
ell today was the day
that a lot of Airbus UK employees have been waiting for, the first fly bye in
the UK of the A380 "Super Jumbo". It made a number of low passes over both UK
factories at Broughton in Flintshire, North Wales and at Filton in Bristol,
South West of England. It was on route from the Frankfurt Air Show to London
Heathrow, for Airport compatibility testing. I was fortunate to have a prime
view of the event on the edge of the runway at the Filton site. So here are a
few photographs to commemorate this historic moment.

Concorde at Filton

The moment of
truth...

A low pass

The fastest and the
biggest...

The 555 seat, double
deck Airbus A380 is the most ambitious civil aircraft program yet. When it
enters service in March 2006, the A380 will be the world's largest airliner,
easily eclipsing Boeing's 747. Airbus first began studies on a very large 500
seat airliner in the early 1990s. The European manufacturer saw developing a
competitor and successor to the Boeing 747 as a strategic play to end Boeing's
dominance of the very large airliner market and round out Airbus' product
line-up. Airbus began engineering development work on such an aircraft, then
designated the A3XX, in June 1994. Airbus studied numerous design configurations
for the A3XX and gave serious consideration to a single deck aircraft which
would have seated 12 abreast and twin vertical tails. However Airbus settled
upon a twin deck configuration, largely because of the significantly lighter
structure required. Key design aims include the ability to use existing airport
infrastructure with little modifications to the airports, and direct operating
costs per seat 15-20% less than those for the 747-400. With 49% more floor space
and only 35% more seating than the previous largest aircraft, Airbus is ensuring
wider seats and aisles for more passenger comfort. Using the most advanced
technologies, the A380 is also designed to have 10-15% more range, lower fuel
burn and emissions, and less noise.

The A380 features an
advanced version of the Airbus common two crew cockpit, with pull-out keyboards
for the pilots, extensive use of composite materials such as GLARE (an
aluminium/glass fibre composite), and four 302 to 374kN (68,000 to 84,000lb)
class Rolls-Royce Trent 900 or Engine Alliance (General Electric/Pratt &
Whitney) GP7200 turbofans now under development. Several A380 models are
planned: the basic aircraft is the 555 seat A380-800 (launch customer Emirates).
The 590 ton MTOW 10,410km (5620nm) A380-800F freighter will be able to carry a
150 tonne payload and is due to enter service in 2008 (launch customer FedEx).
Potential future models will include the shortened, 480 seat A380-700, and the
stretched, 656 seat, A380-900. On receipt of the required 50th launch order
commitment, the Airbus A3XX was renamed A380 and officially launched on December
19, 2000. In early 2001 the general configuration design was frozen, and metal
cutting for the first A380 component occurred on January 23, 2002, at Nantes in
France. In 2002 more than 6000 people were working on A380 development. On
January 18, 2005, the first Airbus A380 was officially revealed in a lavish
ceremony, attended by 5000 invited guests including the French, German, British
and Spanish president and prime ministers, representing the countries that
invested heavily in the 10-year, €10 billion+ ($13 billion+) aircraft program,
and the CEOs of the 14 A380 customers, who had placed firm orders for 149
aircraft by then.

The out of sequence A380 designation was chosen as the "8" represents the
cross-section of the twin decks. The first flight is scheduled for March 2005,
and the entry into commercial service, with Singapore Airlines, is scheduled for
March 2006. Apart from the prime contractors in France, Germany, the United
Kingdom and Spain, components for the A380 airframe are also manufactured by
industral partners in Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Finland, Italy,
Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland and the United
States. A380 final assembly is taking place in Toulouse, France, with interior
fitment in Hamburg, Germany. Major A380 assemblies are transported to Toulouse
by ship, barge and road. On July 24, 2000, Emirates became the first customer
making a firm order commitment, followed by Air France, International Lease
Finance Corporation (ILFC), Singapore Airlines, Qantas and Virgin Atlantic.
Together these companies completed the 50 orders needed to launch the programme.
Later, the following companies also ordered the A380: FedEx (the launch customer
for the A380-800F freighter), Qatar Airways, Lufthansa, Korean Air, Malaysia
Airlines, Etihad Airways, Thai Airways and UPS. Four prototypes will be used in
a 2200 hours flight test programme lasting 15 months



Flying High... On
the Crest of a Wave



Undercarriage



Filton Skyline



On Cloud 9

The Long Goodbye...
All photographs were taken at Airbus UK in Filton
Bristol -
England on the
18th May 2006.
|