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#1 vitaminm

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Posted 19 March 2007 - 12:07 PM

Airbus A380 Makes 1st Flight to America


Monday, March 19, 2007
NEW YORK - The latest jetliner to claim the title of world's biggest passenger aircraft completed its maiden voyage to America on Monday, flying on football field-length wings and a prayer that the U.S. airline industry will want to buy the double-decker jumbo jet.

The four-engine Airbus A380 touched down at Kennedy International Airport at about 12:10 p.m., to the cheers of onlookers gathered to watch the arrival. As the plane taxied, a pilot waved an American flag. A separate A380 was flying to Los Angeles time but devoid of any passengers.

The eight-hour flight is a chance for plane builder Airbus and German airline Lufthansa AG to show off the jewel of Airbus' offerings to potential American buyers and to the airports they hope to turn into flight bases for the jet. The 239-foot-long A380 can seat as many as 550 passengers, hold 81,890 gallons of fuel, cruise at 560 mph and fly some 8,000 nautical miles.

Lufthansa Flight 8940 is meant to be a statement by its builder, the European consortium now called EADS Airbus, that it can accommodate vast numbers of travelers comfortably and efficiently.

"We're talking about an airplane that is representing aviation in the 21st century in terms of efficiency," said Jens Bischoff, Lufthansa's vice president for the Americas.

It was one of the highest-profile maiden voyages since 1969, when the Concorde, the world's first and still only commercial supersonic transport, arrived at JFK from London. The European-made Concorde was retired from British and French service in 2005.

EADS Airbus hopes the A380 - designed to carry more people farther than any plane in history, though at subsonic speeds - will dominate air travel for the next two decades.

Waiting in the wings, however, is Boeing, whose 747 jumbo jet has been the world's principal long-haul aircraft for the past 30 years and now has competitors to the A380 in early production.

For Airbus, which has been beset by management and financial problems - including a two-year delay to the A380 that wiped out more than $6.61 billion in profit forecasts - the flight is a chance to prove that the plane will be ready when the first deliveries are made in October to Singapore airlines.

Lufthansa chief pilot Juergen Raps, who has flown the A380 before, said that despite the superjumbo jet's size, it was nimble and responsive.

"If I were to compare it to driving, you would think this would be like driving a truck or a bus," he said inside the plane's cockpit. "It's like driving a Ferrari."

The air show began early Monday at Frankfurt International Airport when the took off as Lufthansa Flight 8940 for the eight-hour flight to Kennedy, scheduled to land at 12:30 p.m. EDT. Onboard were 483 people, including four pilots, four Airbus crew members, 23 Lufthansa cabin crew and several hundred passengers, mostly Airbus and Lufthansa employees along with some reporters.

The flight was to operate just as if it were a commercial one with full dining and entertainment services.

After the inaugural run, Lufthansa and Airbus will operate a demonstration flight to Chicago's O'Hare Airport on Tuesday, before returning to New York and then Frankfurt. The plane then heads to Hong Kong and back, before continuing its journey to Washington Dulles International Airport on March 25, with a final stop at Lufthansa's Munich hub on March 28.

Using the performance results from this circuit - flying the plane as it would be done so if it were in service - Lufthansa's goal is to match the A380's turnaround time from landing to takeoff with that of much smaller long-haul jets already in operation.

Airbus has 166 orders from 15 airlines for the new plane, which has already made tests flights in Europe and to Asia.

"We are proud that ... we are now able to present the A380 to the American people," said Mario Heinen, the head of Airbus' A380 program.

Thousands of onlookers were expected to line fences at Los Angeles International Airport to see the plane make its West Coast debut. The facility nearly lost out on the highly anticipated landing of the A380 after Airbus announced plans to land the jet in New York instead.

The company revised its plan to allow for arrival at both locations. Los Angeles sped up construction of a $9 million gate for the giant gate to accommodate the plane.

Toulouse, France-based Airbus said that plane will perform tests at the California airport, including airfield maneuvers, docking at the terminal gate and ground and gate handling exercises. The Los Angeles airport, the fifth-busiest worldwide, is expected to be the first U.S. destination for the A380 when it enters commercial service.

The flights come as Airbus looks to put what Louis Gallois, co-chief executive of parent company European Aeronautic Defense and Space Co., called "the worst year for Airbus in its life" behind it. Airbus is seeking to recoup its losses by cutting 10,000 jobs and spinning off or closing six of its European manufacturing plants.

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On the Net:

Airbus: http://www.airbus.com

Lufthansa: http://www.lufthansa.com
vitaminm

#2 flyers&divers

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Posted 19 March 2007 - 12:17 PM

How timely for the Chinese at the time of the maiden voyage of the Airbus Jumbo to announce that they made a long term strategic decision to enter the aircraft market to compete with Boeing, Airbus, the Russians, at al.. It will take them years and I have no doubt they will succeed. I do not know how many of you heard this but at some point the Chinese knocked off a Boeing aircraft down to the last screw but on it's test flight it fell out of the air because it was not balanced properly. :D Regards, F&D
"Successful trading is more about Sun Tzu then Elliott." F&D

#3 Mtrader

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Posted 19 March 2007 - 02:54 PM

"We're talking about an airplane that is representing aviation in the 21st century in terms of efficiency" Wow. There is plenty of copper on board. I am not sure it can carry people. LOL. DOOM BABOOM.
You are on your own. This is for demonstration only.
JV

#4 crestdorf

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Posted 19 March 2007 - 05:07 PM

A friend who helps design major international airports told me that this airbus consumes more O2 in a second than everyones breaths on the earth in same duration. I could have mis heard him but I don't think so. He is very pro airport/travel and he said this plane is an environmental disaster.

#5 n83

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Posted 19 March 2007 - 06:01 PM

A friend who helps design major international airports told me that this airbus consumes more O2 in a second than everyones breaths on the earth in same duration. I could have mis heard him but I don't think so. He is very pro airport/travel and he said this plane is an environmental disaster.


that goes with all the big jets..the 777 747-8 (new version) etc..all huge engines