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#61
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Dylan Smith wrote:
Dean Wilkinson wrote: If you followed the airline industry, you'd realize that the 787 fills a different market segment than the 777 does. The 787 is not an intercontinental machine, its a regional machine, and will serve as a replacement for the 757/767 models. The 787 is most certainly an intercontinental machine. One version will have a range in excess of 8,000 nm. (15,000 km), which will be enough to carry it between the US west coast and Australia. They are also planning a shorter range version with 3,500 nm range, which would handle service within continents, as well as shorter North Atlantic runs. ... in which case why the planet of hell are all the pundits discussing the A380 and 7E7 as head-on competitors? If that is the case their roles are completely orthoganol. The intercontinental 787 may not be a direct competitor with the A380 in terms of routes. For example, there is now frequent 747 service between Europe and South Africa. The A380 will likely displace many of the 747s now in that service, since the passenger volumes can justify larger aircraft. The 787 might fly the routes, but with limited capacity might not be the aircraft of choice on the part of the airlines. The 787 will, however, compete for many of the same passengers as the A380 on US/European routes, as an example. Airbus is betting that the larger, more efficient aircraft will be needed for heavy volume trunk routes, like NYC-LON, NYC-AMS, NYC-FRA, or NYC-PAR particularly in light of the need for slot controls at some of the airports in those cities. Boeing is betting that many passengers not destined to the larger cities would prefer to fly on non-stop flights using efficient aircraft that serve other airports, but where the routes don't have the volumes to support the A380. For example, if a passenger wanted to fly between Raleigh/Durham and Munich, it might be possible to offer a non-stop flight using a 787, rather than forcing a passenger to be routed through larger cities on each continent. If the fares are competitive, the passenger would likely choose the non-stop flight. Using the South African example, it might be possible to offer non-stop 787 service to Durban for the holiday crowd from a number of European cities, with would not be justified with a 747 or A380. It's kind of a parallel to the use of regional jets to fly non-stop between smaller airports, rather than forcing all passengers onto larger aircraft routed through major hubs. |
#62
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On Sat, 30 Apr 2005 13:28:08 GMT, John Ousterhout
wrote: Although they are intended for different markets, they are competitors in that each company has spent so much on development that they have literally 'bet the company' on the success or failure of the A380 and the 787. That may be true of Boeing (though the 787 looks like a winner at this point, so it is perhaps an easier bet than say the 747). But it's not true of Airbus. If the 380 doesn't make a profit, Airbus just doesn't repay the launch aid. What a business model! -- all the best, Dan Ford email (put Cubdriver in subject line) Warbird's Forum: www.warbirdforum.com Piper Cub Forum: www.pipercubforum.com the blog: www.danford.net In Search of Lost Time: www.readingproust.com |
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