Have you read the book or seen the movie A Bridge Too Far? It's a true story about Operation Market Garden, the WWII push to capture the bridge across the Rhine river at Arnhem which, if successful, would have hastend the Allied march into Germany and final victory. It got its title from a quote by British Lt. Gen. Frederick Browning who at the time told Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery, "I think we might be going a bridge too far." He was right, and the operation failed.
Fast forward about 50 years and I think someone should have told the powers-that-be at the European airplane consortium Airbus that their proposed gargantuan A-380 might turn out to be A Plane Too Big. (I saw a prototype fly back in '06, and it was almost gravity defying!) If they had it looks like they would have been right as I saw in the news today the A-380 program is about to die a quiet death.
Airbus original business plan was to have the countries that built major parts of their planes...France, Germany, the UK, and Spain..."loan" them the R&D cash to get off the ground. *sorry* It worked well for them with the A-300, A-310, A-320, A-330, and A-340, so they doubled down with the giant A-380. That looks like it will be a 25-30 BILLION dollar Oops!
The A-380 was to be a plane that would fly from gateway city to gateway city. Only major air hubs could handle it, what with all the airport and terminal modifications that would be needed to accommodate its huge girth. From the gateway airports, passengers would then board smaller planes to get them on to their final destination.
Eight years after it first entered service with Singapore Airlines, it is reported Airbus will wrap up A-380 production within two years, with those final planes losing Airbus TENS OF MILLIONS of dollars each!
Boeing on the other hand felt the flying public would rather fly a bit smaller airplane directly to their final destination city, bypassing the connecting flight. That's what they designed their revolutionary 787 to do.
They've had a longer than anticipated gestation period with their Do-Or-Die composite (vs aluminum) Big Bird. Several dissatisfied early airline customers even demanded their money back. (I think this just validates the old adage that you shouldn't buy the first of a new model of anything.)
It looks like they're finally getting the kinks worked out, but it has been a giant pain in Boeing's posterior to date. I think if they were to write a book about the 787 it might should be titled A Plane Too Different.
So if the A-380 is a dud, and the 787 a meh (so far), what's the next big plane? *sorry again* Based on the number of customers who are jumping off the A-380 bandwagon, it looks like it just might be the old tried-and-true Boeing 777, specifically the updated, re-engined, streeeeeched 777 9X. (It looks like it straddles several zip codes!)
Here is an early test model sans paint. It will fly as far as an A-380, carry 80% as many passengers, and even more cargo in its belly, all on just two fuel-sipping engines. I'm thinking it should be called the Not Too Big, Not Too Small, Not Too Odd, But Juuust Right plane. (Goldilocks for short?)
Ironically it's the relatively tiny Boeing 737 and Airbus A-320 models that keep their respective companies in the black....they can't build them fast enough!
The meek shall inherit the earth. Ha!
OK, I had to get my airplane geek out. You can go back to your nap now. :)
S
Showing posts with label Boeing 787. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boeing 787. Show all posts
Monday, June 6, 2016
Thursday, January 17, 2013
Just a quaint little cabin on the high plains....
Yesterday I went by to pick up something from a friend of mine who owns a large woodworking shop. He's the guy who made these ceiling beams for a home I built a couple of years ago:
This is Larry standing beside some of the other pieces that will go into T-Boone's weekend getaway. (I wonder if that's what his friends call him since "T-Bo" is already taken?) That top piece is the fireplace mantle in the new addition. Can you imagine the fireplace itself? I suspect it doesn't burn logs, but entire trees!
I also know the contractor who has done all of T-Boone's projects for years, Tommy Ford. He's a real builder's builder, truly in a class by himself. And to his credit, he's a nice, down to earth guy, too.
It's a shame Boeing can't build airplanes (at least the 787) as good as Larry can build beams and Tommy can build mansions:
Until now I was pretty impressed by the size of these beams. I say "until now" because yesterday he invited me back into his workshop where his guys were working on some beams that would soon be installed in an outdoor dining hall addition to T. Boone Pickens' ranch/estate in West Texas. They were 36 feet across, so large that the only way I could show them was in this video:
He told me just his woodwork for this addition is valued at $150,000-$200,000. Yikes!
This is Larry standing beside some of the other pieces that will go into T-Boone's weekend getaway. (I wonder if that's what his friends call him since "T-Bo" is already taken?) That top piece is the fireplace mantle in the new addition. Can you imagine the fireplace itself? I suspect it doesn't burn logs, but entire trees!
I also know the contractor who has done all of T-Boone's projects for years, Tommy Ford. He's a real builder's builder, truly in a class by himself. And to his credit, he's a nice, down to earth guy, too.
It's a shame Boeing can't build airplanes (at least the 787) as good as Larry can build beams and Tommy can build mansions:
Let the weekend countdown begin. G'day everyone.
S
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