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BA gives strongest hint yet of Airbus snub (747 v. 380)
This Is Money ^ | 5/29/07 | n/a

Posted on 05/30/2007 6:35:11 AM PDT by stinkerpot65

Rather than commit to the troubled A380, there is growing speculation BA will sign up as a launch customer for Boeing's proposed 747-8, a stretched version of the original jumbo jet and capable of carrying 475 passengers.

(Excerpt) Read more at thisismoney.co.uk ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy
KEYWORDS: 380; 747; airbus; boeing
Bad news for Airbus.
1 posted on 05/30/2007 6:35:13 AM PDT by stinkerpot65
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To: stinkerpot65
Also... American about to announce massive Boeing order.

Here

- Boeing 787s - 100-125 firm, plus another 100 options

- Additional Boeing 777s - firm number unknown

- Boeing 737s - 100 firm, options unknown

2 posted on 05/30/2007 6:37:14 AM PDT by stinkerpot65
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To: stinkerpot65

Wouldn’t that be the Airbust killer deal? Wow!


3 posted on 05/30/2007 6:39:42 AM PDT by rawhide
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To: stinkerpot65

That’s good news, but I’m still surprised that there is much of a market for four engine aircraft.


4 posted on 05/30/2007 6:43:23 AM PDT by Moonman62 (The issue of whether cheap labor makes America great should have been settled by the Civil War.)
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To: stinkerpot65

British Airways would have been a prime customer for the A380-800, but since British Airways controls a large fraction of the landing slots at London Heathrow Airport, they don’t need the biggest plane to compensate for the lack of landing slots. As such, expect the airline to buy a combination of 777-300ER’s and 747-8I’s to eventually replace their 747-400 fleet over the next 10-15 years.


5 posted on 05/30/2007 6:47:38 AM PDT by RayChuang88
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To: Moonman62
"That’s good news, but I’m still surprised that there is much of a market for four engine aircraft."

When someone comes up with a jet than can carry 500+ people on two engines, the airlines will buy it. But I just don't see a super jumbo on less than three engines, and neither does Boeing or Airbus. And those 500+ aircraft are going to dominate long range routes, especially the US to Asia and Europe to Asia routes.
6 posted on 05/30/2007 6:54:26 AM PDT by DesScorp
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To: stinkerpot65

I just don’t see the traffic there. Who flies in planes with 400 other people? Imagine the lines at that airport? Imagine that many people going through security? Bizarre. Imagine baggage handling for 400 people.Imagine when one of those crashes. I suspect if they do make them they’ll fly half empty and what a waste of resources.


7 posted on 05/30/2007 7:11:10 AM PDT by ArtyFO (I love to smoke cigars when I adjust artillery fire at the moonbat loonery.)
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To: ArtyFO

Fly the NW Airlines flights 7 and 8 from Shanghai to Tokyo or Tokyo to Shanghai route sometime... A 747-400 with 416 seats, and most days you will find every seat full.

They can actually load and unload that plane pretty quick, by use of two gangways. Security delays aren’t an issue, since you typically have a few dozen planes boarding at any time anyway so the airport is already staffed up for considerably more than 400 people.

Most of the time it takes about 30 minutes to go from doors open to getting my ride - exiting the plane, walking the airport, customs, baggage. Pretty efficient if you do it right...


8 posted on 05/30/2007 7:40:59 AM PDT by PugetSoundSoldier (Tagline: Kinda like a chorus line but without the legs)
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To: ArtyFO
Who flies in planes with 400 other people?

I take it you haven't flown since they took propellers off of passenger planes. (Delta stopped flying DC-7s about the time it started flying 747s.)

9 posted on 05/30/2007 8:23:45 AM PDT by PAR35
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To: stinkerpot65

Here is a 2004 News Flashback that will make you LOL. (7E7=787)

Airbus has harsh words for Boeing’s 7E7 ‘hype’
Executive calls sales optimism a ‘figment of the imagination’

SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER REPORTER
FARNBOROUGH, England — Airbus super-salesman John Leahy has never been shy when it comes to mixing it up in a war of words with The Boeing Co., his longtime rival.
But Leahy, head of Airbus commercial and the executive most often credited with the rise of Airbus as the world’s biggest commercial jet maker, outdid himself during an interview on the eve of the Farnborough Air Show.
He called Boeing’s confident predictions that it could have 200 orders for its 7E7 Dreamliner by the end of this year the stuff of public relations fancy, not reality.
The twin-engine, widebody jet is too small — the base 7E7-8 would carry around 217 passengers in a three-class configuration — and many airlines are telling Airbus they are not interested in ordering it, despite what Boeing says publicly, according to Leahy.
“It’s typical hype,” the American-born Leahy said.
“I’ve never seen an airplane where the market hype from the PR department is less in contact with the reality of the marketplace.”
Leahy will be among the Airbus executives taking center stage today when the European airplane maker, which last year delivered more jets than Boeing for the first time, presents its story to the media at the air show. Airbus will follow Boeing commercial airplanes boss Alan Mulally in back-to-back news conferences that traditionally kick off the weeklong show held every other year outside of London.
During the last few months, Boeing has landed 62 announced orders for the 7E7, which is due to enter service in 2008. None yet are firm.
All Nippon Airways of Japan has said it expects to reach a firm agreement with Boeing for its 50-plane launch order around September.
Air New Zealand and two European charter carriers have announced orders for the other 12 planes, though no firm contracts have been signed.
Mike Bair, senior vice president of the 7E7 program, has said about two dozen airlines have accepted proposals from Boeing for 7E7 orders totaling about 200 planes — that includes the 62 announced so far. Those airlines have put down security deposits to save a delivery position, and Bair has said he expects most of the commitments to become orders by the end of this year.
Boeing has also said airline interest in the 7E7 is so strong that it could have 500 orders by the time of the first flight of the 7E7 in 2007. That would make the 7E7 the best-selling Boeing or Airbus widebody jetliner ever — as measured from product launch to first flight.
Mulally told a group of European journalist in London yesterday that he considers deposits for those 200 planes “as good as a firm contract.”
Nonsense, Leahy said.
“Those numbers are purely a figment of the imagination of Boeing’s public relations department there in Seattle,” he said.
“We are in contact with the airlines. We talk to them on a daily basis. We know Boeing is going around and making a lot of presentations, but we don’t see anyone about to place orders.”
Why would Boeing executives risk their credibility by making such wild statements if they knew the orders would not materialize?

excerpt


10 posted on 05/30/2007 8:29:23 AM PDT by NavyCanDo
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To: NavyCanDo
Boeing has also said airline interest in the 7E7 is so strong that it could have 500 orders by the time of the first flight of the 7E7 in 2007.

Wow. Talk about on the money. But I'm guessing more like 700.

11 posted on 05/30/2007 8:35:43 AM PDT by stinkerpot65
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To: ArtyFO

Shoot, imagine going through Customs with 500+ p*ssed-off passengers?


12 posted on 05/30/2007 8:59:16 AM PDT by Tallguy (Climate is what you plan for, weather is what you get.)
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