Go Back  Airline Pilot Central Forums > Career Builder > Technical
The new 747-8 jumbo jet: Up close and inside >

The new 747-8 jumbo jet: Up close and inside

Search
Notices
Technical Technical aspects of flying

The new 747-8 jumbo jet: Up close and inside

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old 02-13-2011, 12:50 PM
  #1  
Administrator
Thread Starter
 
vagabond's Avatar
 
Joined APC: May 2006
Position: C-172
Posts: 8,024
Default The new 747-8 jumbo jet: Up close and inside

From Seattle Times:

Unlike the Dreamliner that Boeing rolled out in 2007 but didn't get off the ground for two-and-a-half years, the new 747-8 jumbo jet unveiled in Everett on Sunday is not an empty shell.

"We're going to roll out an airplane that's darn near ready to fly," Boeing commercial airplanes chief Jim Albaugh said in an interview. "I think it'll fly within three or four weeks."

An advance tour inside the giant passenger plane, the 747-8 Intercontinental, revealed final preparations for flight testing.

The flight deck is ready for the pilots to take the controls. A little label above the pilot's steering yoke reads: "Boeing 001. Flight test."

In the cavernous passenger cabin, Boeing has installed racks of computer equipment and dozens of interconnected black barrels so that during the upcoming flight tests, the water that serves as ballast can be pumped around to simulate various loads.

On the outside, the plane looks dramatic because of what Albaugh called "that bigger bump on top."

This latest model of the iconic jumbo jet, whose first version flew in 1969, has an extended forward fuselage hump with a row of windows that stretches all the way back to the wings.

The rival Airbus A380 superjumbo airliner, with its full-length double-decker passenger cabin, has a regular, more nondescript fuselage shape. But the curve of the 747-8 upper fuselage hump will be distinctive even to people unfamiliar with airplane types.

Boeing's marketing mavens developed a brash new burnt-orange sunburst paint scheme unique to the plane in Sunday's ceremonial rollout.

"We wanted to gain the world's attention and to give the message that this is not your father's 747," said Steven Myers, a senior designer with Boeing's Seattle-based design partner Teague.

A swooping horizon line along the side of the jet separates a predominantly reddish orange lower fuselage from the pearl-white upper fuselage. Silvery gray highlights and gold stripes fade into the main blocks of color.

A nonmetallic mica in the clear topcoat will sparkle in sunlight.

Inside the hangar where the plane had just been painted, Myers said Boeing chose the reddish color scheme to appeal specifically to the Asian customers that are expected to be the major buyers of this jet.

The stylized figure 8 on the vertical tail fin represents the model number, but also conveys the Chinese "lucky number" representing prosperity and wealth.

The fading effect was done by hand and the paint job took 10 days, said Bill Dill, Boeing's paint operations leader.

The plane that rolled out Sunday — 250 feet long with a 224-foot wingspan — is a VIP jet for a private buyer, so it will never have a conventional airliner interior.

After flight tests are completed it will be refurbished and customized for the buyer.

Right now, the long passenger cabin is carpeted and has some stow bins and sidewalls in place.

But orange wiring snakes along the floor to the racks of electronic boxes in the center. And the interior space is otherwise largely empty except for the squat, load-shifting water barrels fore and aft, connected by tubes.

At the back of the cabin, a device resembling a giant hamster wheel is installed, about four feet in diameter. During test flights this wheel reels in and out from the tip of the vertical tail a long tubular line attached to a cone-shaped sensor that takes air pressure readings well away from the fuselage.

Admiring the paint scheme his team had completed, Dill said of the Sunday rollout that "the queen is ready for the ball."

Even better, the hardware inside suggests the queen is also nearly ready for her working flight tests.

Business & Technology | The new 747-8 jumbo jet: Up close and inside | Seattle Times Newspaper

The Seattle Times: The new Boeing 747-8
vagabond is offline  
Old 03-20-2011, 08:55 AM
  #2  
Administrator
Thread Starter
 
vagabond's Avatar
 
Joined APC: May 2006
Position: C-172
Posts: 8,024
Default First flight today

Alas, I have to take advantage of the nice weather and do some yard work so will be unable to make it to either Paine Field or Boeing Field.
Boeing's latest and largest passenger plane, the 747-8 Intercontinental, is expected to make its first flight this morning after 10 a.m. from Paine Field in Everett.

Painted in a vivid orange-and-white livery with gray and gold striping, the jumbo jet is expected to fly for about 5 hours before landing at Boeing Field in Seattle.

Business & Technology | Boeing's biggest passenger jet set for first flight | Seattle Times Newspaper
vagabond is offline  
Old 03-20-2011, 11:58 AM
  #3  
Banned
 
Joined APC: Mar 2009
Posts: 1,822
Default

Is it me or does that thing have a longer nose/radome than previous 74's?
ERJF15 is offline  
Old 03-20-2011, 12:03 PM
  #4  
Administrator
Thread Starter
 
vagabond's Avatar
 
Joined APC: May 2006
Position: C-172
Posts: 8,024
Default

I can only look at pictures, I'm afraid.

Maiden flight of the Boeing 747-8 | Photos from seattlepi.com
vagabond is offline  
Old 03-20-2011, 08:08 PM
  #5  
Banned
 
Joined APC: Mar 2009
Posts: 1,822
Default

I guess it was the pics.
ERJF15 is offline  
Old 03-29-2011, 10:07 AM
  #6  
Gets Weekends Off
 
NoBeta's Avatar
 
Joined APC: May 2009
Position: autopilot abuser
Posts: 166
Default

That is one BIG Mamma Jamma!!!!

It totally dwarfed that Cessna.

When I worked at KSLC we had an Antonov come in. HUGE.....

The engines looked like they could swallow a single engine anything.
NoBeta is offline  
Old 03-29-2011, 12:55 PM
  #7  
Gets Weekends Off
 
Hrkdrivr's Avatar
 
Joined APC: Oct 2007
Position: Fairly local
Posts: 1,458
Default

Gosh she's pretty!

I wonder how you get the job flying the T-33 chase plane???
Hrkdrivr is offline  

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On



Your Privacy Choices