Plane Nation

News about commerical aviation

Entries for the ‘Farnborough Air Show’ Category

Bombardier Announces the C Series Aircraft Program (100-150 seats)

Bombardier today announced that its Board of Directors has granted approval for the launch of the CSeries family of aircraft, a new game-changing five abreast commercial airliner family, with the economics, performance, environmental and passenger-oriented improvements demanded by airline customers for the next quarter century. Entry into service is scheduled for 2013.

Leave a Comment

500 seat Boeing 747-8i - it could be possible

Boeing could reposition its 747-8 Intercontinental to bring the four-engined long-range widebody’s passenger capacity to within 10% of the Airbus A380
’s standard three-class 555-seat capacity. Initial studies of the stretched Boeing 747-8 Intercontinental appear to show the aircraft could seat almost 500
passengers and still make its provisional 14,800km (8,000nm) minimum range target, says the manufacturer. The findings, which are yet to be ratified during
ongoing trade studies, could satisfy the additional payload needs of several potential customers and for the first time put the 747-8 in a similar capacity bracket to
the A380. Boeing 747 sales, marketing and in-service support vice-president Randy Tinseth says rough calculations indicate that with

Leave a Comment

Goodbye Airbus A370 hello A350 XWB - extra wide-body

The A350 XWB (extra wide-body) is Airbus’ response to market demand
for a medium capacity long range wide-body family. Available from 2012,
it will have an entirely new, uncompromised, 21st Century design with a
new and wider fuselage for extra space and passenger comfort. It will
also be extra efficient, extra environmentally friendly and quiet, as it will
feature all the advanced technologies available in the first part of the 21st
century, bringing the A380 experience to a new level. Conceived from
the outset to form a complete family of airliners, three basic passenger
versions are being offered. They include the -800, -900 and the -1000
accommodating between 250

Leave a Comment

Possible steeper touchdown and take-off angles for the new Boeing 747-8 with a tailstrike protection system

Boeing is studying a 777-style electronic tailstrike protection system for the 747-8, which would enable steeper touchdown and take-off angles and help reduce
noise during critical approach and departure phases. The electronic tailskid trade study forms a key element of Boeing’s attempts to close the gap on
QC1 noise limits at London, and the outcome is largely dependent on windtunnel tests being performed at Qinetiq’s facility at Farnborough in the UK. ©
Mark Wagner / Aviation-images.com Windtunnel tests at Farnborough are a vital element in the tailskid study The tests are to assess low-speed aerodynamic
characteristics to help finalise aircraft lines, design loads and control laws. Tailstrike protection system technology, developed

Leave a Comment

Airbus announces new A350XWB - Extra Wide Body

As reported by Airbus, the new A350XWB model will be 12.5 centimeters
wider than the previous draft and carry 314 passengers. It will also make
extensive use of carbon-fibre composites and fuel-efficient engines.
Airbus intends to begin development in October, and the plane is
expected to enter service by mid 2012.

Leave a Comment

Dreamliner 787 has a weight problem

Boeing’s 787 Dreamliner is overweight and experiencing delays with some suppliers, the company said Sunday, while stressing that the long-range, fuel-efficient
jet remains on budget and on schedule. Rival Airbus, however, announced this weekend that the widely expected redesign of its planned A350 - billed as a
competitor to the 787 - will nearly double the development cost of the plane. Boeing Commercial Airplanes Chief Executive Alan Mulally, speaking in London on
the eve of the Farnborough Air Show, declined to say where 787 supply problems were occurring or by how much the plane was exceeding its target weight.
“We’re a little over where we want to be at this

Leave a Comment

Boeing to begin testing of 787 Dreamliner Wing Box

FARNBOROUGH, England, July 17, 2006 — Boeing  and its partners have completed construction and will soon begin structural testing of a full-scale 787 Dreamliner composite wing box as part of the certification process of the all-new jetliner.
The test piece measures approximately 17 feet front spar to rear spar and 50 feet from airplane centerline to [...]

Leave a Comment

Airbus to potentially release 3 new jets at the Farnborough Air Show as A350 or A370

Airbus will expand its offering of two new mid-sized planes to three in order to catch up with surging rival Boeing Co., industry sources said on Friday. Worried
that its pair of proposed A350 models aimed at competing with the Boeing 787 due in 2008 will do little to slow sales of Boeing’s larger 777, France-based Airbus
will add a third, larger model. “They are definitely looking at doing three,” one industry source said, adding that the new planes were likely to be named the
A350-800, A350-900 and A350-1,000. There was a chance Airbus could go with the name A370, he added. A second source confirmed the story

Leave a Comment

Airbus A370 design may not be shown at the Farnborough Air Show

EXECUTIVES of Europe’s aircraft manufacturer Airbus were engaged
this weekend in another crisis. They had hoped to unveil the design of
their new A370 aircraft this week on the eve of the Farnborough Air
Show. The “launch” of the new plane, which is even more critical to the
company’s future than its troubled A380 super-jumbo, had been pencilled
in for 14 July until British partner BAE Systems announced it was
triggering a full audit of the Toulouse-based European planemaker. On
Friday, the launch of the mid-sized jet was suddenly suspended to allow
new chairman Christian Streiff to “review” the troubled project, so Airbus
claimed.

Leave a Comment

Airbus may be forced to delay the launch of the A350

European aircraft maker Airbus, which faces delays to production of the
A380 super-jumbo, may also be forced to delay the launch of its long-haul
A350 jet, London’s Times newspaper said Friday.The new setback was
because Christian Streiff, expected to be confirmed as the new Airbus
chief executive, needed time to approve the venture, the newspaper said
citing sources close to EADS, which owns 80 percent of Airbus.The
group has been busy redesigning its A350 model, a new mid-sized airliner
that has been poorly received by potential clients.According to The
Times, sources close to the European Aeronautics Defence and Space
Company have warned that Streiff may not make a decision

Comments (1)