billion to develop it, the company based near Toulouse, France, saw the plane as the solution to airport congestion and to increased demand for air travel. Only so many planes can land at an airport in any given day, so Airbus reasoned that planes carrying more people would allow airports to absorb more passengers. The A380 can carry more than 500 passengers while also offering amenities like showers, first-class suites and a bar.

298 comments

  1. Not surprising... by wbr1 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    In many topologies, a network with more nodes allows for more fail over paths and more flexibility, albeit at the expense of more complex routing. Routing however is not an issue - just look to the IT world for examples.

    So, it is not surprising - especially of the cost of mid-size planes decreases - that airlines would go this way.

    --
    Silence is a state of mime.
    1. Re:Not surprising... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Packet loss is big problem in this example...and Airlines run on what seems to be a token ring network (hub and spoke) that gets nerfed every time there is an issue of any kind. Point-to-point travel is still preferable from a reliability standpoint even if the network model is more flexible and lower cost.

    2. Re:Not surprising... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's the same with UK railway lines in the South of England. The main train ticket website would always list the quickest route as taking an Intercity into Central London and then another one going out to whatever other outlying town or city you wanted to go (Hub network). Then when you actually made your journey, any major disruption in London like an accident, snow or rain would require seeking an alternative route that didn't go through London. That meant two or three short train journeys plus a 10 minute wait on each platform.

    3. Re:Not surprising... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Routing is not an issue"... says the guy who has clearly never had to write software to perform the task.

      Coming from someone who has: trust me, routing is an unforgiving bitch who will not hesitate to fuck you over fully and completely in ways you never thought possible.

      Then again, some of the trouble I've encountered came from having to deal with a multi-dimensional, cyclic, directed path-graph with cycles filtered out, per dimension, at run-time. If you don't know what that is, enjoy your fortune. You're a luckier man than I.

    4. Re:Not surprising... by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Routing is easier when most flights are direct, because you avoid the cascading delays common for "hub-and-spoke" routing.

      Passenger routing and packet routing are not totally analogous, because packets don't get angry if they have to spend six hours in Atlanta.

      Also, even for hub-to-hub flights, big twin engine planes like the 777 are cheaper to operate per passenger-mile, mostly because of better fuel efficiency. The 777 is now certified for trans-ocean flights, so it competes directly with the A380 everywhere.

      So does it ever make sense to buy a new A380? I don't think so.

    5. Re:Not surprising... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Packets can also be resent with little impact if they get lost or corrupted. Not so much with planes (esp. with large humanoid packet payloads).

    6. Re:Not surprising... by Richard_at_work · · Score: 5, Informative

      The 777 has been "certified for trans-ocean flights" from day one - its the only aircraft to achieve ETOPS 207, which gave it the ability to cross the Pacific, and that was well before the A380 came on the scenes.

      The A380 comes into its own when you look at slot restricted airports - O&D (origin and destination) traffic from many of the worlds hubs has simply continued to grow, even in the "age of point to point", so people obviously want to travel to hubs for reasons other than going elsewhere afterward. The problem comes when these airports become so congested that they can't just accept another aircraft landing or take off - so you have to increase the size of the aircraft rather than add a second flight.

      So yeah, it makes sense for some airlines to buy A380s, but those airlines it makes sense to do so have already bought it.

    7. Re:Not surprising... by q_e_t · · Score: 2

      Graph theory applies to both.

    8. Re:Not surprising... by q_e_t · · Score: 1

      It's easier, provided you have enough smaller aircraft, and people, to do it, and enough landing spots at each location.

      For example, if everyone wants to fly to London, from New York, Paris, and Munich, you might run out of slots. If you make everyone go to Paris first, and get on a big plane, they don't. That's the bet Airbus made. Of course, in fact people want to go to Birmingham and Manchester too, not always through London, although to go across the Atlantic, often you do.

      With automation, you could envisage many more small aircraft, landing more closely together, but the efficiency in terms of fuel per passenger probably wouldn't be very good.

    9. Re: Not surprising... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      That actually sounds really fun.

    10. Re:Not surprising... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      " just look to the IT world for examples. "

      So you'd rather have 1000 56kbps modems than one 50mbps line?

      Since we are talking about people or data carried after all.

    11. Re:Not surprising... by Carewolf · · Score: 4, Funny

      "Routing is not an issue"... says the guy who has clearly never had to write software to perform the task.

      Coming from someone who has: trust me, routing is an unforgiving bitch who will not hesitate to fuck you over fully and completely in ways you never thought possible.

      Then again, some of the trouble I've encountered came from having to deal with a multi-dimensional, cyclic, directed path-graph with cycles filtered out, per dimension, at run-time. If you don't know what that is, enjoy your fortune. You're a luckier man than I.

      I really hope my travel route doesn't go multidimensional, is cyclic or my plane gets filtered out at runtime..

    12. Re:Not surprising... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it's not surprising why didn't you speak up on this earlier? Because hindsight is 20/20.

    13. Re:Not surprising... by FormOfActionBanana · · Score: 1

      A single domestic American traveler's journey may be a token ring topology, but hub-and-spoke is not.

      --
      Take off every 'sig' !!
    14. Re:Not surprising... by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 2

      Routing is more efficient with point-to-point links, just terribly less economical. Going from FAT to HEL will always require at least one connection, because it is unlikely that there is even one passenger per day wanting to take that route average. Where that connection point can be somewhere in the middle, and bisect other major routes you have a natural hub.

      The A380 failed because it was not effective for enough markets. It was great the Mideast carriers, but not a big hit in China. It also failed because Boeing put extra money into the 747-8 (a failure as well). Rationally, they planned for too high of an output rate, and should have started with a plan to be profitable at 12/year.

      But, Airbus is astronger manufacturer for their failure. Even without the 380, they are extremely well positioned for the next 15-20 years.

    15. Re: Not surprising... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1,000 56k modems is better than even single point to point gigE if you are are trying to connect more than two points.

    16. Re:Not surprising... by spineboy · · Score: 1

      In November 2009, the Airbus A330 became the first aircraft to receive ETOPS-240 approval, which has since been offered by Airbus as an option.[10]

      On December 12, 2011, Boeing received type-design approval from the U.S. FAA for up to 330-minute extended operations for its 777-200LR, 777-300ER, 777F and 777-200ER equipped with GE engines, and with Rolls-Royce and Pratt & Whitney engines expected to follow.[11] The first ETOPS-330 flight took place on 1 December 2015 with Air New Zealand connecting Auckland to Buenos Aires on a Boeing 777-200ER.[12] On May 28, 2014, the Boeing 787 Dreamliner received its ETOPS-330 certificate from the FAA.[13]

      The first time that ETOPS-330 approval was given to a four-engined aircraft was in February 2015, to the Boeing 747-8 Intercontinental.[14]

      In October 2014 EASA certified the Airbus A350XWB to ETOPS-370.

      --
      ..........FULL STOP.
    17. Re:Not surprising... by arglebargle_xiv · · Score: 5, Funny

      That's nothing compared to the weird routing I got from the German rail site when I wanted to go from Berlin to London. The route went straight into Belgium, pivoted down into France via some tiny little port I'd never heard of, Dunk-erg or something, and then headed for Paris. Never did make it to London on that trip.

      Mind you that's nothing compared to the tortuous route I got when I wanted to go from Berlin to Moscow..

    18. Re: Not surprising... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      777 has been ETOPS rated for like, ever. You thinking 787??? Even then...

      A380 was in obvious trouble the first month it was open for public sale. A big splashy marketing push on opening day is the sign that buyers weren't stacked up like cord wood to buy the thing. If it was really an efficient people mover, airlines would have been beating each other with rocks to get it when oil was $100+.

      No, a380 is technically cool, but isn't viable at the present.

    19. Re: Not surprising... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For 1000 users distributed around the world, yes. Otherwise I have 998 users ready to go tiki torch on the other 2...

    20. Re:Not surprising... by ceoyoyo · · Score: 2

      The A380 may be a bit ahead of it's time. They expected airport congestion to be a critical problem and designed a plane for it. What they didn't anticipate was that the congestion problem would be delayed through better routing software. The problem is still approaching though.

    21. Re:Not surprising... by Yaztromo · · Score: 1

      Routing however is not an issue - just look to the IT world for examples.

      Where collisions at the hub are rampant, so we just wait a bit and retry?

      I do NOT want to fly your airline!

      Yaz

    22. Re:Not surprising... by Teancum · · Score: 1

      That perfectly describes air traffic at Heathrow or O'Hare. A "collision" in this case is multiple aircraft trying to take off or land at a given airport where there is a priority scheduler which decides what "packet" or aircraft will enter the "airstream".

      On rare occasions though, actual collisions do happen. It can be a fatal error too. It is mainly an issue of the proper "software" being "installed" or taught properly to avoid those errors.

    23. Re:Not surprising... by Solandri · · Score: 3, Informative

      Boeing knew this all along. They only made the original 747 a double-decker because they wanted the cargo variant to have a fold-up nose, so it would have the capability to slide fuselage-filling cargo pallets in from the front. This necessitated putting the flight deck above the fuselage. And the aerodynamic bump behind the flight deck provided a little extra space where they could put a few passenger seats.

      Once the second deck was fixed into the design, Boeing realized they could greatly increase capacity by making the plane a full double-decker. They continuously pitched this possible variant to the airlines from the 1970s to the 2000s. Every time, their market research said there just wasn't enough market demand to justify making such a large plane. So they never made one. Over the years they increased the length of the upper cabin a bit, but never got enough airline interest to warrant a full double-decker.

      Then Airbus came along and insisted there was enough market demand to pay for developing a full double-deck airliner. That's the kind of risk you can take when the governments grant you loan guarantees (Airbus wouldn't have had to pay back the loans for developing the A380 if hadn't generated sufficient sales to pay for itself). As it stands, it looks like the A380 program will just barely break even, so at least the EU citizens won't get stuck with the bill.

    24. Re:Not surprising... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Dimensions" in graphs are just filtering conditions attached to each edge, such as distance, category, or some other aggregation value.

      Imagine if there was a single routing system that had to keep flights separate by airline. Now imagine if every airline had to allow every other airline's passengers to ride on their routes, and individual passengers had to be allowed on possible routes by their airline. Now imagine if each airport had to sort those passengers and send them to the correct gate for boarding based on the current (and changing weekly) routing structure. And then passengers could be able to get to their next destinations via multiple paths, some of which were defined as stopping to pick up more passengers, while others were load-at-start. And most flights stopped at multiple drop-off points, but could only carry certain airlines' passengers on certain legs of the routes.

      That's the software I had to design and help write. (Except it isn't for airlines. It's a trucking company's tracking system.)

      It is exactly the nightmare it sounds like.

      Fortunately, none of this leaves the ground without a decently-sized tornado.

    25. Re: Not surprising... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I get it... It's actually quite funny

    26. Re:Not surprising... by gravewax · · Score: 1

      yep the problem is not going to go away, however Airbus needs volume to justify keeping the production line going and we are still a few years off before this is really going to hurt some of the major airports.

    27. Re:Not surprising... by LostMyBeaver · · Score: 1

      You make some very interesting points which got me thinking in those lines.

      Also consider that we're not really considering some more important issues which is that in the past, we were very dependent on major hubs because most airline travel was planned and booked by travel agents or humans who would calculate routes. They could search for a direct flight and they could also search for flights through hubs between the origin and destination. But booking multiple corresponding tickets on multiple airlines would result in major delays as well since the airlines didn't really cooperate like that. So one airline wouldn't necessarily hold a flight 5 minutes to compensate of a delayed plane from another airline that had a connection.

      These days, due to far more efficient algorithms in calculating the routes, but also in executing the forwarding of the passengers through the routes as well as the buffer management on ingress and egress... as well as the added ability to compensate for things like additional security checks at Heathrow that can take 45 minutes or longer between flights in the same terminal.... we don't need big fat ass planes from hub to hub anymore.

      I've been on probably close to 100 flights since the A380 was launched. I don't think I've been on it more than twice. I've been on 787s a few dozen times.

      Was the A380 the one which had the window seats with storage on the side which means you can't sleep while leaning against the window?

    28. Re:Not surprising... by LostMyBeaver · · Score: 1

      Isn't the solution to that to :
        a) Eliminate Fresno... ever since Karate Kid, this has seemed like a good idea
        b) Don't go to Helsinki... don't get me wrong... it's a pretty place. But the old saying is "There's no I in team"... and the reason for that is because the Fins used all the I's in their language and there was none left for the rest of the world. No person should ever have to expose themselves to a culture (one famous for exposing themselves to everyone else when running into the snow from saunas) that actually believe entire sentences can be constructed without the use of a single consonant.

    29. Re:Not surprising... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Going from FAT to HEL

      Well, being overweight is known to cause heart attacks and death, but there is no reason you would go to hell and not to heaven!

    30. Re:Not surprising... by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      so people obviously want to travel to hubs for reasons other than going elsewhere afterward

      This. It is the same problem as network design. Do you put your hub in the building next door and run lots of cables to your server? No it goes into the server rack. So regardless of how many options become available for flying around the world, if you need to go from London to Chicago (two of the most populated cities on each side of the Atlantic) you will go from hub to hub. That's the reason they built the hubs there in the first place.

    31. Re:Not surprising... by oobayly · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, I bet your trip from Berlin to North Africa with you Italian friends was fun while it lasted!

    32. Re:Not surprising... by arglebargle_xiv · · Score: 1

      That one was fine, it was the Moscow trip that was the real pain, after four years I ended up back in Berlin without every reaching Moscow. I think I'll ask for my money back on that one.

    33. Re:Not surprising... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mate, you don't fly much - 100 flights in 10 years?

      I fly 100 times per year, around 40 of them (roughly 4 per month) on A380s.

      For large-volume long-distance travel they can't be beaten. This is why a lot of SE Asian and Australia/NZ airlines are using them for the long-haul up to Europe.

    34. Re:Not surprising... by SomeoneFromBelgium · · Score: 1

      That's the kind of risk you can take when the governments grant you loan guarantees (Airbus wouldn't have had to pay back the loans for developing the A380 if hadn't generated sufficient sales to pay for itself). As it stands, it looks like the A380 program will just barely break even, so at least the EU citizens won't get stuck with the bill.

      Hmm. I'm not an expert on this but I do seem to remember that Airbus accused Boeing of exactly the same thing in front of the World Trade Agency (WTA).

      Me thinks they were probably both right: many governments both in US and in EU are keen to give subsedies and government backed loans in return for employment. But in both cases the government backed loans will need to be repaid. Unless Airbus/Boeing would want to face bankruptcy...

    35. Re:Not surprising... by TWX · · Score: 1

      Sure, and those very long distance flights are only a small part of the airline industry. There are loads of people flying within the same continent or merely crossing the Atlantic where it's not so critical to have onboard bathing facilities, and many of the most popular cities are either expanding their airports to allow for more takeoff/landing slots, or are adding additional airports in the vicinity.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    36. Re:Not surprising... by jbengt · · Score: 1

      You're leaving out the most important part. Previously, only the larger planes could handle the longer, direct routes. Smaller planes have been getting longer ranges, and that's one of the main things that has enabled more direct flights bypassing hub and spoke. Though I typically fly in and out of main hubs, anyway, so I don't quite see it happening in my experience.
      The other thing is that you can't just fly a 380 into any old airport any time you want to. Many, especially the smaller airports, would have trouble handling the huge aircraft. You'll probably need to modify some your hangars to accommodate the 380, too. Also lot of concourses and waiting areas can't handle the large number of passengers all at once. You need at least two jetways to deplane and emplane passengers, so a single plane takes up two gates and/or you have to do a lot of modifications to the concourse to handle it - not much improvement with passenger handling capacity there.

    37. Re:Not surprising... by dywolf · · Score: 1

      Dunkirk ?

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    38. Re:Not surprising... by houghi · · Score: 1

      Well, obviously hindsight is 20/20. At that moment it looked as if it was going to work. One minor differences in oil pricing and politics and development in cheap flights and it could have gone much better or much worse.
      Neither you nor I nor Boeing or Airbus can predict the future. They can not do that now. They could not do it then.

      Another thing is that it put Airbus on the map in serious way. That means thaee at least is some competition. Because honestly, who else is there? Bombardier?

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    39. Re:Not surprising... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's your problem with the Finns, mate? One of them seduce your mother, or something?

    40. Re:Not surprising... by Shirley+Marquez · · Score: 1

      Google Maps will fix this kind of problem. It already can do inter-system transit routing in a lot of places and almost certainly does it better than those rail systems did; it even uses real time data from systems that provide it. The biggest problem will be getting all the transit systems to provide accurate and timely data.

    41. Re:Not surprising... by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      The cost of the aircraft is in the noise compared to the cost of the fuel.

      Over the last 15 years oil prices have been pretty low thanks to the price wars and global recession.

      They're starting to climb again and at some point the hub-spoke model will start winning out again unless high speed rail and hyperloop make a miraculous network overnight.

    42. Re:Not surprising... by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      The A380 was on the drawing boards and being planned for nearly 20 years before it took to the skies.

      Things changed in the meantime. Markets changed.

      Even though Airbus thought the VLT market would expand and Boeing thought it wouldn't, The A380 was needed as a halo product and its presence sells thousands of smaller Airbus products, just as the 747 sold thousands of smaller Boeing products.

      Boeing got lucky with the 747 because it was first to market, in a market which has only ever needed 1500 747s to be made. The L1101 and DC10/11 were both intended to compete with it and their failure took the companies down.

      Making a new aircraft model involves a lot of crystal ball gazing and the iron will to stick with a gamble.

      A380s are profitable on almost all the routes they run - usually more profitable than smaller aircraft, but they're nowhere near as flexible and that hurts all but the most well-heeled operators.

    43. Re:Not surprising... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The A380 megaproject began well before 9/11, when hub-and-spoke systems were in vogue, thereby favouring large aircraft, and on assumption, that airports would not expand a lot. Such a configuration apparently favoured mostly existing airport infrastructure. IMO, increased trans-Atlantic traffic was also envisioned for just this configuration to fulfill the objectives, but that increase in traffic did not quite happen. After 9/11, point-to-point systems favouring smaller aircraft became more practical.

      But the A380 project is of such size and magnitude, that only one manufacturer at a time could pull it off. In its time in 1969, the 747 was such a big project for Boeing. By the time the A380 project was ongoing, Boeing was busy with its existing fleet of 747's, and planning for the 787 Dreamliner as an alternative: small plane, very long stretch, fuel economy, not many seats. The A380 went for huge plane, long (or -ish) stretch, fuel economy, lots of seats.

      The A380 is still an engineering marvel, and as such, is well-geared for the reasonably quick transport of a large number of people, especially, when fuel might get even a little scarce, requiring less to be spent per person.

    44. Re:Not surprising... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What you missed was an upmodded Jew joke about train to concentration camps. Ms Serious is serious lol, AND DON'T CALL ME SHIRLEY, Shirley!

    45. Re:Not surprising... by LostMyBeaver · · Score: 1

      It's their general inability to almost intentionally misinterpret everything literally and take offense at things that are obviously jokes to anyone who has a sense of sarcasm. :)

      It's quite funny that this wasn't even my joke originally, it was made by my brother-in-law (a Finn) while we were out drinking one night. Well at least the part about Finns.... he's never been to Fresno so far as I can tell.

    46. Re: Not surprising... by LostMyBeaver · · Score: 1

      A380 was one of the greatest job making successes in the history of France. The government dumped billions into making a plane that took forever to design and build and build and infrastructure around. I have no idea how many jobs were created or mouths were fed from it, but there have been very few great examples of the success of a capitalistic country extending balancing their deficits internationally while decreasing unemployment so drastically on a dead end project.

      The U.S. does this with Boeing, Lockheed and now are experimenting with computer companies like Cisco and HP.

      The idea is, to create more wealth and jobs, you buy and fund tons of shit that really has no benefit what-so-ever to anyone. Wealth is created by federal governments sort-of controlling the rates of their national deficits relative to one another, so it's kind of like massive collaborative devaluation of currencies. Then the money produced by the increased deficit is used to fund major projects which may or may not succeed, but generates huge numbers of jobs and wealth redistribution within the economy.

      Then ideally to remove some of the money from circulation with the hopes of avoiding major deflation, several 1%ers horde the funds to ensure that the status quo is maintained and the price of bread and milk doesn't inflate too quickly due to devalued currency.

      A380 was amazing for the French economy and I'll be surprised if they can find something new to replace it anytime soon. Maybe a major overhaul to the design to make it more attractive to the market?

    47. Re:Not surprising... by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      That's nothing compared to the weird routing I got from the German rail site when I wanted to go from Berlin to London. The route went straight into Belgium, pivoted down into France via some tiny little port I'd never heard of, Dunk-erg or something, and then headed for Paris. Never did make it to London on that trip.

      Mind you that's nothing compared to the tortuous route I got when I wanted to go from Berlin to Moscow..

      Your problem is that you went to the old site www.3rdReichsbahn.de - you need to go to www.bahn.de

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
    48. Re:Not surprising... by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      What you missed was an upmodded Jew joke about train to concentration camps. Ms Serious is serious lol, AND DON'T CALL ME SHIRLEY, Shirley!

      Errm, yeah, Hedy Lamarr. Because the Concentration Camps famously were in London and Moscow.

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
  2. General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by JoshuaZ · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The general lesson may be the same as that behind the Concorde. There's not a massive market for people willing to pay a massive amount of money for travel by planes. That applies whether the increased cost is for incredible luxury or incredible speed. If this is what is going on, then this does not bode very well for ideas like Musk's point-to-point transit with the Big Falcon Rocket.

    1. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by mykepredko · · Score: 0

      Nope. See my comments.

    2. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The A380 wasn't intended to provide "incredible luxury". It was designed on the assumption that hub and spoke routing would always be the solution. But what happened instead is that when there is enough traffic between two spokes to support a direct flight, an airline steps up and provides it. Capitalism in action.

    3. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The general lesson may be the same as that behind the Concorde. There's not a massive market for people willing to pay a massive amount of money for travel by planes.

      On the contrary, there are lots of people willing to pay for air travel. Type "overtourism" into google and you might be surprised what comes up.

      That applies whether the increased cost is for incredible luxury or incredible speed.

      Where there is a small fraction of the A380 that travels in luxury (with a price to match), most of the passengers are crammed in tightly, like most other planes.

    4. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by JoshuaZ · · Score: 1, Funny

      Since this comment is your only comment on this article, I'm not sure where you are intending me to look.

    5. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by mykepredko · · Score: 1

      Do a Ctrl-F in this discussion for "Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins"

    6. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by iamgnat · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The general lesson may be the same as that behind the Concorde.

      Unlike others, I agree

      There's not a massive market for people willing to pay a massive amount of money for travel by planes. That applies whether the increased cost is for incredible luxury or incredible speed.

      But I think you went to the wrong conclusion

      The biggest issue with the 380 is that not all major airports can accommodate it. Even those that could handle the 747. Remodeling an airport is not a simple affair. Especially those where communities have grown up around them and effectively limited their expansion space.

      The Concorde had a similar issue where there were only a few airports could accommodate it's runway requirements and even before it started running into regulation problems there wasn't a swell of airports looking to sink the money into supporting it.

      A related issue with the 380 is that many airports are already at or near capacity as it is, so the idea of more people in the same number of flights is another infrastructure problem they have to solve at the same time they are dealing with runway/traffic/gate changes. That doesn't give them much incentive to invest in letting those monsters land.

    7. Re: General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      No

    8. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by JoshuaZ · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ok. I see it now. It does seem from the time stamps that you posted the comment in reply to me, before you actually posted the comment in question. Your reply to me is timestamped 4:30, and your comment below is at 4:46.

    9. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by itsdapead · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The general lesson may be the same as that behind the Concorde. There's not a massive market for people willing to pay a massive amount of money for travel by planes.

      Except the showers, cinemas, shopping malls etc, are entirely optional on the A380, and airlines can (and do) just fit them out with regular economy, business and first sections and just carry more people for the same price - or add deluxe accommodation in first without reducing the number of cattle in the back.

      I've ended up on an A380 from San Francisco to Heathrow a couple of times in premium economy - the accommodation was no different from any other plane, except everything is a bit newer. What makes it more pleasant is that it is noticeably quieter and, supposedly, higher air pressure (I'll have to take that on trust since I had to give my barometer away to some bloody architect).

      Nope, I suspect the "failure" of the 380 is that the easier solution to airport capacity is to add new flights between alternative, less crowded airports ...which is probably why, on my last trip, I ended up on a flight from Gatwick to Oakland on a regular plane that avoided the scrum of mega-airports, took me closer to where I needed to go and cost less.

      --
      In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
    10. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      re. BFR as passenger transport.
      No-one with knowledge of fuel costs and an ability to work a calculator EVER thought that the BFR would realistic for surface to surface transport.

    11. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I concur.

      I've been playing SimAirport a lot lately. If you plan out and build a huge airport, the part that brings your PC to its knees is the passenger pathfinding load. This always takes its toll immediately after you start accepting 747, and A380 flights (and to some extent, the 767, 787, and A350(?)). If you translate that into real-world variables, the sheer resource expense of the passengers makes the airport hella expensive to maintain and drags everything else down. It's not an exact mapping between the simulation and the real world, of course, but it certainly shows what causes problems in general: more people. And those large planes are made to carry exactly that. Dinosaurs, all of them.

      May the 737 live on forever.

    12. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      Fuel costs? Methane is not all that expensive. And even if the fuel costs were slightly higher, given the laws of physics, the difference in fuel economy is the smallest for the trips where people are the most willing to pay extra money to not sit in a plane for twenty hours, that is, for trips halfway around the world. I'm pretty sure the other aspects such as reliability and safety are much more of an issue than fuel costs here.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    13. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by q_e_t · · Score: 2

      The A380 is very efficient in terms of fuel per passenger, and is no faster than any other jet, so the comparison to Concorde doesn't make any sense.

    14. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by complete+loony · · Score: 3, Informative

      IMHO The A380 works pretty well servicing flights into or out of Australia. I think It's pretty much the ideal case for the plane right now. Lots of people wanting to travel half way around the world, with varied destinations. Routes that no plane can yet do in a single hop, with enough demand to fill each plane. So fill a few A380's going to other travel hubs, and swap there for another large plane.

      But for the northern hemisphere, there's enough demand for single hop flights between regional airports, and a few choices for planes that can fly those routes efficiently. Plus smaller airports are much cheaper to fly into and out of. Bigger is not always better.

      --
      09F91102 no, 455FE104 nope, F190A1E8 uh-uh, 7A5F8A09 that's not it, C87294CE no. Ah! 452F6E403CDF10714E41DFAA257D313F.
    15. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by SuperKendall · · Score: 2

      It's interesting that you and Musk seem to disagree on economics of the BFR. Do lay out your calculations that make it infeasible...

      Those of us that can work a calculator and know what kind of fuel the BFR would use, generally agree with Musk that the idea is feasible (and greatly superior in terms of travel time)

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    16. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The comparison is that Europe's inferiority complex meant that it needed to have the mostest (speed or size) despite there being no realistic business case. Meanwhile, the United States, often accused of being big show-offs who have much more luck than talent, looked at it rationally and didn't take the bait, in either case.

      Airbus will win over Boeing eventually, though. Boeing only has to screw up once, whereas Airbus can just keep failing continuously, propped by France and Germany, until they finally get lucky. Then the arrogant European will crow about how superior they are, without noticing that China has taken over most of the market (starting from the low end, of course).

    17. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by jrumney · · Score: 2

      It costs no more to fly on an A380 than a B777. The "luxury" models were promotional concepts that Airbus thought up, most are 80% cattle class 19% Business.

    18. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by jrumney · · Score: 2

      Given that the number one aircraft in longhaul service at the time the A380 launched was the 747-400, don't you think you are rewriting history a bit with your opinion that there was no business case?

    19. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by jittles · · Score: 4, Interesting

      IMHO The A380 works pretty well servicing flights into or out of Australia. I think It's pretty much the ideal case for the plane right now. Lots of people wanting to travel half way around the world, with varied destinations. Routes that no plane can yet do in a single hop, with enough demand to fill each plane. So fill a few A380's going to other travel hubs, and swap there for another large plane.

      But for the northern hemisphere, there's enough demand for single hop flights between regional airports, and a few choices for planes that can fly those routes efficiently. Plus smaller airports are much cheaper to fly into and out of. Bigger is not always better.

      The A380 works great for Emirates because they want to fly everyone into their country, making it an important international hub. So they can have these huge planes flying people in and out, 500 at a time, because these people have to travel around the world and need to take two flights no matter what. What US airlines have found, however, is that it's a heck of a lot cheaper to fly back and forth between regional airports than to have a hub and spoke model because congestion at one regional airline only affects flights back and forth between that airport. If your hub goes down for whatever reason, your entire flight schedule is thrown into jeopardy. If you look at schedules, you'll see that UAL has planes that do nothing but fly between SFO and ATL all day, or IAH and ORD all day. Delta has routes between AUS and ATL all day long, etc. These planes do nothing else. They continue to make revenue as long as those two airports do not experience delays. If DXB has delays, all of Emirate's flights will be delayed. They all go through Dubai.

    20. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by Ksevio · · Score: 3, Informative

      Your phone probably has a barometer on it - I use the app "PressureNet" to graph changes in air pressure.

    21. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by Richard_at_work · · Score: 3, Informative

      Emirates makes you fly to Dubai *because* so few countries allow fifth freedom rights - the right to fly O&D passengers between two countries of which neither is the country of the airline.

      Therefore, apart from a few routes, Emirates *has* to fly you via the UAE, or they don't have a viable airline at all.

      Emirates fleet and network is the product of other countries protectionism, rather than a grand desire to make people visit Dubai.

    22. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At the time, Boeing was looking into making a larger version of the 747 (extending the upper level all the way to the tail instead of having a bump). They looked at the numbers and determined that there wasn't enough demand for planes with that capacity to justify the investment. It looks like their judgement was correct, no?

      dom

    23. Re: General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Reliability, or at least the perception of, in the public eye.

      If the buyers think Ps is less than 5 9's, they're not gonna fly by rocket in enough volume to run that airline...

    24. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by istartedi · · Score: 1

      Perhaps an even more general lesson--evolution determines practical upper limits on the sizes of "creatures" of various "species". A380 is a mechanical equivalent of the biggest whale in the ocean, the tallest tree, etc.

      --
      For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    25. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by gravewax · · Score: 1

      exactly, I actually regularly fly on the A380 for Australia-USA, it is perfect for the very long flights between hubs. can't say I have ever flown one with the showers etc though have only been in first class once, usually just business. Usually it pretty much similar layout to every other large long-haul jet for first/business/economy just more seats and easier to sleep due to the lower noise levels.

    26. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by jonwil · · Score: 1

      There are a fair few A380 flights on transatlantic routes between the US and Europe as well where the high fixed costs (lack of slots at the major transatlantic hubs, high airport fees, high route fees etc) make running more flights with smaller planes less viable than it is for, say, flights within North America or flights within Europe)

    27. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      But for the northern hemisphere, there's enough demand for single hop flights between regional airports, and a few choices for planes that can fly those routes efficiently.

      This! When I flew from Brisbane to London my choice was source > hub > hub where the first hub varied, or source > hub > hub > hub in case I flew via Sydney, then the second hub varied.

      When I fly from the Netherlands to London I have a choice between 4 source airports and 4 destination airports (or a train). With spread out populations in small pockets the hub and spoke does not make much sense.

    28. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The general lesson may be the same as that behind the Concorde. There's not a massive market for people willing to pay a massive amount of money for travel by planes.

      Have you seen the price of tickets for a A380 flight? Have you been inside one, where you see no blackjack tables, no cinemas, or first class seats for everyone? The reason airlines don't buy A380 planes is because people don't want them. People prefer direct flights than hub to hub with spokes at each end. So, rather than flying 800 people from Amsterdam to New York and then doing yet another flight to Atlanta, KLM ends up with flights to New York and Atlanta. And for that you only need two 300 seat planes, because the other 200 passengers are flying to Boston or Chicago.
      Boeing 747 and Airbus A380 made sense in a world where twin-engine aircrafts couldn't fly far over water. That's not the case right now, so people opt for better solutions.
      Boeing 747 and Airbus A380 makes sense in a world where airports are so congested you can't fly more smaller planes into them, so you're forced into a hub and spoke model again, with huge planes transferring people between hubs. Whether we'll ever be in a world like that, depends on the near future where climate change and the risk of nuclear war pose threats to our long term survivability (as an advanced species, not as groups of stick-wielding tribes).

    29. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by jbengt · · Score: 1

      You are correct. The 380 allows a single plane to handle more passengers, in an airport that can handle its' size. But you still have to deplane and emplane those passengers, you need multiple jetways to do it anywhere near efficiently, and you need sufficient circulation area for passengers to walk, a big enough place for waiting, sufficient baggage checking and security screening, and enough amenities like food service, toilets, etc. So the 380 doesn't help unless the airport's passenger accommodations have spare capacity.

    30. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      or add deluxe accommodation in first without reducing the number of cattle in the back.

      'Moo!'

    31. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      "What US airlines have found, however, is that it's a heck of a lot cheaper to fly back and forth between regional airports"

      The A380 is not a regional flier - it's a specifically tasked intercontinental loadhauler - and when you start flying intercontinental routes (even with big twins) you don't often fly from or to regionals as you start running into the same risky economics as you get with the big birds. Any segment less than 5-6 hours is on dodgy economic grounds even with a full load in a A380.

      The bigger problem with the A380 is both that it's the right aircraft at the wrong time, and that just as in road haulage there are a lot more sales opportunities for smaller aircraft than larger ones - but having the larger ones means that you can sell more smaller ones on the basis of fleet uniformity (Airbus have unified cockpits and operators prefer to stick to one type of engine to keep maintenance prices down)

      If fuel prices hadn't crashed it would be more popular. If they rise back to historic levels then it probably will be.

      NEO would be a lot more doable if the engines have the same mounting and electronics interfaces as the existing ones, are not significantly larger (ie, don't need landing gear mods) and the efficiency gains don't come with significant mass penalties (embedded 20-30MW gearboxes are _heavy_) requiring that longer legs be flown to realise the efficency gains (this is the same reason why shorthaul aircraft don't have substantial winglets: The mass penalty outweighs the efficiency gain over the average flight leg)

      Part of the problem there is that Trents are very good cores but P&W have the gearbox tech plus superlight fans, and there's no way you can mate the two parts together to produce a sum greater than the parts. For turboprops and suchlike you don't have that problem inasmuch as you can take engine from one maker and propellor from another (and in fact, usually do), but a turbofan is a complete packaged solution, so buyers are at the mercy of an individual maker's strengths, weaknesses and patent portfolios.

    32. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      "Emirates fleet and network is the product of other countries protectionism"

      Which makes the point that whilst major aircraft makers are frequently (and justifiably) accused of being government subsidised (it's a matter of national pride to have this kind of technology), many/most international airlines are similarly subsided via the backdoor with preferential deals as a matter of national pride/publicity/flagwaving

      (Before anyone says US airlines are not, the fact that foreign operators are prohibited from flying revenue domestic legs is one example of this kind of protectionism/backdoor subsidisation)

    33. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      "When I fly from the Netherlands to London I have a choice between 4 source airports and 4 destination airports (or a train)."

      I usually take the train - even before the dedicated HS lines were completed between France and A'dam it was only an hour longer doorstep to doorstep, with far less hassle and more scenery.

      London to Paris or Brussels is almost always faster by train than by air, far less stressful and by the time all the costs are added up, usually cheaper than flying+ancilliary costs.

      Once oil costs start ramping up again, the economics of trains with electric power supplies will start winning out over the time savings for longer distances. It's a different story in the USA where long distance trains generally operate at speeds which europeans associate with rustic rural backwater lines (frequently even slower than Indian railways infamously slow systems).

    34. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      "higher air pressure (I'll have to take that on trust since I had to give my barometer away to some bloody architect). "

      FWIW, Most smartphones these days have one built in and they're surprisingly accurate (as is the calibration on their microphones)

    35. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      What US airlines have found, however, is that it's a heck of a lot cheaper to fly back and forth between regional airports than to have a hub and spoke model because congestion at one regional airline only affects flights back and forth between that airport.

      Well, that may have been before Trump cut back on funding for the Essential Air Service (EAS) program to and from local airports.

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
    36. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      At the time, Boeing was looking into making a larger version of the 747 (extending the upper level all the way to the tail instead of having a bump). They looked at the numbers and determined that there wasn't enough demand for planes with that capacity to justify the investment. It looks like their judgement was correct, no?

      dom

      So if nobody wanted those planes, why did Airbus sell over 300 of them? That's more than twice the amount of 747-8s that were sold (and more than 6 times the number of the passenger version) - a plane Boeing obviously thought would sell, else they hadn't build it.

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
    37. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      I usually take the train - even before the dedicated HS lines were completed between France and A'dam

      The Eurostar is being extended through to Amsterdam shortly so you won't even need to change to a Thalys or something like that. The problem is still cost. ~$100 each way with the Eurostar, about $80 return with a plane.

    38. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by hoofie · · Score: 1

      From March Qantas will start direct London to Perth Flights using the 787 Dreamliner :14,470 direct kms and 17.5 hours flying time. That's UK to Australia [ok West Coast] non-stop. They plan to send onward traffic to Sydney but that's a furphy - They have asked Airbus & Boeing [aimed mainly at Boeing I suspect] to get to a point when they can have an aircraft to fly London - Sydney non-stop ; the Kangaroo Route. It's an extra 2,500 kms but the manufacturers will deliver it eventually. Boeing managed to add 50% more range to the original 777 with variants and engine upgrades.

      Concorde did find it's niche eventually as ultra-fast transport across the Atlantic [British Airways had very high load factors] but only after the cost had been written off and it was clear that commercially it was a dead duck if an airline had to buy the aircraft.

    39. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      if I take the plane, I have to pay more than that difference to get to the airport in London - and be there 3 hours ahead of time and only have 20kg (10kg with some airlines)

      If going to amsterdam by air the train from Schipol is free (but the train from London probably passed through schipol 15 minutes earlier.

      If going to paris, the subway fares in from the airports Paris and London would more than make up the difference.

    40. Re:General lesson - same problem as the Concorde by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      if I take the plane, I have to pay more than that difference to get to the airport in London

      I know, this gives me the shits the cost of trains to and from the airport are a significant portion of the ticket cost. Fortunately my head office is about 3miles from Heathrow. :-)

      It comes down what matters to you. Last time I went to Paris I also took the Thalys because I wanted to work and sit comfortably rather than stand in a security checkin queue. But when I go to our head office in London it takes me longer to get from the city centre than it does to get to the office. Last time I flew with a colleague we both booked separately, he booked the "cheapest" option and ended up in London city, we both left at the same time. By the time he got out to us he had spent more on his trip in total flying a budget airline vs my full fare, AND I had lunch waiting for him. People often forget to look at the cost of getting too and from airports. Which leads me to ...

      If going to amsterdam by air the train from Schipol is free

      WHAT! Where do you see this?

  3. Great news for Boeing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    MAGA m'ladies

  4. Too ugly by ugen · · Score: 1

    It's problem is that it's an ugliest plane ever made. Now if only it had the graceful lines of 747.

    1. Re:Too ugly by Richard_at_work · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I don't get why people hate on the A380 for it's looks and then hold up the 747 as the counter example - to me, the 747 has always looked like it needed a nose job doing, it's simply got a massive disproportional snoz and I can't understand what people see in it.

      Now, a plane like the Caravelle or the Comet - those were things of beauty. The Bombardier CSeries has nice proportions, as do the 787 and A350.

    2. Re:Too ugly by jazman_777 · · Score: 2

      Boeing is ending 747 passenger production, will continue cargo version production.

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    3. Re:Too ugly by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      They all _look_ like almost identical buses to me.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    4. Re:Too ugly by bobbied · · Score: 1

      It's problem is that it's an ugliest plane ever made. Now if only it had the graceful lines of 747.

      Ah yes, that 747 which is also going out of production...

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    5. Re:Too ugly by hipp5 · · Score: 1

      It's problem is that it's an ugliest plane ever made. Now if only it had the graceful lines of 747.

      None of which you see as a passenger...

    6. Re:Too ugly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The F-106 is a beautiful plane. Airliners, though... meh.

    7. Re:Too ugly by TigerPlish · · Score: 2

      None of which you see as a passenger...

      Nope.. but you sure can from the gate, from the highway which parallels the runway, from the observation deck, from your favorite planespotting perch, etc. Mine was at the fence of what is now Luiz Muñoz Marin (what was Isla Verde International Airport)

      Not all plane passengers are plane lovers, but plane lovers *always* take note of what's overhead, even subconsciously.

      747's best angle? 3/4 from behind. The wing fillet. That's art. Or simply science. (If it looks good, it flies good.. forgot who said that. Some early aerospace guy, I think)

      --
      The "Civilized World" jumped the shark ca. 1973.
    8. Re:Too ugly by hey! · · Score: 1
      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    9. Re:Too ugly by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 1

      They all _look_ like almost identical buses to me.

      Why, that's a very racist thing to say!

      And that on MLK day, to boot!

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    10. Re:Too ugly by Patent+Lover · · Score: 1

      It's problem is that it's an ugliest plane ever made. Now if only it had the graceful lines of 747.

      Ah yes, that 747 which is also going out of production...

      After 47 years. Not quite the same as the A380.

    11. Re:Too ugly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Well, if we are going off in this direction, then I will comment (Although I don't think that looks have anything to do with the issue.)

      The A380 is ugly, but in a beautiful way. It is ugly in the same way that the A-10 is ugly. When compared to other vehicles of comparable proportions, the A380 does loose to the 747, but I just find it hard to call the magnificent machine *ugly*.

    12. Re:Too ugly by Richard_at_work · · Score: 2

      Yeah, thats going to end soon as well - Boeing only has a total of 12 in its backlog and delivered more than 12 747s in 2017, so without new orders its doubtful the line will see 2020.

    13. Re:Too ugly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well we agree on something for sure. The 106 is quite possibly the most beautiful aircraft ever flown, (Still has the speed record too). I would, however like to say that those who feel that the 106 is a good looking aircraft are likely to say the 104 is better looking but since this is what we are talking about, we would have to include the SR-71 too and that always seems to win. But I agree the 106 is it.

      If you know of any 106 pictures of it flying in the NASA blue line scheme, please reply to this comment.

    14. Re:Too ugly by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 1
      It is really ugly. Both 747 and A380 have the same length, but the A380 has extended the nose bulge all the way to the tail. It looks stubby and fat like a beached whale.

      747, on the other hand slims down has a graceful line, an interesting and distinct profile. I am not fond of the lines of Lockheed Superconstellation, that is a little to fish-like. Business jets are beautiful and have very nice livery, then at the above 100 seat category, 747 is probably the best looking.

      --
      sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    15. Re:Too ugly by bobbied · · Score: 1

      True, Boeing made money on the 747 while Airbus is still trying to make back their development costs. But my point was that large passenger aircraft are falling out of favor.

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    16. Re:Too ugly by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1

      It's problem is that it's an ugliest plane ever made. Now if only it had the graceful lines of 747.

      Ah yes, that 747 which is also going out of production...

      Maybe that's because the kept extending the originally graceful-looking bump until it started to push into the ugly zone.

    17. Re:Too ugly by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      747 was never popular as a passenger airplane for its capacity, it was popular because of its range, and because in the past they didn't let dual engine commercial aircraft fly long distances (usually over water) without diversion airports.

      Newer dual engine planes have long range and are more efficient. Increased reliability has altered the rules, so new dual engine planes are allowed to fly intercontinental routes. So for customers that 20 years bought 747, they would now want 777 for the same route. In almost all cases. Because dual engine aircraft are cheaper to buy and operate than quad engine aircraft. And the slightly lower capacity is actually a plus, for the reason above; they bought the capacity for the range, and then had to manage the flights to try to use up as much of the capacity as they could.

      Which explains why the 747-8 cargo version is still popular. Cargo carriers, unlike passenger carriers, do actually want the full capacity, and so they don't take the same operating cost hit from supporting "extra" engines.

      Boeing planned for all this, the 777 was expected to be competing with the 747 and A380 in addition to the 767 that it was more directly replacing and the A330 and 757 that also compete for similar routes.

      Boeing didn't reduce 747 production because of problems, it did it because of the success of their own newer products that were intended to replace it. Compare to Airbus, which still has the successful A330 but very little else. Their new version, the A330neo, at least borrows the new engines from the 787 to increase efficiency. So their market share won't crash too hard. But it will certainly shrink over time.

    18. Re:Too ugly by Michael+Woodhams · · Score: 1

      I prefer the A380 to the 747, because I find the 747s hump ugly. However, the 747 blends its cockpit windows very smoothly with the shape of the nose, which the A380 doesn't. Also the A380 just looks too short for the height of its fuselage.

      The A340 and 787 both look great, in my opinion. I haven't seen an A350 in the flesh yet, so can't comment on that.

      --
      Quattuor res in hoc mundo sanctae sunt: libri, liberi, libertas et liberalitas.
    19. Re:Too ugly by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      Airbus has sold a comparable number of A320 family aircraft as Boeing has the 737, and they did it while Boeing enjoyed a 20 year head start. How's that not a successful product?

      Airbus has sold 854 A350XWB aircraft, how is that not a successful product?

      Airbus isn't going anywhere, and they are due to overtake Boeing in deliveries in 2019 - their market share is increasing rather than decreasing.

    20. Re:Too ugly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you are just plain nuts, the 380 is a much more attractive aircraft than the 747, hell a dc10 was pretty compared to a 747

    21. Re:Too ugly by Waccoon · · Score: 1

      Well, the 747 reminds me of an alligator with its high, narrow "eyes". Hardly beautiful, but it looks a bit organic. The A380 looks like a squishy, overweight lizard that got clobbered on the head.

    22. Re: Too ugly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The DC-10 looked good, although it looks "retro" now that nobody uses it anymore (other than cargo).

    23. Re: Too ugly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speed record? Ahead of the Blackbird? Get real!

    24. Re:Too ugly by yobjob · · Score: 1

      Every time I fly in an A380 I hop out the window and look at the plane. Worries me greatly how it looks.

    25. Re:Too ugly by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      The 747 looks like a guppy. The A380 more like a plecostumus and the AN-225 looks like a sumo wrestler

      There are a bunch of _far_ uglier aircraft in the sky.

    26. Re:Too ugly by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      "747 was never popular as a passenger airplane for its capacity, it was popular because of its range"

      To underscore that, 1000-passenger civil versions of the C5 Galaxy were proposed. No airline wanted them.

    27. Re:Too ugly by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      "Airbus has sold a comparable number of A320 family aircraft as Boeing has the 737, and they did it while Boeing enjoyed a 20 year head start. How's that not a successful product?"

      Not only that, but the backlog of orders for A320 is higher than for 737

      Airbus could sustain another 2 assembly A320 assembly lines without much difficulty and now they're venturing into a market that Boeing doesn't even operate in (100-seats) with the Bombardier purchase that has a large degree of interest as the world's turboprop fleet is aging out.

    28. Re:Too ugly by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      There aren't any 47-year old 747s flying.

      In fact, even before the A380 launched there was virtually nothing older than 747-400 left in revenue cargo/passenger service and airlines were retiring those at 15 years old.

      The size of this market is small. Small enough that Boeing as first to market, owned that market. McD-D and Lockheed both found that out the hard way when they tried to muscle in.

      One of the main things that is in Airbus' favour about the A380 is that unlike Boeing, McD-D, or Lockheed, it didn't "bet the farm" on the success of the A380. Had the 747 commercially failed, Boeing wouldn't exist. Airbus can afford to continue producing the A380 as a halo product even if there isn't sufficient demand to justify the reengineering for a NEO.

    29. Re:Too ugly by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      The development costs of the A380 are kind of interesting, as much of the R&D turned out to be directly relevant to the other lines it made and substantially shortened the development cycle of the A350XWB (as well as the development costs) - to the point that the savings on that aircraft probably make up for what the A380 incurred - and that's before considering how much the A330/A320NEO programs benefitted.

  5. The A380 is to big for many airports. by Qbertino · · Score: 4, Interesting

    That could be part of the problem. They've probably reached a point where mass transport of passengers doesn't pay off anymore. At least not well and fast enough to justify further investment any time soon.

    I would expect the market for the A380 to grown in time though. Just not as fast as Airbus might hope,

    Then again, this could be just some marketing babble or call for more EU funds for Airbus. The latter being the most likely.

    --
    We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
    1. Re:The A380 is to big for many airports. by alvinrod · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I think the bigger problem is that flying as an experience kind of sucks in general (not all of this is the fault of the airlines) and big planes are mostly good for a hub-based model where you might need some additional connecting flights with the possibility for long layovers in between. Mid-sized planes have much greater range now and unless you're making some truly long haul international flights, it's not a major obstacle to have direct flights between the smaller airports that these hubs used to connect. A lot of budget airlines have sprung up to do exactly that and the narrow focus on a few routes lets them keep costs down which is as big of a factor as anything else.

    2. Re:The A380 is to big for many airports. by Streetlight · · Score: 2

      Besides the fact that very few airports could handle the A380, one version could carry ~800 passengers. Imagine even a large airport with the runways that could handle it and getting a large number of them for nearly simultaneous boarding and landing all at once - the terminal would be a mess. And don't even think about the TSA Holdup Theater.

      --
      In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act. George Orwell
    3. Re:The A380 is to big for many airports. by Kjella · · Score: 1

      The hub-and-spoke model still has plenty advantages but I think you also need to factor in that going through the biggest hubs with multiple terminals and many hundreds of gates is something of a pain in itself. Transfers at moderately sized hubs (<100 gates) where you never leave the security zone and your luggage is checked through to your final destination are quite nice. Basically if you've got so many flights and runways that airspace is a problem maybe it's time to create sub-hubs. I've traveled quite a few times to meet some people I know and there's no direct flight but there's three different hubs I can go through. Price and timing of flights is of course an issue but those things being roughly equal I pick the smaller hub every time.

      And I don't do that just because of the airport itself, it seems like all the margins are slimmer like if your flight lost their time slot, well it's fucked. If there's weather problems, some kind of service disruption or gate problem or delay everything goes to shit for the whole day while smaller airports have gaps and slack that let them catch up better. Heck, if you're travelling with the same company and have a late incoming flight connecting to an outbound spoke they might hold the gate for you a few minutes. On approach I've been told the connecting gate, walked straight to it and boarded as the last passenger, grabbed a seat and a few minutes later we're in the air. That doesn't happen at a major hub, if you're late you missed it.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    4. Re:The A380 is to big for many airports. by Aighearach · · Score: 0

      It really comes down to this: Only the middle east region has rich people who want to pay extra to fly on planes with a bar that you can walk up to to order. Only the middle east has rich people who want to rent a private suite on the plane instead of just a group of first class seats. Only the middle east has rich people who want to pay extra to have showers on the plane.

      And Emirates Airways already bought as many as they want. Airports on important routes connecting to the UAE already have the upgrades, and airports that don't already have the upgrades have little reason to add them.

    5. Re:The A380 is to big for many airports. by Matt · · Score: 1

      Heck, if you're traveling with the same company and have a late incoming flight connecting to an outbound spoke they might hold the gate for you a few minutes. On approach I've been told the connecting gate, walked straight to it and boarded as the last passenger, grabbed a seat and a few minutes later we're in the air. That doesn't happen at a major hub, if you're late you missed it.

      I had that happen once at Denver several years ago. My first flight left late (from LAX - big surprise). As we were approaching the gate, they asked everyone who wasn't connecting to another flight to stay seated a minute. We walked up the jetway and fortunately just across the concourse to the next gate, where one of the pilots was waiting for us and followed us, closing the door behind him.

    6. Re:The A380 is to big for many airports. by turp182 · · Score: 1

      I know flying in the US sucks, but it was actually fun back in the 1990s.

      Where else does flying suck? Everywhere now? Leaving Korea a few years ago was pleasant. Massive plane.

      I do know one place where it is fun to fly. From the Galapagos Islands, heading back to Ecuador. I got to kick back with some beers while watching the slowest pit crew ever manually change a flat tire on our plane (737). It took so long that security left and we had full run of the entire airport (move from the entrance to secure areas at will, including an area of the tarmac to watch). It was tourists, locals, and the bar keeps.

      Of course Galapagos is a niche situation, I can't recommend a cruise trip there more.

      --
      BlameBillCosby.com
    7. Re:The A380 is to big for many airports. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And don't even think about the TSA Holdup Theater.

      With that in mind, the A380 is not meant to approach the U.S. border. The world is far and wide.

    8. Re:The A380 is to big for many airports. by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      Those big empty spaces are there for an important reason - space below decks for freight.

      A fully-stuffed A380 has 6 spaces for cargo containers after passenger baggage is loaded, but can still carry twice the cargo mass of a similarly-stuffed 777 at MTOW, over a much longer distance.

      By reducing seat count to ~500, space is freed up below decks to carry freight and you can use the space above decks to offer better seat pitch and halo accomodation at no cost - most of the time that halo accomodation isn't sold so goes to some lucky frequent flier as a fantastic advertising gimmick. When they do sell it, the halo space is a nice sidestream earner.

      Freight is significantly more profitable than passengers, doesn't complain about being bumped to the next flight and doesn't have to be loaded/unloaded in 15 minutes (quite apart from the catering costs) It also fills an aircraft more reliably than passenger flows.

      This cargo issue is the primary disadvantage of double passenger decking on a long-haul aircraft. The aircraft would have benefitted significantly from double freight decking and combi conversions may well do so. Freighter designs do make provisions for 3 layers of containers, even though none are flying.

  6. Not enough locations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The A380's poor service record with being grounded so much didn't help. It also didn't help that it didn't actually end up helping congestion. The wake off the 380 is so bad they have to space out landings further at major airports like Heathrow. Plus, very few runways were structurally capable of landing a 380, since the last update to max gross weight for runways was the 747.

    It just isn't living up to Airbus' promises. And, now that you only need 2 engines for transoceanic flight and 2 engine aircraft like the 787 can cover the world's longest routes, there's no need to have a bigger plane to get good long range performance. There's no business case for the A380, just like there's not much of a business case for the 747.

    1. Re:Not enough locations by Tailhook · · Score: 3, Interesting

      There was never much business case for the A380. It's a prestige plane, built to prove that Airbus is a world class manufacturer. Boeing had a legitimate reason to build the 747 and the market rewarded that with 40+ years of sales. It was easy for rational people to see at the time the A380 was announced (and as demand for the 747 was tapering off) that the A380 wasn't really needed. But they built it anyhow and cut a bunch incestuous deals leveraging EU trade to move them (which is why so many A380s are operated out of Asia.)

      All the trade deals are signed so that bargaining chip is gone, no one actually wants the plane.

      --
      Maw! Fire up the karma burner!
    2. Re:Not enough locations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      nothing to do with weight the loading on the tires is actually lower than a 747, the 727 still has one of the highest tire loading of any aircraft.

      and wake turbulance it has nothing on a 757

    3. Re:Not enough locations by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      I've flown the A380 several times on a route that definitely benefits from it: Shanghai to Guangzhou on China Southern Airlines. They fly the A380 about 3 round trips a day, and it's always packed. And that doesn't include the dozens of other flights in smaller jets that fly the same leg. Outside of that heavily congested and used route, though, I don't see much call for a plane that can seat upwards of 800 passengers.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    4. Re:Not enough locations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Got to wonder how much EU flight delay compensation hurts the business case too.

    5. Re:Not enough locations by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      There was never much business case for the A380.

      Sure there was. There was a huge business case for moving more passengers in one go through major hubs. The problem is the industry changed away from major hubs. There were plenty of airlines who bought the plane and are putting it to incredibly good use. However in the modern world of air travel this is restricted to major international routes between major hubs.

      There was a huge business case, but a small market. Those who wanted the plane already have it and were initially falling over each other to buy it. This is a plane that will remain in active service for many years.

      The 747 is comparable to the A380 in every way except for timing. They both serve the same function. In the modern world the 747 will also find no useful place that isn't already being serviced by an A380.

    6. Re:Not enough locations by edtice1559 · · Score: 1

      So its a two hour boarding process for a one hour and a half hour flight? I would hate to have to board such a large plane for a puddle jump.

    7. Re:Not enough locations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It reduces air pollution, it increases bandwidth, it reduces service costs, it reduces risks (fewer aircraft in the air means less pressure on air traffic control) - there was plenty of justification for it.

      So much so, Boeing was building its own, with the help of NASA. George Bush the Younger decided to cut NASA's funding, which ended the work.

    8. Re:Not enough locations by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      They use four jetways to board; it's impressive as heck. Two for the upper deck, two for the lower. Takes about 40 minutes to load. But given that the alternative is to simply not fly (the limitation is the number of planes in and out, not the loading/unloading time), it's still not bad.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    9. Re:Not enough locations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sensible people just take the high speed train.

    10. Re:Not enough locations by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Not an option a few years ago, unless you wanted to spend 14-16 hours on a train... As-is today, it is still a 7 hour journey.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    11. Re:Not enough locations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But the trains run on time aren't delayed x hrs randomly and don't take 40 minutes to climb onto and off of again. Seats are also bigger and more comfortable too. And it's cheaper too.

    12. Re:Not enough locations by edtice1559 · · Score: 1

      That's pretty good. Heck it can take 30 minutes to board a 737!

    13. Re:Not enough locations by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      "wake turbulance it has nothing on a 757"

      Depending what you're flying in even a 737 can be bad (hot day, thermals lifting up the wake on approach, flying 5-6 minutes behind in a PA-38 == unpleasant)

  7. My life is over by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I have been told all my life that Europe can do no wrong. It is not possible that a European product can fail. I cannot go on. Goodbye.

  8. Essentially a human problem by Dorianny · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The problem they couldn't solve is how to load/unload all the passengers efficently. How fast you can get in/out of the gate is just as important as how many passengers you can carry

    1. Re:Essentially a human problem by bobbied · · Score: 2

      The problem they couldn't solve is how to load/unload all the passengers efficently. How fast you can get in/out of the gate is just as important as how many passengers you can carry

      No, the problem is keeping all the seats full when the aircraft is flying. Loading and Unloading process times are not a huge issue. Load factors are the issue.

      What's happening is that the large direct routes that warrant a 380 are relatively few and there are enough aircraft flying now to service them while keeping the load factors in profitable zones. Airlines thus are not buying 380's. They are not buying 747's either. The market is saturated with large capacity aircraft, so they have stopped building them.

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    2. Re:Essentially a human problem by nospam007 · · Score: 1

      "The problem they couldn't solve is how to load/unload all the passengers efficently. "

      Trains can unload a 1000 passengers in a minute or so.
      The solution is called 'doors'.

    3. Re:Essentially a human problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Trains are not pressurised cylinders hurtling through the air miles above your head at 500 mph.

      Doors = fuselage weakness areas.

    4. Re:Essentially a human problem by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Call airbus with you insight.

      You could be right, you could be clueless.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    5. Re:Essentially a human problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just start a good sized fire at the back of the plane -- people will move pretty quickly to disembark. Problem solved.

    6. Re:Essentially a human problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The problems arising from the "doors" solution are "pressurization" and "structural integrity at altitude". Trains can have multiple doors per car, and capacity can increase by adding more cars and engines. Airplanes have to be self-contained and complete from the day they're built. If you cram 1000 people into an airplane with a bunch of extra doors, getting them out will be quite simple. The craft will "pop" at cruising altitude and the passengers will all come spilling out in one burst. And then all of your money will come spilling out in a burst of litigation.

    7. Re:Essentially a human problem by tlhIngan · · Score: 5, Informative

      No, the problem is keeping all the seats full when the aircraft is flying. Loading and Unloading process times are not a huge issue. Load factors are the issue.

      What's happening is that the large direct routes that warrant a 380 are relatively few and there are enough aircraft flying now to service them while keeping the load factors in profitable zones. Airlines thus are not buying 380's. They are not buying 747's either. The market is saturated with large capacity aircraft, so they have stopped building them.

      Basically Boeing and Airbus bet on the air travel market going two ways. Airbus bet big on the hub and spoke model - travelers will travel to hub airports, then board an A380 who will bulk carry them to another hub airport halfway around the world, then another flight to their final destination.

      Boeing bet big on the niche flight model - airlines operating flights out of smaller airports near where the big hubs are. This is the point to point model. This is an innovative model that requires a small plane that can go far, hence the 787 Dreamliner which can hold a mere 267 passengers, but go 8000 miles. This is considered innovative as in the past, small planes aren't used because most don't go far, so you needed larger jets like the 747 in order to go transcontinental. But with the 8000 mile range, a 787 departing London can basically fly to everywhere except Australia.

      This model is appealing for another reason - cheap flights. With the rise of the ultra-low-cost-carrier, they can suddenly run reasonably priced flights from oddball places between the US and Europe, where the smaller airports are cheaper to operate. These smaller places will have less passengers, but it's a lot easier to have a high load factor with a 260-seat plane than a 680-seat plane.

      A neat YouTube video that summarizes this is https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

      That's not to say the A380 is useless. Japan uses 747 on short haul runs that last under an hour. So much so that Boeing has had to come up with a special table for their 747 flight manuals on the most efficient way to fly them short haul. It's not range, it's capacity - only in Japan could you have hourly flights in a 747 that fly within the nation.Given a maxed out configuration of an A380 is 800-odd seats, double that of a 747, that could help during the many times the planes are just packed.

    8. Re:Essentially a human problem by Carewolf · · Score: 1

      The problem they couldn't solve is how to load/unload all the passengers efficently. How fast you can get in/out of the gate is just as important as how many passengers you can carry

      It is easy enough to solve. Just board economy first, business class and families with children last. Or board on the runway with ramps in both ends. Just no one wants to do that for a luxary flight. They are in fact more likely to do the opposite and achieve the mathematically proven LEAST efficient boarding.

    9. Re:Essentially a human problem by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1

      Trains can unload a 1000 passengers in a minute or so.
      The solution is called 'doors'.

      Trains also solved the question of variable capacity demand two centuries ago with a simple solution: articulation.

      Maybe Airbus should have done that, too.

    10. Re:Essentially a human problem by sconeu · · Score: 1

      Or board on the runway with ramps in both ends.

      Southwest does that at BUR.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    11. Re:Essentially a human problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can even make it to Australia from London non stop, starting from March 2018. They’ll use the 787-9.

      http://www.cityam.com/263671/qantas-launches-first-direct-flights-london-perth-ahead

    12. Re:Essentially a human problem by Malc · · Score: 2

      But with the 8000 mile range, a 787 departing London can basically fly to everywhere except Australia.

      London to Perth, non-stop in a Dreamliner, starting this March:
      https://www.qantas.com/gb/en/p...

    13. Re:Essentially a human problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Both the 787 and the A380 were conceived at a time when fuel cost were increasing steadily and consequently their designs were significantly influenced by factor.

      On paper the A380 has a lower operating cost on certain route under ideal conditions, but not many operators operate in that market, Outside of the long haul high capacity market the A380 has little appeal and the airplane is not suited to be an efficient cargo airplane.

      I like the A380 from a technological standpoint and getting such a big airplane designed, built, delivered and flying is a great achievement and that achievement needs to be acknowledged, but in the end it was designed for a narrow market and has little mission flexibility.

      Boeing hedged its bet partway through with the introduction of the 747-8, which is also has challenges with sales, not because it's not a good airplane but the reality is the market is moving away from large capacity airplanes.

      Even the venerable 747-400 is being retired by many operators since the newer smaller sized, but long range airplane, allow them to tailor their route offerings to be more efficient and attractive price wise to consumers.

      The markets has clearly spoken and what they want are highly efficient quick turnaround short and medium haul airplanes, 737-MAX, A320neo and longer distance medium haul airplanes that can fly point-to-point from North America to Asia non-stop like the 787 and A350.

    14. Re:Essentially a human problem by Wrath0fb0b · · Score: 1

      I'm really not sure either way, but could you provide a citation to the fact that LHR (for instance) is gate-constrained and not slot-constrained?

      My initial thought was that it must be takeoff/landing slot-constrained, but now I'm not convinced.

    15. Re: Essentially a human problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For an outside the box solution... Board passengers before the plane arrives, container shipment style. Load up a "sled" with seats and overheads, then slide the whole thing in like a pallet onto a truck.

      Plane lands, tail swings up, terminal based forklift lifts and unloads the passenger pallet, loads the new one.

    16. Re:Essentially a human problem by jrumney · · Score: 1

      Boeing bet big on the niche flight model - airlines operating flights out of smaller airports near where the big hubs are.

      Both companies bet on this. Boeing already had a jumbo, and at the same time as the A380 they were working on a bigger version - the 747-8. Both companies also have smaller planes such as the 777, 787, A330 and A350.

    17. Re:Essentially a human problem by elwinc · · Score: 1

      The problems arising from the "doors" solution are "pressurization" and "structural integrity at altitude".

      Actually, big planes have plenty of emergency doors, and they very rarely go "pop." According to https://aviation-safety.net/ai... a boeing 747-400 has 10 exits that can be used in emergency, plus a cockpit hatch.

      --
      --- Often in error; never in doubt!
    18. Re:Essentially a human problem by jrumney · · Score: 1

      Will this be like the old Auckland to Vancouver route, where they had to fly the plane (747 in those days) half empty to make the distance?

    19. Re:Essentially a human problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're willing to believe this projection, Perth is at the very edge of the range of a 787 flying out of London in a 3-class configuration.

      dom

    20. Re:Essentially a human problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Difference is that the 747-8 was a refinement of an existing aircraft and those refinements borrowed heavily from what was already developed as a part of the 787 program. The only reason Boeing even went there with the 747-8 was that they couldn't give that market up to Airbus completely. The A380 on the other hand was an entirely brand new airplane. Boeing bet pennies on upgrading their jumbo, knowing they'd lose most of it, but doing it with the intention of limiting the return on investment for Airbus after they bet the whole piggy bank.

      On the other hand Boeing bet big on the 787 and in spite of the initial issues it's proving to be a good bet. On the other hand Airbus was forced kicking and screaming by their customers into developing the A350, which is essentially an all new aircraft, to compete with the 787.

    21. Re:Essentially a human problem by Solandri · · Score: 1

      Given a maxed out configuration of an A380 is 800-odd seats, double that of a 747,

      Max capacity of a 747 is over 500. If you're willing to make it all single-class, you could theoretically get over 600 people aboard. That's why the worst single-airliner accident (JAL 123, a 747) had 520 fatalities - nearly as many fatalities as the worst airliner accident in history (collision between two 747s).

    22. Re:Essentially a human problem by Solandri · · Score: 1

      Boeing introduced the 747-8 as token competition to the A380. If there had been no A380, I doubt they ever would've introduced it. More likely they would've updated the 747-400. They'd been doing market research on a full double-deck 747 almost since they first began selling it, and every time it came back that there wasn't enough demand.

      Boeing bet on sales shifting towards the long-range twin-engine market (two engines are more efficient than four). That was the entire reason they developed the 777 and 787. Airbus totally missed the boat. Airbus' offering in that role was the A340 - a four-engine plane like the 747. (The A330 could only reach long range with a max passenger capacity of about 250).

      The 777 beat the A340 into a bloody pulp in the market (1534 planes built in 24 years, vs 377 planes built in 20 years). When Boeing introduced the smaller 787, Airbus initially announced plans for the A350 as a 787-competitor. The airlines revolted - what they really wanted was a 777 competitor. They got Airbus to modify the A350 so it slotted in between the 787 and 777.

    23. Re:Essentially a human problem by yobjob · · Score: 1

      Ban carry on baggage and first class passengers.

    24. Re:Essentially a human problem by yobjob · · Score: 1

      Also you're allowed to get your bags and wait at the doors as a train pulls in to the station. On a plane you're stuck to your seat as long as the seatbelt light is on.

    25. Re:Essentially a human problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then the problem can be solved easily: ban 787s and the like from operating in Europe. Threaten with sanctions any nation that operates them. Use the vast economic power of the EU to support Europe's policy. Simple as that.

    26. Re:Essentially a human problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's Japaneses handle that. They are the best for this kind of things.

    27. Re:Essentially a human problem by nospam007 · · Score: 1

      "Trains are not pressurised ..."

      No? The Chinese railway has pressurized trains for very high altitudes and they have more than 2 doors.

      Also since planes have already perfectly good functioning pressure doors, they could just put more in, but they would have to put in less seats and they're too greedy for that.

    28. Re:Essentially a human problem by Aqualung812 · · Score: 1

      The link says that they'll do 236 passengers. That isn't exactly half-empty, but it isn't 100% full, either.

      My guess is that they'll do a larger business-class section, and it will look full based on available seats.

      --
      Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
    29. Re:Essentially a human problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Boeing made the 747-SR (short range) which was a 747-100 with beefed up landing gear to take landings with high fuel level. They were set up with seats a 18 inches wide (in Japan this worked out). They also made the 747-SP (special performance) another derived 747-100. Note I used the verb made -- in the distant past (in airframe years). The 747-SR and 747-SP were 100 series aircraft, the current generation is 800 so these aircraft are 7 generations old.

    30. Re:Essentially a human problem by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      "Max capacity of a 747 is over 500."

      Or 1088 if you're not careful about counting passengers when loading (operation Solomon)

      The limit on capacity is set by evacuation time, not by seating. The 830 capacity of the A380 was determined by running practice evacuations and counting how many could get out in 90 seconds. The actual seating capacity if you used 777 sardine class is in excess of 1200.

    31. Re:Essentially a human problem by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      Trains have far more doors per passenger than aircraft.

      A train carrying 1000 passengers will typically have 40 doors PER SIDE

      WRT china's pressurised trains, yes they're pressurised but the difference between inside and outside isn't particularly high and unlike aircraft the mass of door mechanisms/pressurisation equipment isn't an issue.

  9. Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by mykepredko · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you go back 20 years ago when the A380 was being proposed - Airbus confidently proclaimed that there would be a 1,300+ unit market for a huge four engine jet. Boeing predicted that, at best, there would be a 360 unit market.

    The difference was based on the assumptions made by each manufacturer. Airbus, at the time, was pushing the A340 (four engine) over the A330 and getting reasonably good traction which lead them to think that four engines and more passengers was the way to go. Boeing had just finished the B777 and could see it eating into the B747 market - the B777 offered better economics for 250-350 passengers which Boeing decided was the optimal passenger size for long range.

    It's interesting to see what happened as Airbus started to develop the A380, it gained a lot of good press and a gold plated launch customer in Emirates (to which Boeing responded with the B747-8 to show they were still in the market but wouldn't require a lot of development funds). Boeing sank their development money into the 7E7 (which became the B787), gained sales of almost a thousand sales before the first roll out and Airbus scrambled with the A350.

    The A380 failed simply because Airbus misread the demand for the aircraft (along with the desire to have the bragging rights on the largest airliner out there) and Boeing had a better product roadmap for this space. Boeing is now finishing up the first the second generation B777 prototypes while Airbus is trying to finish the A350 line and revamp the A330.

    The writing has been on the wall for the A380 for at least 5 years (arguably 10) and really the big question is when will Airbus decide to take the write-down on the lost development costs.

    1. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      That was always Airbus's problem. They always show up late to a market, with absolutely no genuine understanding of that market and the direction that it's going in.

      Their judgement is not coldly determined by raw numbers and statistics, like Boeing, but rather by a burning, swelling national pride that seems to blind them to the true direction of the market. National pride was always the weakness of the European aerospace manufacturers.

      Airbus was thinking "build bigger planes! we will have biggest plane ever! European pride!" while Boeing sat there and said "Yo man computer scheduling is getting better and better, it's gonna kill hub-and-spoke as a concept."

      Airbus's predecessor failed financially because of this same problem, trying to perfect supersonic transport. They just thought "build faster planes! we will have fastest plane ever! European pride!" while Boeing sat there and said "cost-per-seat is gonna be too fucked up with supersonic...let's just build a really big, efficient plane."

      I guess Airbus is gonna have to merge with COMAC or one of the Russian OKB bureaus to save themselves this time around....or they can always ask the British and French governments again for a bailout :)

    2. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by bobbied · · Score: 2

      I think the question is will they survive the write down of the A380's development costs.

      They may not have bet the farm on this venture, but they sure bet a significant part of it. Now that they cannot recover these costs from sales, they are going to have a nasty looking balance sheet.

      Does anybody know if they broke even yet?

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    3. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by 110010001000 · · Score: 1

      Airbus stock is going through the roof the past year. Not sure why they wouldn't survive?

    4. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by bobbied · · Score: 1

      They've been saying that 270 A380's where necessary to break even in the past. Current orders + already flying don't meet that so they lost money on the A380.

      Every stock is though the roof, my guess after looking at this is that Airbus will survive, but they will take a hit when compared to their industry. They've been careful to avoid even a hint of this action in past years, reacting strongly to people who suggested that they might need to end production of the A380. They where keeping the dream alive, until it died today. Such things usually hurt stock prices.

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    5. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Airbus has sold more planes than Boeing each year for the last decade and has been increasing the number of planes manufactured annually as well. Provided it can keep costs under control, I don't see Airbus going under at all.

    6. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      Airbus has already absorbed the A380 production cost, its not been on their books for years - they don't operate the same accounting as Boeing (where Boeing get to use "deferred production costs" to move current debt to later airframes), so there is no development costs to write off.

      Airbus could write off the A380 tomorrow and the only financial cost they would incur is the physical cost to close the line.

    7. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      The EU failed to understand nations needed a big jet and a smaller jet for cheap local holidays and many still had shorter runways.
      The EU funded a really, really big jet for nation building and good jobs in the EU and expected the world to pay for upgrades globally.
      To build new runways and support when much better aircraft deigns did not need all the national upgrades to existing services.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    8. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 0

      great advantage to have, if the tax payer funded government as the ultimate back stop

      --
      sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    9. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by Richard_at_work · · Score: 3, Informative

      As if Boeing has never received subsidies...

      Oh wait, they did.

      The Japanese government paid for the design and development of the 787s wings - funny how no one remembers that.

      Boeing also got massive tax relief from Washington State, but again, that's often never remembered.

      Airbus receives its subsidies via repayable launch aid - it's still paying millions per airframe with each A320 family delivery, when the original forecast for that was 500 deliveries, and yet here we are where the 737 and A320 are about even on orders to date... EU government shave made massive profits on Airbus. Can't really same the same for Japan and Washington State for Boeing...

    10. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by bobbied · · Score: 1

      Well, when/if Boeing fails, the government won't be on the hook unless it chooses to be. With Airbus, multiple governments where among the primary investors to get it started and have thrown money in along the way to keep it going. Boeing may have enjoyed tax credits and favorable banking arrangements, but they began the old fashioned way and don't have to pay homage to government investors, just hire lobbyists to protect their interests in Washington DC.

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    11. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, when you've got governments willing to manipulate the currency to keep you afloat, you don't have to be good or even particularly competent.

    12. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      The data seems otherwise. And it's not so much sales that matter, but deliveries. It's common for airlines/leasing agents to over-order, but then accept marked-down deliveries. Boeing's been doing quite well with deliveries...

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    13. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you go back 20 years ago when the A380 was being proposed - Airbus confidently proclaimed that there would be a 1,300+ unit market for a huge four engine jet. Boeing predicted that, at best, there would be a 360 unit market.

      More specifically, Boeing predicted more correctly the engine manufacturers ability to acquire ETOPS-180 (and greater) ratings, making two engine flight viable for 95% of the routes. While a A380 may still cost less to operate (per passenger) if you can reliably fill the plane than a smaller twin, filling an A380 every day between two airports just was not reliably achievable. Advantage Boeing

    14. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by TJ_Phazerhacki · · Score: 1

      I feel like it's also a huge warning sign for anyone trying to sell large-scale luxury 'infrastructure' goods in the ME - the long term finances required for stuff like skyscraper construction or buying jumbo jets aren't looking to hot right now.

      Supercars, expensive watches, and ridiculous handbags? Sure. But 8-figure-plus stuff? Planning your long term strategy around a bunch of oil barons having money to burn in another decade is a dangerous proposition.

      --
      Physics is nothing like religion. If it was, we'd have an easier time trying to raise money!
    15. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by Strider- · · Score: 1

      If you go back 20 years ago when the A380 was being proposed - Airbus confidently proclaimed that there would be a 1,300+ unit market for a huge four engine jet. Boeing predicted that, at best, there would be a 360 unit market.

      I've always thought that the A380 was one of the greatest marketing coups in history. On the part of Boeing.

      Back when all of this was being proposed, Boeing had their own conceptual super-jumbo that they were proposing (remember the huge flying wings and so forth?), they were proposing this kind of thing along with Airbus, the difference is that Boeing never actually booked an order,s ot hey didn't have to build it. This let them focus on the Dreamliner, further development of the 777, and so forth.

      Airbus, on the other hand, did book the orders, and thus had to spend the billions of Euros it took to actually produce the aircraft.

      --
      ...si hoc legere nimium eruditionis habes...
    16. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by Richard_at_work · · Score: 4, Informative

      You seem to forget the military contracts the US throws Boeings way when it needs propping up - such as the tanker leasing deal Boeing got back in 2001, before it was revealed as a shitstorm of corruption (the USAF would have ende up paying more than four times what the tankers were worth, and then it was revealed that Boeing had paid off a governmental contracts negotiator to hand over Airbuses offer details on the rematch - people went to prison for that)...

      Add to the fact that Boeing received subsidies from EU governments when they placed 787 assembly contracts with Spanish and Italian companies.

      There's enough mud here to throw at both Airbus and Boeing, but some people try their hardest to make it seem like Airbus is alone out there - at least EU governments show a return on each airframe delivered.

    17. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is not what backlog means...

    18. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by jrumney · · Score: 1

      I suspect there's a fair bit of selective memory involved here. If Boeing did not believe there was a market, why did they scramble to develop the 747-8 in response to the A380? They could have just squeezed more life out of what they had and left Airbus to their fate.

    19. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by jrumney · · Score: 1

      The data shows that Airbus has grown from 1/5 the market size of Boeing in the 1980s to about the same in the 2000s and 2010s. It also shows that 222 A380s have been sold already and there is a backlog of 95 more, so it is still possible that they at least make their development costs back without having to rely on A320 sales to subsidize it. It certainly doesn't show that ending A380 production early will ruin the company.

    20. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 3, Informative

      Of course Airbus won't close; it's too important to several EU Governments and has strong backing from them.But the data does show that Boeing leads in deliveries for most of the last 10 years, and that is what matters. As a person who grew up in Seattle - home of Boeing back then - sales and bookings make news, but deliveries actually made money.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    21. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by ceoyoyo · · Score: 2

      IIRC correctly the tax break Boeing got from South Carolina for their second 787 production line was a record at the time.

    22. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      No the biggest advantage is to have American people scrutinise every tax dollar that goes into an overseas company while turning a completely blind eye to their own.

    23. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have it wrong. The EU cannot "fail to understand" anything. It's lesser nations that fail to abide by European rules. It is entirely their fault and they will pay for it. Make no mistake, they'll pay for it.

    24. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by bobbied · · Score: 1

      That tanker contract was contested, multiple times, and after multiple rounds and bids Boeing won. But it might just be that Boeing won for technical and price reasons, not simply corruption?

      Yea there is plenty of mud to throw at Boeing, but the fact remains Airbus is a government organized consortium which was put together by EU countries to compete with Boeing, a publicly traded company. Sure Boeing contracts with governments around the world, but they where NOT organized by multiple governments as well.

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    25. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by Aviation+Pete · · Score: 1

      the B777 offered better economics for 250-350 passengers which Boeing decided was the optimal passenger size for long range.

      The 777 was simply the biggest twin possible with the next generation of engines back then. It was sized for the GE90 (which wasn't even ready when the 777 was). If there had been a bigger engine on the horizon, the 777 would had become even bigger.

      The A380 failed simply because Airbus misread the demand for the aircraft (along with the desire to have the bragging rights on the largest airliner out there)

      Now you are close to the truth. The French were green with envy for the entire existence of Airbus when they had to sell 300's and 320's without the ability to subsidise them with profits from a bigger plane like Boeing did when selling the 737 cheap because 747 profits allowed them to do so. In the end, the conclusion was reached before the studies were made, and the studies simply were massaged until they supported the rationale of a Superjumbo, made by Airbus.

      --
      You know it's time for the next revolution when your rulers' names end with roman numerals.
    26. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

      I think you're defending them and they don't deserve being defended. The A380 is for the most part a knock off of the C5 galaxy built in the late 1960s. Only the C5 was way better designed. All they had to do was license the plans from the Americans and stick in seats. It may have actually made money. Better yet, have Boeing build it for them. They had all of those numbers and such. I always wondered why they didn't do that. Other than to show they couldn't build it as well and it was a bad idea. That's what they did.

    27. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      A subsequent tanker contract might have been legitimately won by Boeing, but the original contract which started the whole thing most definitely was won through an intention to subsidise and corruption, as was the next contract - the final contract was well down the road of those two.

      Winning the last contract legitimately doesn't wipe the slate clean of those won unlawfully.

      And who really cares how Airbus was created - Id rather live in a world where Airbus exists than one where Boeing is the monopolistic company.

    28. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      "If you go back 20 years ago when the A380 was being proposed "

      Go back a decade further. It was being actively pitched at about the launch size when I started pilot training in 1990 and Airbus had feelers out for a few years earlier than that (Trent 800 and 1000 were actively promoted as design targets for the A3XX at the start of Trent production in the early 1990s). Virtually every large airline in the world was expressing interest or making preorder noises.

      Large aircraft design and production involves very long-distance crystal ball gazing and risk calculation.

      Back at that point the 747 was the only game in town for Trans-pacific flights and ETOPS was only viable across atlantic and islandhopper routes. Most airlines were still using 747s on transoceanic and islandhopper flights not so much due to distrust of ETOPS as the risk of being stranded at XYZ tiny island if there was an engine failure

      If you've ever seen how much of an event each 747 flight was and the issues involved in getting 300+ people off and on these aircraft, 1-2 immigration officials on duty, along with local acommodation only being able to take a fraction of them due to most passengers simply passing through, you'll understand those concerns. It wasn't unusual for 200+ passengers to have to bunk down in the airport lounge when breakdowns occurred simply because there was nowhere else to put them.

      On top of that fuel prices were only going in one direction - upwards - and stayed that way until just before the first A380s were launched.

    29. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      > while Boeing sat there and said "cost-per-seat is gonna be too fucked up with supersonic...let's just build a really big, efficient plane."

      Um, no. Boeing was set a target by the US government of building a transport that was both 50% faster than concorde and carried twice as many passengers, over twice the range.

      The passenger load and range was probably doable, but Concorde was about as fast as it was technically possible to reliably fly using metallurgy of the day (Before anyone says "SR71", I'll just mention all that fuel pouring out onto the runway and the fact that it had to be refuelled after takeoff before it could do anything meaningful and about every 90 minutes after that when travelling at speed))

      The 747 was a backstop freighter design derived from a scaled-up 707 for a military contract competition and only intended to sell 2-300 or so whilst they got their SST flying. The Hump was only there to allow a nose door. They weren't expecting Juan Trippe to say "I'll take two dozen kitted out for passengers!"

      Concorde and the Boeing SST were pretty much the last time that makers built what governments told them to, vs asking the airlines what they really wanted and building that.

    30. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      R&D spent on the A380 was directly applied to the A350XWB, shortening the development cycle and reducing costs substantially. It also had a lot of input into the NEO programs.

      They may never recover the R&D costs on direct A380 sales, but they've already covered them on A350 preorders.

    31. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      "That tanker contract was contested, multiple times, and after multiple rounds and bids Boeing won"

      Primarily because Airbus walked away when it was made clear that no matter how many times they won on technical grounds, it will be challenged and killed on politics.

      In the meantime they made and sold a bunch of A330 Voyager tanker/transports to other militaries, so they didn't lose any money on R&D for the competition. One of the huge cost savers of the Voyager over every competing craft is that because the wing is common to A330 and A340, there are 2 built in "free" wing hardpoints for fuelling with no heavy re-engineering needed to make use of them (being designed for engine mounts, they're significantly _over_ engineered for this purpose.)

    32. Re:Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twins by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      They've been saying that 270 A380's where necessary to break even in the past. Current orders + already flying don't meet that so they lost money on the A380.

      Did you know that "alternative facts" is Germany's "unword" of 2018?

      Let's see, 317 orders total - that seems to be more than 270, doesn't it?

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
  10. Airbus didn't listen by harvey+the+nerd · · Score: 1

    Airbus didn't listen to expert advice from Boeing about the 4 engine giant passenger market size. Boeing has been proved right that the proposed [A380] would trash that market without a return. Of course the 777s undercut both in a lot of cases but one can only wonder if one healthy line would have stayed open a few more years.

    Turns out to be just another wasteful corporate welfare and jobs program damaging to both.

    1. Re:Airbus didn't listen by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      Boeing didn't listen to their own advice - see 747-8I.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    2. Re:Airbus didn't listen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Actually, Boeing was offering a stretched 747 similar to the -8 back when Airbus was planning the 380. They thought that was what the shrinking market for large four engine planes could support, and it didn't require the infrastructure changes the 380 did.

      The only airlines looking for larger planes at the time wanted the sexiness of the biggest, though, so Boeing didn't sell any. Then, years later, when the market proved that, indeed, there was only a little demand for giant planes, Boeing offered that small market the -8 and sold a few (it's more popular for cargo, though). It just shows that Boeing was better at reading the market and was right all along.

    3. Re: Airbus didn't listen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      747-8I was an attempt get a few sales (at the expense of the A380) for a passenger version of a 747-8F freighter as the conventional wisdom was it is easier to sell a freighter if the customers know it can count on a few hand-me-down parts and airframes to keep prices down over time...

      Boeing didn't think they would sell too many 747-8I planes and they didn't. ..

    4. Re:Airbus didn't listen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Typically when planning out your business strategy you don't listen to the advice of your fiercest rival as it isn't necessarily good advice.

  11. B52 and 747 OLDEST flying still in production by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good as they are, that's why! BOEING, baby!

      Suck sweaty balls, Eurotrash. Notice I don't mention China? Notice I don't mention Russia? Because they are sweaty ballz!

    1. Re:B52 and 747 OLDEST flying still in production by naughtynaughty · · Score: 1

      The B52 is still being flown but is not in production. It hasn't been in production since 1962.

    2. Re:B52 and 747 OLDEST flying still in production by toddestan · · Score: 1

      If you're talking military craft, the king has to be the C-130, which has been in continuous production for over 60 years now. Heck, the C-130 has been in production longer than the time it took between the Wright brothers' first flight and the first C-130 to roll off the assembly line.

  12. My personal view. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I fly long haul international a lot, usually on 777 or 380, mainly in cattle although sometimes in Premium Economy.

    I much prefer the 777.

    The 380 always feels more hemmed in and claustrophobic for me, like there's less head room. Also, the 380 just feels more "full".

    I'm never up at the pointy end, but I do understand that if $$$ is no object then the A380 is the way to go, but that doesn't concern me.

    Also, and this is not based on any hard stats, the A380 appears to have problems with its engines blowing up/falling off. I know it was an issue with the Trent and fixed, but the impression remains.

    I have no Boeing/Airbus bias as I (being Australian) have faith in both the US and EU manufacturers.. (and the Embraer from Brazil) and have no real qualms about flying in any of them, but in a 777 vs A380 scenario I'd choose the 777.

    It's also quite a sight to be queued up on the apron awaiting take-off in a smaller jet, and to see that massive A380 one plane ahead of you roll out and then take off. It still amazes me it even gets off the bloody ground........ :)

    1. Re:My personal view. by Malc · · Score: 1

      I've flown London to Melbourne a few times, and it's normally an A380 on the London leg, and a B777 on the Melbourne side. The B777 always feels cramped and a step down after the Airbus.

      Particularly nice is the economy section upstairs behind business class on Air Malaysia. The window seats have bins on the side that really let you spread out.

      We have a baby, and the space at the balkheads downstairs on the A380 leaves you crying when you get on a B777. 26 hours to Melbourne at Easter with an active 18 month old is something I'm dreading, although this time I think it's an A380 followed by B787 (there are no planes out there in my price range that will make this a good journey though!)

    2. Re:My personal view. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The 777 has problems with its batteries catching fire. All new aircraft designs will have teething issues - what's your point?

    3. Re:My personal view. by Michael+Woodhams · · Score: 2

      That was the 787

      --
      Quattuor res in hoc mundo sanctae sunt: libri, liberi, libertas et liberalitas.
  13. Re:Fly the last one into a skyscraper. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shithole countries don't have skyscrapers, they have enormous mosques.

    Oh, wait.........

  14. Re: Trump will cease being president in days. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It went really well other than his disappointment that his caddy wasn't black and his cheeseburger was cold.

  15. China / India demand that didn't materialize by TigerPlish · · Score: 1

    So in this vid (from 2013?) I saw the other day, Airbus CEO was saying that China (especially) and India (partially) was going to fuel the demand for massive numbers of passengers per plane. This was going to be the sell for the 380.

    Didn't happen.

    Same with the 747. Juan Trippe's bet never did quite pay off. He had bet that 747s stuffed to the gills with passengers was the future. Instead, most flew at 50% if not under. I've flown plenty in 747, the only one I've been in that was packed was a meat flight (military charter) from PHL to MHZ in 1990.

    Instead, the twins won the sky, and it happened well before the 777. The 777 was the last nail in the 747's coffin.

    I'm still glad I got to fly in it, and watch them land and take off so much. Always the highlight of a visit to any airport, challenged only in coolness by some old piston liner like a dc-3, 6, 7 or insane .mil hardware.

    --
    The "Civilized World" jumped the shark ca. 1973.
    1. Re:China / India demand that didn't materialize by jittles · · Score: 2

      So in this vid (from 2013?) I saw the other day, Airbus CEO was saying that China (especially) and India (partially) was going to fuel the demand for massive numbers of passengers per plane. This was going to be the sell for the 380.

      Didn't happen.

      Same with the 747. Juan Trippe's bet never did quite pay off. He had bet that 747s stuffed to the gills with passengers was the future. Instead, most flew at 50% if not under. I've flown plenty in 747, the only one I've been in that was packed was a meat flight (military charter) from PHL to MHZ in 1990.

      Instead, the twins won the sky, and it happened well before the 777. The 777 was the last nail in the 747's coffin.

      I'm still glad I got to fly in it, and watch them land and take off so much. Always the highlight of a visit to any airport, challenged only in coolness by some old piston liner like a dc-3, 6, 7 or insane .mil hardware.

      How many 747s have you flown on? I've flown on it maybe half a dozen times and it has always been full. I did once fly on a 777 that was almost completely empty, but those are usually full also. In fact, with the way pricing and flight schedules are lately, I feel like it has been a long time since I have been on a plane that was less than 90% capacity. I did once have the luxury of flying on a 737 with just one other passenger.

    2. Re:China / India demand that didn't materialize by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      I've flown on some 747s that were basically empty. Luxury... three seats to spread out across on those transatlantic flights.
        That was a long time ago though. I suspect routing and logistics software improved, but it seems all flights, from the twin prop dash-8 I flew to get home for Christmas to the widebodies are now packed.

    3. Re:China / India demand that didn't materialize by slickwillie · · Score: 1

      They realized too late that Indians couldn't ride on the outside of the plane.

    4. Re:China / India demand that didn't materialize by tbq · · Score: 1

      The 777 was the last nail in the 747's coffin.

      The 777-9 is roughly the same size as a 747-400 and the proposed 777-10 would be about the same size as 747-8. Given that twin engine planes are more efficient than 4 engine planes in most use cases, airlines are finding it much more cost effective to order the new 777 compared to the 747. Thus the reduced demand for the 747, and similarly the A380. Boeing currently has 326 orders for the new generation 777 compared to 14 unfulfilled orders for the 747-8, and Airbus has 95 unfulfilled A380 orders.

    5. Re:China / India demand that didn't materialize by Godwin+O'Hitler · · Score: 1

      The best flight I ever had was from Bombay to Paris on a 747. It was supposed to be Air India but for some reason the plane was Air France.
      It's literally the only time I've ever been able to sleep on a plane. It's the only time I've ever had any room on a plane. Me and the 50 or so others.
      I'm all for big planes if I can replicate those flight conditions.

      --
      No, your children are not the special ones. Nor are your pets.
    6. Re:China / India demand that didn't materialize by jittles · · Score: 1

      Yeah that's what I figured. Scheduling has definitely improved on the airline's end. Not as comfortable for passengers when basically every flight is full and they're trying to cram every last seat in to make more money. But tickets are much less expensive now so I guess I can't complain.

    7. Re:China / India demand that didn't materialize by jittles · · Score: 1

      I recently flew from Beijing to SFO. About 3 days before departure only ~30% of the seats on the plane had been assigned. I thought that meant a very luxurious flight home. Either most of those people bought tickets that did not let you pick a seat, or that route is so busy that they knew they'd pick up a ton of last minute business travelers. They ended up offering vouchers for people to stay in Beijing an extra day. I think the days of (mostly) empty planes are long gone.

    8. Re:China / India demand that didn't materialize by TigerPlish · · Score: 1

      Given that twin engine planes are more efficient than 4 engine planes in most use cases

      What fries my noodle is that one 777 engine is about 120,000 lbs thrust, and one 747 is around 25,000. (or thereabouts, may be quite a bit more now)

      One 777 engine is enough to comfortably fly a 747. o.O

      I don't mind that 747 is flying into the sunset. She gave 50 years, and plenty will still be flying for at least a decade or three. Its time came.

      The joke's on Airbus, whose 380 came despite not being needed by the airlines, despite seeing what Boeing had also seen - that the big four-engine birds are doomed (except for freight, a 747 can haul a miraculous amount of freight, and so can the 380, and the L1011, and the DC10 / MD11, all still in use now as freight birds.)

      --
      The "Civilized World" jumped the shark ca. 1973.
  16. So, if bigger planes are not needed.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then why it is such a pain in the ass to travel?

    Example, every single trip is always overbooked and creates abuses like the one experienced by the asian DR.

    Or not enough trips any given day, so on the contrary, i feel that bigger planes are needed.

    1. Re:So, if bigger planes are not needed.. by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Tell Airbus about your feelings. I'm sure they will revise their plans.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  17. Routing and distance by FeelGood314 · · Score: 1

    Big planes could get more people out of an airport and fly further. Before computerized routing every airline had to mostly operated as a hub and spoke with big planes moving people between hubs. In the 80s the routing problem was solved. It still took 15 years for the airlines to perfect it but it should have been obvious that they would. Next was the distance problem. You used to need a big 747 to get you across the Atlantic or Pacific. Not anymore. The big planes still have an advantage on some long routes that are busy enough to fill them but with the big planes no longer needed between hubs we have a surplus of big planes for the next 5 years.

    1. Re:Routing and distance by Godwin+O'Hitler · · Score: 1

      I'm not getting this. People keep saying you need a monster plane to get you across the Atlantic. Planes like the Comet 4, the 707, and the DC-8 were flying across the pond already in the late fifties and they are anything but huge. What point am I missing?

      --
      No, your children are not the special ones. Nor are your pets.
    2. Re: Routing and distance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They had 4 engines

  18. Routing and Distance by FeelGood314 · · Score: 1

    Big planes could get more people out of an airport and fly further. Before computerized routing every airline had to mostly operated as a hub and spoke with big planes moving people between hubs. In the 80s the routing problem was solved. It still took 15 years for the airlines to perfect it but it should have been obvious that they would. Next was the distance problem. You used to need a big 747 to get you across the Atlantic or Pacific. Not anymore. The big planes still have an advantage on some long routes that are busy enough to fill them but with the big planes no longer needed between hubs we have a surplus of big planes for the next 5 years. Reply to This Share

  19. Single Aisle is where Airbus is making its money by mykepredko · · Score: 1

    The bad news is that they're losing money on the A380.

    The good news is that they're making it up on the volume of the A320. It looks like they made a genius move on the C-Series as it eliminates the need for them to revamp the A319 line so they can focus on the A321/MOM (Middle Of Market) aircraft.

    Boeing, on the other hand, is making their money on the big twins and hoping the B737 can catch up/be profitable while trying to figure out if their MOM aircraft will be an extended B737, shrunk B787 or new aircraft.

  20. And so it will be by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With self-driving cars. Just wait.

  21. Re: Airbus didn't predict the rise of the big twin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem is that Airbus cannot close the line tomorrow as it still has deliveries on the books. It has the unenviable choice to refund all that revenue and pay cancellation penalties it has booked AND take the loss closing the line OR make the product at a loss to fulfill those orders.

    Right now Airbus is using accounting tricks to say that even at the current reduced production rate it is not loosing too much per plane, but once they actually set a date to cease production, we'll know just how much they are actually losing per plane to ramp down production as cost amortization on the line won't apply any more.

  22. So actually the lesson is not the same by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

    The general lesson may be the same as that behind the Concorde.

    Unlike others, I agree...But I think you went to the wrong conclusion

    So actually you do not agree because you think the lesson to be learned is NOT the same as the lesson from Concorde. The problem with Concorde was cost and the sonic boom which limited both the number of people willing to travel on it and the routes the plane could fly: generally only routes over oceans were possible.

    The problem with the A380 is almost exactly the opposite. The cost per passenger is less but the experience of each passenger is worse due to the long time to load the craft and the need to fly through a hub. Similarly, there is no limit on the routes the A380 can fly but there is a limit on the number of airports which have the infrastructure required to support such a huge plane.

    1. Re: So actually the lesson is not the same by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I prefer flying in the a380. Loading through three doors is fast enough; Emirates is cheaper than the 747 carriers. But yes, fog at DXB has huge knock on effects.

  23. Real shame because the 380 is a great ride by Zontar_Thing_From_Ve · · Score: 2

    I got to fly on a 380 some years ago between Singapore and Hong Kong. I thought it was great. The plane seemed to laugh at turbulence. The whole ride was smooth as silk. Too bad it hasn't really worked out for Airbus because I feel that if more passengers actually rode on it, they'd probably like it.

  24. Inside the USA, B757 is the largest plane used by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Inside the USA, B757 is the largest plane I've been on the last 15 yrs, though B737 is also common. Usually, it is an A320 or MD-8x type (or something smaller). Flew from Atlanta to Anchorage on B737s (PDX stop), for example.

    Going overseas the last 4 yrs, it has been B767, B777 and A330s. Did a 10 hr flight to Santiago on a B767 2 months ago. Last year, it was a B777 to NRT and another to BKK.

    It used to be B747 almost always to either Europe or Asia, if it wasn't an MD-10/11. Last time I was on a B747 was a Delta Air flight in 2013.

    I've never flown on an A380, A340, B787 or A350. They do show up here in ATL, but not too often.

    ERJ has taken over the sub-1k-mile city-to-city hops. For smaller airports, I've flown on Saab 2000s, Dash-8, Beechcraft 1900d and even a DHC-3 Otter. ;)

    I suppose if I flew from LA to NYC, things might be different. Everywhere else, B757 or smaller.

  25. That's sad. I'd be gutted if it went by seoras · · Score: 5, Informative

    I live in NZ but I'm from the UK. I go home every so often for visits. I always fly Emirates just so I can fly in the A380. Why?
    I've flown in 747's so many times I've lost count which is why the first time I flew in an A380 I almost shit myself.
    So used to hearing the engines of the 747 go full throttle, being thrown back in my seat as it launches itself down the run way, I expected the same of the A380.
    Not so. When it took off (from Auckland) it felt like it was taxi-ing down the run way. In my head I'm thinking "come on Cap'n put the f-ing boot down".
    He didn't. It just trundled leisurely along. I'm now thinking "FFS, there's water at the end of this run way, stop teasing and go man!"
    Then all of a sudden it lifted it nose. My knuckles went white. It soared gracefully into the air. I was gob smacked.
    That and it's so much quieter than any other jet I've ever flown in.
    If you have to spend a whole day at 36,000 feet sitting on your arse watching tv & movies then I recommend doing in this bird - while you still can...

    1. Re:That's sad. I'd be gutted if it went by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I find it's not easy to sleep on. In the 747s you could rest your head against the window side, but because the gap is too large on the A380 between the seat and window, you can't rest properly meaning you end up sitting uncomfortably in their shitty seat the whole way.

    2. Re:That's sad. I'd be gutted if it went by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

      You fucking kidding? I love the moment when the captain hits the throttle and you get pushed back in your seat. You're afraid of that? You poor unadventurous soul.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    3. Re:That's sad. I'd be gutted if it went by seoras · · Score: 1

      You don't read very well do you? You poor illiterate fuckwit.
      I said "I almost shit myself" because the A380 DIDN'T feel like it went full throttle and I wasn't thrown back in my seat - which I do love and I had come to expect.
      RTFP...

    4. Re:That's sad. I'd be gutted if it went by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      The A380 _can_ do that - its takeoff and landing speeds are 20-35 knots slower than the 747.

      However they _don't_ do that.

      It's better for the engines (maintenance wise and therefore cost-wise) to use just enough power to takeoff in the available runway length than to punch it and use the shortest possible length. It's also better for the neighbours' hearing.

      Watch any airport and you'll see that despite massive differences in power and size, all aircraft tend to take off about the same point. TOGO power is only used when things go pearshaped.

      When an A380 does punch it, you'll know about it.

  26. Why are twin jets cheaper to run? by Michael+Woodhams · · Score: 1

    The fundamental problem for the A380 is that twin jets are cheaper to operate than quad jets. The 777 may not carry as many passengers, but it has lower cost per passenger-kilometre than the A380, or indeed the 747 (which isn't so different in size than the 777.)

    I have seen this stated many times. However, I don't really understand why. For example, this article states "those newer, more reliable [twin jet] engines have also been bigger and more efficient" but doesn't say why jet engine companies aren't also making more reliable and efficient engines for quad jets, if it is all down to newness.

    I've looked online for an answer, but generally I just find speculation from people who seem no more knowledgeable than myself.

    I can give an argument why quad jets should be cheaper. A plane needs to have sufficient thrust to take off and climb out after a single engine failure at the worst time (just after it is too late to abort take off.) If we call this thrust T, then a twin jet needs each engine to be capable of producing T, so it provides 2T thrust. For a quad jet, after a failure it needs T, so each of the remaining engines needs 1/3T, hence when fully operational it need only provide 4/3 T thrust. So a twin jet must be much more over provisioned than a quad.

    Speculations I've seen include that four engines are extra complexity (but those big twin engines need a lot of extra complexity to be so big), extra maintenance costs, that engines disrupt lift, so you need bigger wings (and more weight) to make up the losses of having two extra engines, that with engines further outboard you need more structural strength in the wings (hence more cost and weight.)

    I'm not saying these reasons are wrong, just that nobody I've seen making those arguments has convinced me they know what they're talking about. In replies, if you have expertise, or are citing someone with expertise, please make this clear.

    --
    Quattuor res in hoc mundo sanctae sunt: libri, liberi, libertas et liberalitas.
    1. Re:Why are twin jets cheaper to run? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget volume - there is a bigger market for the big twin jets, so the return on investing in further refining its purpose designed engine are better. Compare the production numbers for the 737 vs 747 (2 year difference in debut year): 9685 vs 1565. That's 3x the engine production, so worth further investment in pushing the limits of engine efficiency.

    2. Re:Why are twin jets cheaper to run? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Larger turbines (up to a point - one which we haven't reached) are more efficient. Therefore, 2 larger turbines will always be more efficient than 4 smaller turbines. That combined with the cost of only maintaining 2 engines (vs 4) is why.

    3. Re:Why are twin jets cheaper to run? by Michael+Woodhams · · Score: 1

      For planes of the same size, twins are cheaper than quads. 777s are driving out A380s and 747s, and the A340 died while the A330 lives on.

      --
      Quattuor res in hoc mundo sanctae sunt: libri, liberi, libertas et liberalitas.
    4. Re:Why are twin jets cheaper to run? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      The efficiency of a turbofan (which is what those "jets" really are) is limited by how big you can make the fan part. This is a basic property, and applies to propellers too.

      If you look on a modern airliner, they have "high bypass" turbofans, meaning the fan part is a lot bigger than the jet part. They've basically made the engines as big as they possibly can: most of them are mounted in front of the wings, not slung under them, so the intake and fan can actually extend up above the wing, and often the bottom of the cowling is flattened to give a bit extra ground clearance. Contrast that with older jets that had these long skinny little engine nacelles slung under the wing.

      Your ideal design for an efficient jet would be one gigantic engine right in the middle, but unfortunately that's where you want to put the passengers. Your next best bet is to have two engines that are as big as you can get, to either side. A twinjet.

    5. Re:Why are twin jets cheaper to run? by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      What you describe is absolutely not a modern airliner, but rather a newer version of a 737 - a 1960ies design that is a direct derivative of a 1950ies design (707). It looks the way it looks because Boeing kept the short gear struts after reengining. Aircraft designed with a high bypass turbofan in mind doesn't have flattened engine cowlings and the fans definitely don't extend above the wing. 737 is not a modern aircraft, it is an ancient pig with a lot of lipstick.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    6. Re:Why are twin jets cheaper to run? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "For a quad jet, after a failure it needs T, so each of the remaining engines needs 1/3T, hence when fully operational it need only provide 4/3 T thrust. So a twin jet must be much more over provisioned than a quad."

      Here's your error. A turbojet or turbofan (or any turbine engine) is only substantially efficient inside a certain window of thrust, which differs between engines but is roughly around 70 to 80 % of max thrust. Both quad and twin jets have to operate their engines inside that window at cruising flight to make any efficiency gains. Meaning the theoretical gain from dividing the required thrust over more engines doesn't help, as then the quads have to work outside their efficient window. That with the added weight and especially drag, the quads never reach the efficiency of the twin setup.

      The same problem exists in the power industry with the advent of sudden solar and wind surplus. Gas turbine plants would be the first to be adjusted as coal is slow to adjust (it needs hours to burn off 10% of its boiler fuel) and nuclear takes even days to adjust (and is preferably adjusted during scheduled maintenance). However when you half the fuel supply in the gas plant, its efficiency can drop from around 40 to 50 % to a mere 20%. Meaning you get a 25% of your original energy output for 50% of the original fuel supply. That extra loss is wasted fossil fuel for which the renewables don't account. Of course, the solution is to add battery or hydro storage to lower dependability on turbine plants and/or to be able to switch turbine plants off or on instead of adjusting, but just like the airplane industry this can take a decade or more.

    7. Re:Why are twin jets cheaper to run? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would also reckon that having four engines means more overheads in terms of maintenance, spare parts, tools and consumables. Especially if all four engines are not of the same type (e.g. in the 747).

    8. Re:Why are twin jets cheaper to run? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A nineteen sixty-ies design?

      You use strange terminology.

    9. Re:Why are twin jets cheaper to run? by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      Perfectly valid in my part of the world.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    10. Re:Why are twin jets cheaper to run? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1
    11. Re:Why are twin jets cheaper to run? by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      Let me give you some perspective on the A350
      http://www.aerospacemanufactur...

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    12. Re:Why are twin jets cheaper to run? by Michael+Woodhams · · Score: 1

      All four engines are of the same type in the 747. I'm not aware of any plane using different engines in different positions.

      --
      Quattuor res in hoc mundo sanctae sunt: libri, liberi, libertas et liberalitas.
    13. Re:Why are twin jets cheaper to run? by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      "Speculations I've seen"

      The primary reason twin beats quad at any given size is simple: Mass.

      Both of the extra two engines and the wing structure to hold them. The extra fuel consumption factors in too, but it's not that much extra fuel consumption.

      Given you have a MTOW based on what the wheels and runway can handle, losing mass to engines+support structures means that much less revenue freight, fuel or self-loading freight can be carried.

  27. A380 = by spineboy · · Score: 1

    The A380 looks like a Beluga whale - something just looks incredibly off.

    The 747 at least has the cockpit windows in a better place

    --
    ..........FULL STOP.
    1. Re:A380 = by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The A380 looks like a Beluga whale - something just looks incredibly off.

      The 747 at least has the cockpit windows in a better place

      Aesthetically, I agree 100 %. However, cockpit visibility from a 747 is so bad that it wouldn't pass present-day FAA certification. Airbus tried to kill the 747-8i by lobbying for it to be recertified instead of getting certified via the grandfather clause. A redesign (most likely resembling the A380 and placing the cockpit between the decks) would've cost Boeing too much to make it worth launching and hence Airbus would've gotten all of the tiny market for 747+ sized aircraft.

    2. Re:A380 = by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course there's an actual Airbus Beluga, which I just learnt is based on A300.
      I like it, because it's the only plane I recognise and when seeing it in landing approach there's an illusion it's flying super low.

      Other planes I don't know if they're Airbus or Boeing they're white cylinders to me.

  28. [citation needed] by Michael+Woodhams · · Score: 1

    please

    --
    Quattuor res in hoc mundo sanctae sunt: libri, liberi, libertas et liberalitas.
  29. It was never the future of aviation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The only people who thought the A380 was the future of aviation were the people who designed it and their counterparts in the marketing department. Itâ(TM)s an incredible feat of engineering and an amazing aircraft, but by the time it was released Boeing had already seen decreased orders for modern variants of the 747 (which cost considerably less than the A380).

    1. Re:It was never the future of aviation by Chrisq · · Score: 1

      The only people who thought the A380 was the future of aviation were the people who designed it and their counterparts in the marketing department. Itâ(TM)s an incredible feat of engineering and an amazing aircraft, but by the time it was released Boeing had already seen decreased orders for modern variants of the 747 (which cost considerably less than the A380).

      I agree. Like Concorde there are a handful of routes where it could work, but not nearly enough to make it profitable.

  30. Re:Fly the last one into a skyscraper. by slickwillie · · Score: 1

    Mayhaps the AC was referring to the shithole country of New York City.

  31. No Airbus ever made book figures by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No Airbus Aircraft lives up to the published specs. The A380 is not cost effective on longer routes, it is on shorter ones.

    I think it was only brought out as a European PR exercise in cooperative manufacturing, not actually something to make money. It was a nice try, but doesn't fit the bill. Even the 747 is now being abandoned.

    For the all the 'Big' hype, it's also it's downfall. Special pavements and special facilities required.

  32. Re:Trump will cease being president in days. by LostMyBeaver · · Score: 0

    Made me scroll up to see what article it was I was reading.

    Are you REALLY excited and hopeful that Mike Pence... a guy who is the political embodiment of the flat-Earthers and who needs a constitution if you have the evangelical church to guide him... as president?

    Trump is horrible... but would you rather have Trump which no sane politician wants to be seen to support or would you rather have Mike Pence who it seems everyone would support if it meant getting rid of Trump?

    I'd rather have a fool who has a one track mind of building a wall that we can say no to as opposed to a fool who thinks women who get pregnant when they're raped should be forced to kill themselves because they can't kill off the seed of the rapist who destroyed their lives... who would have the full support of a republican congress.

    Please consider trying this nifty new game called chess. It teaches you... if you let it to consider the consequences of your actions. What seems like a great idea at first may not be the best idea if you look a move or two ahead.

  33. Maybe people think by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe people think that such a large aircraft is a tempting target for the Muslims. That's why the only large order came from Emirates airways, like tall buildings only Muslim countries and those who deal with Muslims properly (like China) can have them.

  34. Good riddance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Itâ(TM)s the free market and death shit to the failed EU austerity. Theyâ(TM)ve been waiting for the USA to drive demand again instead of priming their own demand.

  35. Dont put so many people on one thing that can fail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its bad enough when a smaller plane crashes due to technical or human fault or intent, larger planes full of more people only make it worse.

  36. Very accurate production estimate from Boeing by turp182 · · Score: 1

    From:
    https://www.nbcnews.com/storyl...

    As of the end of November, Airbus had won orders for 317 A380s and delivered 221, leaving 96 unfilled orders.

    --
    BlameBillCosby.com
  37. Cargo Variant? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The only reason the 747 is still in production is for long cargo routes, where it is still in demand.

    Seems like the 380 could compete in that market, yet I haven't heard of a cargo variant for the plane. Anyone know why?

  38. It is often forgotten... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...Boeing were building an aircraft that was just as large, if not larger, with help from NASA Langley's aerospace group. The Boeing/NASA Blended Wing wide-body passenger jet would have been the direct competitor to the A380. One wonders what would have happened if the project had been completed.

    George Bush decided NASA should only work on projects that produced more air pollution and pulled the funding.

  39. It's Dunkirk. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dunkirk is the place, where many battles of WWI, and WWII took place.

  40. The Comet crashed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A thing of beauty, indeed.

  41. Alcohol makes it easier to travel by dddux · · Score: 1

    I've always loved me some bar... and get hammered on a plane. One of the reasons being my aeroplane travel anxiety. It makes it so much easier and merrier.

    --
    "It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society." - Jiddu Krishnamurti
  42. Let Me Guess... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are the only rational person? Or is it that you are one of a special class of rational people?

    Funny then, that you weren't given production green-lighting authority on the A380. Oh, I know, it's all because of the incestuous deals that cut out all of the rational people. That must be it.

    "Everything is easy to those who don't have to do it."

    1. Re:Let Me Guess... by Tailhook · · Score: 1

      I didn't swallow the Airbus hype and I didn't shut down my critical thinking ability out of deference for all things European. In the several years before the A380 announcement the decline of 747 sales was entirely evident; airlines were shifting to large twins and away from large four engine jumbos. Many voices shared my view at the time, but the enthusiasm for an Airbus superjumbo as a Boeing rival drowned out anything that wasn't in tune with the fanboi echo chamber. The skeptics were right and the A380 is a dead end; it achieved its dubious goal as a prestige plane and now the market is putting it to bed.

      Airbus is prone to this; Concorde is another example. Builders and airlines that actually had to consider the market value of supersonic aircraft killed off their development efforts because it didn't make sense. Only the state supported golden boy outfits like Airbus/AF/BA and Tupolev/Aerflot that could build and run SSTs at a loss persisted.

      Several people have provided anecdotes about their A380 experiences and observations about successful A380 operations. I never claimed the plane was useless or that airlines aren't utilizing them. My point is that the plane's reason for existence is about EU/Airbus prestige as opposed to market demand, and the limited sales are mostly the result of European pressure to move the limited production. Unless the EU and UK step in again and squeeze someone to buy more then production will end.

      --
      Maw! Fire up the karma burner!
  43. Re:What future?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    -1 Flamebait

    Oooooh! Another one! You cunts are so tough! I can do this all day. Can you? You dumb stupid fuck! Your goddamn airbus sucks balls! And so do the cunt face moderators! We should put them on an airbus, to Kabul!

  44. Re: Trump will cease being president in days. by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

    Anyone know how his round of golf went today?

    As always: 5 under par. On every hole.

    --
    Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
  45. Re:Single Aisle is where Airbus is making its mone by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

    The A319 was discontinued long before the Bombardier acquisition started. They weren't selling enough of them to make it worthwhile as downsizing an aircraft results in higher per-seat costs.

  46. UPDATE by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1
    --
    Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
  47. good riddance by NikeHerc · · Score: 1

    I cringe every time I have to fly on an Airbus. My motto: if it ain't Boeing, I ain't going.

    --
    Circle the wagons and fire inward. Entropy increases without bounds.
  48. Dive-by Grammar Nazi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    [T]he first time I flew in an A380 I almost shat myself.

    Strong verbs (usually) form the simple past by application of an ablaut: spit/spat; sit/sat/; shit/shat. Were 'to shit' instead a weak verb, and notwithstanding irregularity, the preterite form should be 'shitted.' (eg. knit/knitted; piss/pissed; fuck/fucked.)

    Goodness, what do they teach the kids in school these days?