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- Path: sparky!uunet!olivea!spool.mu.edu!uwm.edu!linac!unixhub!ohare!news
- From: kls@ohare.Chicago.COM (Karl Swartz)
- Newsgroups: sci.aeronautics.airliners
- Subject: Re: Boeing 747-300
- Message-ID: <airliners.1992.10@ohare.Chicago.COM>
- Date: 19 Nov 92 07:20:12 GMT
- References: <airliners.1992.4@ohare.Chicago.COM> <airliners.1992.5@ohare.Chicago.COM> <airliners.1992.9@ohare.Chicago.COM>
- Sender: kls@ohare.Chicago.COM
- Organization: Chicago Software Works
- Lines: 66
- Approved: kls@ohare.Chicago.COM
- X-Original-Message-ID: <1992Nov19.072012.14608@ohare.Chicago.COM>
-
- In article <airliners.1992.9@ohare.Chicago.COM> Helen Trillian Rose <hrose@eff.org> writes:
- Karl> == Karl Swartz <kls@ohare.Chicago.COM>
-
- Karl> Mfr. Type MGTOW seating service
- Karl> Boeing 747-400 870,000 430 1989
- Karl> MacDAC MD-11 618,000 250 1991
- Karl> Airbus A-340 559,000 230 1993
- Karl> Boeing 777 515,000 ~220 1995
-
- >I hadn't thought the B777 was going to be in between the 757 (~200) and
- >767 (~250) passengers. I thought it was going to fill the niche between
- >the 767 and the 747 -- about the size of the old 747SP in number of
- >seats.
-
- Sorry, that was a typo. The correct number should be 290. Note,
- though, that I said a *three* class configuration, since the topic
- was long-range aircraft. A 757 is in the 185 to 195 range with only
- two classes; 250 is the right ballpark for a two class 767-300. The
- smaller 767-200 is just over 200 with two classes, not much bigger than
- the 757. With three classes, a 767-200 is aroung 165 to 170 while the
- 767-300 is about 210 to 220.
-
- In the case of the 777, the only numbers I have handy are for United's
- two class configuration, which has 38+325 for a total of 363 seats. I
- tried to extrapolate from that number and the ratio of seats on United's
- two and three class 767-200s.
-
- >The 777 ... was meant to fill the market left wide open by the L-1011
- >and DC-10 trijets (one big reason why it has optional folding wingtips:
- >to fit into a DC-10 gate).
-
- True, though it ended up significantly larger than either. (Using the
- United configs again, 363 seats vs. 298 on a DC-10-30 with a below-deck
- galley.)
-
- As for the foldings wingtips, nobody has yet ordered them. I wonder
- just what they intend to do with all those not-quite-big-enough gates?!
-
- >McDonnell Douglas has put a hold on the MD-12 for lack of financing
- >(lets face it, would *you* get into bed with a company that produced the
- >DC-10?).
-
- I doubt the DC-10 has much to do with it, since the MD-11 has been
- selling well enough. They simply found themselves in a Catch-22: they
- couldn't raise the cash without any firm orders and couldn't get any
- firm orders without a reasonable expectation of the financing falling
- into place. Their poor financial condition of course means they can't
- finance it themselves as Boeing could, which greatly complicates the
- whole matter.
-
- Actually, even if they had the financing they probably couldn't get
- the orders given the current economic situation, and this is exactly
- what they've said in their announcement of delaying the MD-12.
-
- >Only Airbus would create a plane just to compete with Boeing.
-
- Hmmm ... seems to me McDonnell-Douglas with the DC-10 and Lockheed
- with the L-1011 were pretty bullheaded about going ahead simply to
- compete with each other, knowing full well that with the orders split
- neither one could really succeed! 8-)
-
- --
- Karl Swartz |INet kls@ditka.chicago.com
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