Cookies & Privacy Boeing Delivers Upgraded 747 To Qatar Amiri Flight, Would you like to order one ? - Civil Aviation - Civil Aircraft - Aviation Forums - Flightglobal Airspace

Boeing Delivers Upgraded 747 To Qatar Amiri Flight, Would you like to order one ?

Bookmark and Share Skip to the end

rated by 0 users
This post has 0 Replies | 1 Follower

Top 10 Contributor
Male
Captain
flyvertosset Posted: Wed, Feb 29 2012 3:02 AM

Boeing on Tuesday handed over the first passenger version of its upgraded 747 to a VIP customer, who sent the plane to a modification facility to transform it into the "jewel of the sky."

Boeing Photo

The delivery of the 747-8 Intercontinental to Qatar Amiri Flight - Boeing's largest and most recognisable commercial plane - caps a development delay of more than a year.

Boeing marked the milestone with an understated ceremony, keeping the media at arm's length to safeguard the identity of its customer.

"The 747 is the most iconic airplane in the world, and I know customers are going to love what we've done to enhance its performance," Jim Albaugh, chief executive of Boeing commercial planes, said in a statement.

"The Intercontinental is fast, efficient and quiet, offering real savings and a great flying experience," he said.

Boeing has taken 36 orders - nine from non-airline customers - for the aircraft, which lists at USD$332.9 million. The plane is more than 12 months behind its initial delivery schedule and some experts say the order book is small.

The Intercontinental is a stretched, upgraded version of the classic 747, which first flew more than 40 years ago. The 747 was the world's largest plane until 2005, when Airbus unveiled its A380.

"The 747-8 has been slow to take off, and the success of the aircraft is still questionable given so few orders," said Alex Hamilton, an aerospace analyst at EarlyBirdCapital.

Boeing had delayed the delivery to 2012 from the fourth quarter of 2011. The company blamed delays in flight testing and the time required to incorporate flight-test driven changes.

Boeing does not identify VIP customers, but past buyers of customised planes have been multi-millionaires and heads of state.

The first airline set to receive the plane is Germany's Lufthansa, which has ordered 20. Boeing has not set a delivery date for Lufthansa's first Intercontinental.

EXTENSIVE MODIFICATIONS

VIP customers for planes as large as the 747 often request extensive modifications such as bedrooms or bathrooms to accommodate the special needs of the primary passengers and their entourages. These modifications typically are done outside of Boeing, but the company must sign off on the changes.

Boeing Business Jets president Steve Taylor, who was set to fly the plane from Paine Field near Seattle, said it will spend about six months at Boeing's Wichita facility - the plant that modified Air Force One - for basic modifications.

From there it goes to a facility in Hamburg where it will spend two years receiving customer-specific outfitting such as bedrooms, dining rooms and galleys, he said.

Taylor said the Qatar Amiri Flight wants the new Intercontinental to be the "jewel of the sky."

The Intercontinental incorporates some of the technology of the lightweight, carbon-composite 787 Dreamliner. It can seat 467 passengers, 51 more than the current version of the 747, but fewer than the competing 525-seat A380.

By some estimates, the new 747-8 is 8 to 10 tonnes overweight. Elizabeth Lund, 747 programme manager, acknowledged the plane is heavier than originally planned. But she said a redesigned wing makes up for the weight in terms of performance.

Additional weight can reduce the distance a plane can fly or the amount of cargo it can carry.

The freighter version of the 747-8 was first delivered in October. Orders for the freighter have been strained by an economic downturn that has dampened cargo markets.

Boeing made first delivery of its 787 Dreamliner last year after three years of delays. The 787 represents a bigger leap in technology than the 747-8.

Source: Reuters

Gravity always wins!

 
Page 1 of 1 (1 items) | RSS