777-300ER order
#101
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Joined APC: Nov 2010
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It's not an ETOPS issue as Delta routinely runs 180 min ETOPS on its Pacific A350 legs. It's an A350 issue.
306 passengers plus cargo plus fuel (to include the 450 mile away Brisbane alternate) puts you over the max T.O. weight. I believe Delta is looking into having Airbus increase the max TO weight so they can fly this route...all for a small fee, of course.
306 passengers plus cargo plus fuel (to include the 450 mile away Brisbane alternate) puts you over the max T.O. weight. I believe Delta is looking into having Airbus increase the max TO weight so they can fly this route...all for a small fee, of course.
#102
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Joined APC: Jun 2015
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Singapore is doing SIN-EWR-SIN with the A350-900 ULR but that model only has 161 seats and a deactivated fwd cargo hold IAW with the ULR modification.
The "normal" A350-900 isn't fuel limited, it is weight limited. I guess the question is, how much is Airbus charging to certify the A350 for increased gross weights to allow more fuel to be loaded to increase range?
#103
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That's UFB as that route is 7,500 miles and the advertised range for the A359/10 is 8,100/8,400 vs. the 787-9 at 7,635. The UA 787-9s are rarely weight-limited so either DAL skimped on the MTOGW or Airbus once again overpromised and underdelivered. No wonder UA management wants to shed their 45 orders for the A359s with RR engines sounds like they could do it cheaply for cause.
Singapore is flying a stock 350-900 nonstop between SIN and SFO and Cathay is flying HKG-IAD nonstop in the 350-1000.
Both of those are longer then west coast - Australia in terms of miles (Etops and winds and alternates etc of course can add to the fuel requirements)
Great Circle Mapper
So to say the 350 is underperforming performance wise is debatable.
#104
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The 66 seat gap between 787-9s & -10s is exaggerated by the dramatically different seating allocations tailored to the markets they serve.
787-9: 48BF/88E+/116Y
787-10: 44BF/21PE/45E+/208Y (Polaris)
Now that the 787's battery issues are fixed it blows the competition away on cost and can replace 777s in most of the markets they serve. Operating an additional fleet of less efficient aircraft based on a seating gap that is easily addressed by reconfiguring existing aircraft is not compelling as UA management understands.
https://simpleflying.com/boeing-787-vs-the-airbus-a350/
It is amazing to me that DAL is not able to operate A350s on LAX-SYD when UAL has done it with 747s, 777s, & 787s. Must be an ETOPS authorization issue.
787-9: 48BF/88E+/116Y
787-10: 44BF/21PE/45E+/208Y (Polaris)
Now that the 787's battery issues are fixed it blows the competition away on cost and can replace 777s in most of the markets they serve. Operating an additional fleet of less efficient aircraft based on a seating gap that is easily addressed by reconfiguring existing aircraft is not compelling as UA management understands.
https://simpleflying.com/boeing-787-vs-the-airbus-a350/
It is amazing to me that DAL is not able to operate A350s on LAX-SYD when UAL has done it with 747s, 777s, & 787s. Must be an ETOPS authorization issue.
#105
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Exactly, but you were trying to advocate for the A359 based on a 66 seat gap. What was the seat gap before UA turned the 777A into cattle cars and the 747-400s that had 374 seats? Heck they managed with that for 15 years.
#106
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At the end of the day UAL will order what they order. Based on what they determine best suits their needs. 787/350/777 are all solid aircraft with each having pluses and minuses. Quality Airlines (ie.Singapore, Lufthansa, British Airways) around the world have ordered both for fleet replacement. So it just depends on what the need is. So to say the 787 blows the 350 away on cost and efficiency is hyperbole.
Check this out for some discussion on the fuel burns of the 787 vs 350. Consensus seems for shorter routes the 787 wins because the 787 is a lighter/smaller airframe, but for longer routes the 350 is a better aircraft because it can carry more payload then the 787 can.
https://www.airliners.net/forum/viewtopic.php?t=1403667
#107
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https://simpleflying.com/boeing-787-vs-the-airbus-a350/
You are trying to use the exception (SIN-LAX, SIN-NYC) to prove the rule. Sorry that dog don't hunt. As is pointed out in the debate you cite on the vast majority of the city pairs the 787-9 is about 6% more fuel efficient than the A350-900 on a pax-km/liter of fuel.
The 787 also has the added benefits of lower cabin altitudes, fresh (no engine bleed), humidified cabin air and a superior FCRF.
#108
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Joined APC: Mar 2006
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I'm pretty sure that Airbus would allow us to transfer our orders to another Airbus type, but RR won't. That RR commitment is worth hundreds of millions of dollars. I think that we're going to be forced to take the 350s. Maybe we could sublease them to Delta??? But I think that we're not going to be allowed to not fulfill our commitment to RR.
#109
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Joined APC: Sep 2015
Posts: 80
I'm pretty sure that Airbus would allow us to transfer our orders to another Airbus type, but RR won't. That RR commitment is worth hundreds of millions of dollars. I think that we're going to be forced to take the 350s. Maybe we could sublease them to Delta??? But I think that we're not going to be allowed to not fulfill our commitment to RR.
The question is can we extend our 756 fleet another 6-7 years????
#110
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Joined APC: Aug 2015
Position: Captain
Posts: 1,561
42
752s
21
753s
Are less than 20 years old
Why not ?
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