Moderators: richierich, ua900, PanAm_DC10, hOMSaR
ukoverlander wrote:Just saw this today on CNN. Interesting review of the first 10 years of the 787 and is triumphs and struggles.
https://www.cnn.com/travel/article/boei ... index.html
Pythagoras wrote:ukoverlander wrote:Just saw this today on CNN. Interesting review of the first 10 years of the 787 and is triumphs and struggles.
https://www.cnn.com/travel/article/boei ... index.html
The 787-10 is going to be the standard going forward much like the 767-300ER was for the 767 Program and 777-300ER was for the 777 program. There certainly will be a need for the very long range flights in an airlines' operation which 787-8 and -9 will continue to fly, but those are a smaller fraction of an operator's total flights. The economics of a stretch just make it superior to anything else.
Pythagoras wrote:ukoverlander wrote:Just saw this today on CNN. Interesting review of the first 10 years of the 787 and is triumphs and struggles.
https://www.cnn.com/travel/article/boei ... index.html
The 787-10 is going to be the standard going forward much like the 767-300ER was for the 767 Program and 777-300ER was for the 777 program. There certainly will be a need for the very long range flights in an airlines' operation which 787-8 and -9 will continue to fly, but those are a smaller fraction of an operator's total flights. The economics of a stretch just make it superior to anything else.
ElroyJetson wrote:If being the best selling widebody in history is a failure, then yeah....it's real bad.
ukoverlander wrote:ElroyJetson wrote:If being the best selling widebody in history is a failure, then yeah....it's real bad.
Well it's all relative isn't it? If you take the article at face value (and assume it's reported numbers are correct), if 'breakeven' was expected to be 1,000 frames at anticipated expenses of $32 billion, the equation has changed significantly if actual expenses incurred are now $50 billion. Being a 'sales success' is different to being a financial success given those numbers, especially for an airframe that's reached it's10th anniversary.
You can sell a lot of $5 hot dogs for $4 but in the long run unless you can consistently reduce productions costs to profitable levels and maintain sales and margin over time the jury is out on the financial success of the program.
FLALEFTY wrote:I do wonder if Boeing will expand their optimization program for the B788 to get more weight out of the airframe and cut its range to 6,500 nm, making it a better airliner for the Trans-Atlantic market? Get the efficiency up of this type and it would make airlines think twice about deploying the slower, narrow bodied, A321XLR across the Atlantic in competition.
sxf24 wrote:People love the A380 and the A220, but neither are a financial success.
Chris Sloan CNN Correspondent in linked article wrote:I was fortunate to be a passenger on board ANA flight 7871, the inaugural flight of the Boeing 787 Dreamliner in passenger service, operating a special charter between Tokyo and Hong Kong Kai Tak
Pythagoras wrote:The 787-10 is going to be the standard going forward much like the 767-300ER was for the 767 Program and 777-300ER was for the 777 program. There certainly will be a need for the very long range flights in an airlines' operation which 787-8 and -9 will continue to fly, but those are a smaller fraction of an operator's total flights. The economics of a stretch just make it superior to anything else.
tealnz wrote:Pythagoras wrote:The 787-10 is going to be the standard going forward much like the 767-300ER was for the 767 Program and 777-300ER was for the 777 program. There certainly will be a need for the very long range flights in an airlines' operation which 787-8 and -9 will continue to fly, but those are a smaller fraction of an operator's total flights. The economics of a stretch just make it superior to anything else.
Not so sure about that. A couple of years ago NZ was all-in on the -10, planning a fleet of them to replace the 77Es. It was being touted as the answer for North America- New Zealand routes as well as Asia. Some here on a.net even saw the -10 as a 77W replacement.
The airline has now changed tune. So far all the new orders have been for the 789 rather than -10. And the NZ CE is talking of bringing the remaining 77Ws back into service. Maybe the capability limitations of the -10 westbound out of the USA are starting to bite. Perhaps exacerbated by the boost the pandemic has given to freight revenue – where the -10 would struggle even on LAX-AKL.
tealnz wrote:Pythagoras wrote:The 787-10 is going to be the standard going forward much like the 767-300ER was for the 767 Program and 777-300ER was for the 777 program. There certainly will be a need for the very long range flights in an airlines' operation which 787-8 and -9 will continue to fly, but those are a smaller fraction of an operator's total flights. The economics of a stretch just make it superior to anything else.
Not so sure about that. A couple of years ago NZ was all-in on the -10, planning a fleet of them to replace the 77Es. It was being touted as the answer for North America- New Zealand routes as well as Asia. Some here on a.net even saw the -10 as a 77W replacement.
The airline has now changed tune. So far all the new orders have been for the 789 rather than -10. And the NZ CE is talking of bringing the remaining 77Ws back into service. Maybe the capability limitations of the -10 westbound out of the USA are starting to bite. Perhaps exacerbated by the boost the pandemic has given to freight revenue – where the -10 would struggle even on LAX-AKL.
Pythagoras wrote:
The 787-10 is going to be the standard going forward much like the 767-300ER was for the 767 Program and 777-300ER was for the 777 program. There certainly will be a need for the very long range flights in an airlines' operation which 787-8 and -9 will continue to fly, but those are a smaller fraction of an operator's total flights. The economics of a stretch just make it superior to anything else.
seahawk wrote:What a nightmare.
* technology breakthrough
* unbeaten performance
* outstanding dispatch reliability
* best operating cost in the market
* flown by all major airlines
* totally crushed the competition
enzo011 wrote:sxf24 wrote:People love the A380 and the A220, but neither are a financial success.
I guess we can add the 787 to this list, of aircraft people love that were not a financial success.We could play the game of who the aircraft is a success for, whether it be Boeing, the airlines or passengers. Put it this way, I treat the 787 like I treat Ryanair, if it is the cheapest option by a long shot I will choose to fly the airline that uses it. If there is another option for similar price I would rather take the next option. So from this passenger, it is not a success. And before any comes out with, "airlines choose the layouts and not Boeing", funny that Airbus aircraft does not have this problem for most airlines.
ukoverlander wrote:seahawk wrote:What a nightmare.
* technology breakthrough
* unbeaten performance
* outstanding dispatch reliability
* best operating cost in the market
* flown by all major airlines
* totally crushed the competition
You choose to miss the points relating to the factors needed for the airframe to be considered to be a true financial success for a manufacturer. Nobody is suggesting the 787 is not an extremely capable aircraft.and an excellent aircraft for it's customers - it's the economics of it's production and profitability for Boeing to date that tell that more tricky side of the story.
enzo011 wrote:FLALEFTY wrote:I do wonder if Boeing will expand their optimization program for the B788 to get more weight out of the airframe and cut its range to 6,500 nm, making it a better airliner for the Trans-Atlantic market? Get the efficiency up of this type and it would make airlines think twice about deploying the slower, narrow bodied, A321XLR across the Atlantic in competition.
One aircraft has a lower MTOW than the other just standing there empty. You are going to have to shave a lot of weight out of the 787 to get to that stage, right? Yes, you have more seats but those seats needs to be filled and you could be in territory where in the 787 they are lower yielding than the A321.
moa999 wrote:Yep. I think the back is the problem.
The 330 can be a comfortable 2-4-2 or a very tight 3-3-3 on only a few ultra LCCs (Air Asia X, Cebu Pacific).
The 787 is 3-3-3 for everyone
ukoverlander wrote:seahawk wrote:What a nightmare.
* technology breakthrough
* unbeaten performance
* outstanding dispatch reliability
* best operating cost in the market
* flown by all major airlines
* totally crushed the competition
You choose to miss the points relating to the factors needed for the airframe to be considered to be a true financial success for a manufacturer. Nobody is suggesting the 787 is not an extremely capable aircraft.and an excellent aircraft for it's customers - it's the economics of it's production and profitability for Boeing to date that tell that more tricky side of the story.
FLALEFTY wrote:enzo011 wrote:FLALEFTY wrote:I do wonder if Boeing will expand their optimization program for the B788 to get more weight out of the airframe and cut its range to 6,500 nm, making it a better airliner for the Trans-Atlantic market? Get the efficiency up of this type and it would make airlines think twice about deploying the slower, narrow bodied, A321XLR across the Atlantic in competition.
One aircraft has a lower MTOW than the other just standing there empty. You are going to have to shave a lot of weight out of the 787 to get to that stage, right? Yes, you have more seats but those seats needs to be filled and you could be in territory where in the 787 they are lower yielding than the A321.
A weight/range-optimized B788 will be able to fly 30+ more seats, can offer larger premium cabin space, cruise 33 knots faster, carry up to 28 LD3's of cargo under the deck, cruise 4,000 feet higher and offer a cabin altitude 2,000 feet less than the A321XLR. I think it could be a better competitor at the upper-end of the 200-250 seat "sweet spot" for Trans-Atlantic routes.
ukoverlander wrote:FLALEFTY wrote:enzo011 wrote:
One aircraft has a lower MTOW than the other just standing there empty. You are going to have to shave a lot of weight out of the 787 to get to that stage, right? Yes, you have more seats but those seats needs to be filled and you could be in territory where in the 787 they are lower yielding than the A321.
A weight/range-optimized B788 will be able to fly 30+ more seats, can offer larger premium cabin space, cruise 33 knots faster, carry up to 28 LD3's of cargo under the deck, cruise 4,000 feet higher and offer a cabin altitude 2,000 feet less than the A321XLR. I think it could be a better competitor at the upper-end of the 200-250 seat "sweet spot" for Trans-Atlantic routes.
Ok, but what is the difference in a) the list price, and b) the transatlantic operating costs between a A321XLR and even an optimized 787? The 757 opened up thin transatlantic routes and the A321XLR is primarily aimed to meet and expand that market. I imagine that a heavier, more expensive 787 aircraft, with 30+ seats is not necessarily going to be a realistic competitor for many of those routes.
FLALEFTY wrote:ukoverlander wrote:FLALEFTY wrote:
A weight/range-optimized B788 will be able to fly 30+ more seats, can offer larger premium cabin space, cruise 33 knots faster, carry up to 28 LD3's of cargo under the deck, cruise 4,000 feet higher and offer a cabin altitude 2,000 feet less than the A321XLR. I think it could be a better competitor at the upper-end of the 200-250 seat "sweet spot" for Trans-Atlantic routes.
Ok, but what is the difference in a) the list price, and b) the transatlantic operating costs between a A321XLR and even an optimized 787? The 757 opened up thin transatlantic routes and the A321XLR is primarily aimed to meet and expand that market. I imagine that a heavier, more expensive 787 aircraft, with 30+ seats is not necessarily going to be a realistic competitor for many of those routes.
AA uses the B788 as their primary Trans-Atlantic plane out of their PHL hub. While they have also ordered a large number of A321XLR's, I think the original plans to use them T-A out of PHL might not end up being at the scale they previously anticipated. I expect premium, frequent-flyer AA customers will likely book away from an A321XLR T-A flight, if they can, largely because of the better premium cabin offerings on the B788. This will make for a much better potential yield than using the A321XLR with its much smaller, more cramped premium cabin. I expect the AA XLR's will likely end up being used mostly on Transcon, South American, Hawaiian and Caribbean routes.
FLALEFTY wrote:ukoverlander wrote:FLALEFTY wrote:
A weight/range-optimized B788 will be able to fly 30+ more seats, can offer larger premium cabin space, cruise 33 knots faster, carry up to 28 LD3's of cargo under the deck, cruise 4,000 feet higher and offer a cabin altitude 2,000 feet less than the A321XLR. I think it could be a better competitor at the upper-end of the 200-250 seat "sweet spot" for Trans-Atlantic routes.
Ok, but what is the difference in a) the list price, and b) the transatlantic operating costs between a A321XLR and even an optimized 787? The 757 opened up thin transatlantic routes and the A321XLR is primarily aimed to meet and expand that market. I imagine that a heavier, more expensive 787 aircraft, with 30+ seats is not necessarily going to be a realistic competitor for many of those routes.
AA uses the B788 as their primary Trans-Atlantic plane out of their PHL hub. While they have also ordered a large number of A321XLR's, I think the original plans to use them T-A out of PHL might not end up being at the scale they previously anticipated. I expect premium, frequent-flyer AA customers will likely book away from an A321XLR T-A flight, if they can, largely because of the better premium cabin offerings on the B788. This will make for a much better potential yield than using the A321XLR with its much smaller, more cramped premium cabin. I expect the AA XLR's will likely end up being used mostly on Transcon, South American, Hawaiian and Caribbean routes.
flipdewaf wrote:FLALEFTY wrote:ukoverlander wrote:
Ok, but what is the difference in a) the list price, and b) the transatlantic operating costs between a A321XLR and even an optimized 787? The 757 opened up thin transatlantic routes and the A321XLR is primarily aimed to meet and expand that market. I imagine that a heavier, more expensive 787 aircraft, with 30+ seats is not necessarily going to be a realistic competitor for many of those routes.
AA uses the B788 as their primary Trans-Atlantic plane out of their PHL hub. While they have also ordered a large number of A321XLR's, I think the original plans to use them T-A out of PHL might not end up being at the scale they previously anticipated. I expect premium, frequent-flyer AA customers will likely book away from an A321XLR T-A flight, if they can, largely because of the better premium cabin offerings on the B788. This will make for a much better potential yield than using the A321XLR with its much smaller, more cramped premium cabin. I expect the AA XLR's will likely end up being used mostly on Transcon, South American, Hawaiian and Caribbean routes.
I was under the impression the business class on the AA A321XLR would be fairly good, lie flats the same as on the 787, I guess it’s smaller but is that a disadvantage?
Fred
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
FLALEFTY wrote:flipdewaf wrote:FLALEFTY wrote:
AA uses the B788 as their primary Trans-Atlantic plane out of their PHL hub. While they have also ordered a large number of A321XLR's, I think the original plans to use them T-A out of PHL might not end up being at the scale they previously anticipated. I expect premium, frequent-flyer AA customers will likely book away from an A321XLR T-A flight, if they can, largely because of the better premium cabin offerings on the B788. This will make for a much better potential yield than using the A321XLR with its much smaller, more cramped premium cabin. I expect the AA XLR's will likely end up being used mostly on Transcon, South American, Hawaiian and Caribbean routes.
I was under the impression the business class on the AA A321XLR would be fairly good, lie flats the same as on the 787, I guess it’s smaller but is that a disadvantage?
Fred
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
I looked up some of AA's A321 & B788 seat layouts for comparisons:
Here's the standard A321NEO (196 seat) layout for AA:
https://www.seatguru.com/airlines/Ameri ... 321neo.php
Here's the special, Transcon A321CEO (102 seat) layout for AA:
https://www.seatguru.com/airlines/Ameri ... 21_new.php
Here's the standard B788 (234 seat) layout for AA:
https://www.seatguru.com/airlines/Ameri ... 87-8_A.php
The low production rates and rework are expected to result in approximately $1 billion of abnormal costs, of which $183 million was recorded in the quarter.
Hamilton believes the 787 program has cost an estimated $50 billion in program development, cost overruns and customer compensation. And what's overlooked is the knock-on effect in product development. "Had the 787 been delivered on time, Boeing would have easily been 5-8 years ahead of Airbus. Boeing's distraction by crisis after crisis has given Airbus a commanding lead in the heart of the narrow-body market."
Revelation wrote:Interesting this article comes out the same day Boeing reports the following about 787:Hamilton believes the 787 program has cost an estimated $50 billion in program development, cost overruns and customer compensation. And what's overlooked is the knock-on effect in product development. "Had the 787 been delivered on time, Boeing would have easily been 5-8 years ahead of Airbus. Boeing's distraction by crisis after crisis has given Airbus a commanding lead in the heart of the narrow-body market."
I'm not sure how Hamilton comes up with that number, but I do agree with the the conclusion. Basically if 787/Y2 had not been such a calamity in terms of not just budget but also schedule, we would have seen Y3 instead of 777X and Y1 instead of MAX and Boeing would be in a totally different position in terms of its product line up and finances.
Okcflyer wrote:I agree with this 100%. It's starting to feel like the MAX is the MD11 (design compromises lead to crashes and killed it's perception) and the 77X the MD90 equivalent (not well positioned against its more modern competitor). They need to invest heavily in a new narrowbody pretty soon but they keep having to spend all of their resources fighting self-inflicted wounds, and are unable to make the investment to ultimately save the company.
MrHMSH wrote:I don't think the 787 is a 'game-changer' as much as is sometimes perceived, it's the next step after the 777/A330, and what it has achieved is following a similar line of evolution to those aircraft.
That said, it has been very good for the airlines, its size, capabilities and efficiency were exactly what was needed, which is why it has sold so well. It (hasn't/might not?) make money for Boeing, but that's little to do with the actual aircraft and more because of Boeing's fairly well-documented issues. It should be a case study in how *not* to execute a big industrial programme.
Pythagoras wrote:
The 787-10 is going to be the standard going forward much like the 767-300ER was for the 767 Program and 777-300ER was for the 777 program. There certainly will be a need for the very long range flights in an airlines' operation which 787-8 and -9 will continue to fly, but those are a smaller fraction of an operator's total flights. The economics of a stretch just make it superior to anything else.
I'm not sure, I think if it is to happen it'll wait for the engine upgrade. Airlines seem to be happier with the flexibility offered by the A350 and 789. The 78X is good for what it's designed to do, but with long haul aircraft it has generally been the case that the longer range variants have sold more than the shorter. One exception to that is the A333, but even then A333 sales really boomed when the capabilities were improved.
Caryjack wrote:It's nice to see that Tom Sanderson is Director of Product Marketing for the 787. He certainly put a lot into it.
Okcflyer wrote:The Rights:
- Overall marketing: No other commercial airline program has been even remotely as successful as the Dreamliner is/was. It's still perceived to be more advanced and better than it actually is, even within the airline industry, due to the momentum they built early on which cemented it's leading perception. Boeing got maximum value out of these efforts.
The Questionable Parts (and in some cases, the things they got wrong):
- Risk sharing / supply chain: Due to the massive risks they were taking with the all electric systems and new composite barrel construction, they sought more than usual risk-sharing partners on the supply chain side, and one way to do this without giving up too many of the future returns was to use them to do more of the manufacturing process. While this has historically worked out, what they didn't account for well enough is how to manage this properly and what happens when 1 or 2 weak links drives the rest of the supply chain into the ground.
flipdewaf wrote:FLALEFTY wrote:flipdewaf wrote:
I was under the impression the business class on the AA A321XLR would be fairly good, lie flats the same as on the 787, I guess it’s smaller but is that a disadvantage?
Fred
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
I looked up some of AA's A321 & B788 seat layouts for comparisons:
Here's the standard A321NEO (196 seat) layout for AA:
https://www.seatguru.com/airlines/Ameri ... 321neo.php
Here's the special, Transcon A321CEO (102 seat) layout for AA:
https://www.seatguru.com/airlines/Ameri ... 21_new.php
Here's the standard B788 (234 seat) layout for AA:
https://www.seatguru.com/airlines/Ameri ... 87-8_A.php
https://viewfromthewing.com/american-ai ... -9-cabins/
[quote=“Robert Isom”]
[American is] in the process right now of designing the interior for the 321XLR so we’ll take that input and it’s helpful. That aircraft is not going to be as densely configured as our current 321s because it will have a real lie-flat business class section, it will have a real premium economy section and it will have a smaller coach configuration
FLALEFTY wrote:flipdewaf wrote:FLALEFTY wrote:
I looked up some of AA's A321 & B788 seat layouts for comparisons:
Here's the standard A321NEO (196 seat) layout for AA:
https://www.seatguru.com/airlines/Ameri ... 321neo.php
Here's the special, Transcon A321CEO (102 seat) layout for AA:
https://www.seatguru.com/airlines/Ameri ... 21_new.php
Here's the standard B788 (234 seat) layout for AA:
https://www.seatguru.com/airlines/Ameri ... 87-8_A.php
https://viewfromthewing.com/american-ai ... -9-cabins/
[quote=“Robert Isom”]
[American is] in the process right now of designing the interior for the 321XLR so we’ll take that input and it’s helpful. That aircraft is not going to be as densely configured as our current 321s because it will have a real lie-flat business class section, it will have a real premium economy section and it will have a smaller coach configuration
Fred
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
Thanks for the article link. Very interesting!
It seems AA admits that stuffing 172 seats into the B38M and B738, along with jamming 196 seats into their new A321N's were mistakes (I wonder when they will correct them? - Just kidding!). It will be interesting to see what interior configuration of their A321XLR's settles on. I'm guessing an adaptation of the Transcon A321CEO cabin (their version of the "Hollywood-Broadway Express"), but without the F class? I'm thinking they will end up somewhere in the 170~175 passenger range. They may even peel a few XLR's off and configure them into 102-seat versions to replace the CEO's on the JFK-LAX run.
Okcflyer wrote:Commercial aircraft are extremely complex and difficult to get right. There are thousands of critical decisions, each with the potential to cause multiple billions of dollar in delays or overruns. Most here are viewing this on a totality basis, and there is no black or white answer. Lockheed left the market. MCD ran themselves out of business. Russia couldn't keep up with western progress. China has been hard at work for a decade and they don't even have a legit competitor for 40 year old technology (A320). This business is hard and about the only major modern program that has been successful from essentially day 1 without major missteps is the A320 family.
In the case of the 787, we should break it down and analyze what went right and what went wrong. Frankly, the "rights" are probably more important than "whoops, we shouldn't have done that" which become the wrongs.
The Rights:
- Boeing's prediction on the market direction was spot on. Literally could not have been better. They correctly determined there would be massive fragmentation as more non-stop city pairs opened up, and this would put pressure on the traditional flows through strategic hubs. In hindsight this is easy to see but for them to get this so right at the time is incredible, especially as historical performance in both the aviation market and other transportation markets proved to be inversely true.
- Because they got the above right, the nailed the capacity and range requirements of the airplane. Even today some 20+ year later from when these decisions where being made, they're still spot on the mark. They often win tenders because it's design goals most closely match the requirements of today.
- They nailed the fuselage width. Their strategy to lead with a "comfortable 8-wide" but making sure it 9-wide with standard seats was possible was pure genius. This gave them a ton of flexibility long term, and, critically, prevented undercutting their own product (777) too early in the process. By setting their performance targets based on 8-wide, they left themselves the option of going 9-wide to claw back unit-economics when something (which was inevitable) came up with made the thing heavier/less efficient. And it bought them the necessary space to keep it from competing against 777 opportunities early on. Even today, it's the best size dollar wise. While passengers love the A330, it's a bit too narrow for optimum. Had Airbus made the A330 the width of the 787 way back when, they would never have had to invest and build the A350, and they wouldn't have been as badly destroyed by the 77W with the A346 as they were.
- Overall marketing: No other commercial airline program has been even remotely as successful as the Dreamliner is/was. It's still perceived to be more advanced and better than it actually is, even within the airline industry, due to the momentum they built early on which cemented it's leading perception. Boeing got maximum value out of these efforts.
The Questionable Parts (and in some cases, the things they got wrong):
- All-electric architecture. I don't see the ROI this investment had. In hindsight, I think they probably would have kept to a more traditional architectural with latest and greatest predictive maintenance. I think the under-estimated predictive maintenance capabilities on pneumatic and hydraulic systems and convinced themselves they needed to go all-electric when that wasn't actually required.
- Barrel construction: Not as weight or maintenance efficient as originally assumed. Required ridiculous investment up front for the massive autoclaves and dreamlifters. In hindsight, should have one with composite panels.
- Risk sharing / supply chain: Due to the massive risks they were taking with the all electric systems and new composite barrel construction, they sought more than usual risk-sharing partners on the supply chain side, and one way to do this without giving up too many of the future returns was to use them to do more of the manufacturing process. While this has historically worked out, what they didn't account for well enough is how to manage this properly and what happens when 1 or 2 weak links drives the rest of the supply chain into the ground.
- Engines -- not sure the dual supplier of engines really worked out. Boeing got burnt by RR in the end.
Overall, they got more right than they got wrong. They should followed the 80/20 rule better with systems architecture and barrel construction. They could have gotten 80% of those benefits for 20% of the cost and risks. Those two pieces is what drove the program off the walls.
FLALEFTY wrote:I expect premium, frequent-flyer AA customers will likely book away from an A321XLR T-A flight, if they can, largely because of the better premium cabin offerings on the B788. This will make for a much better potential yield than using the A321XLR with its much smaller, more cramped premium cabin.
ElroyJetson wrote:MrHMSH wrote:I don't think the 787 is a 'game-changer' as much as is sometimes perceived, it's the next step after the 777/A330, and what it has achieved is following a similar line of evolution to those aircraft.
That said, it has been very good for the airlines, its size, capabilities and efficiency were exactly what was needed, which is why it has sold so well. It (hasn't/might not?) make money for Boeing, but that's little to do with the actual aircraft and more because of Boeing's fairly well-documented issues. It should be a case study in how *not* to execute a big industrial programme.
Pythagoras wrote:
The 787-10 is going to be the standard going forward much like the 767-300ER was for the 767 Program and 777-300ER was for the 777 program. There certainly will be a need for the very long range flights in an airlines' operation which 787-8 and -9 will continue to fly, but those are a smaller fraction of an operator's total flights. The economics of a stretch just make it superior to anything else.
I'm not sure, I think if it is to happen it'll wait for the engine upgrade. Airlines seem to be happier with the flexibility offered by the A350 and 789. The 78X is good for what it's designed to do, but with long haul aircraft it has generally been the case that the longer range variants have sold more than the shorter. One exception to that is the A333, but even then A333 sales really boomed when the capabilities were improved.
I would generally agree with most of your comments, particularly regarding the 787-10. I think it is a fantastic aircraft for what is does but right now it is not a legitimate ULH plane. My guess is Boeing did not want to cut into existing 777 sales, just as Airbus did not want to initially cut into A340 sales with early versions of the A330.
As it became clear the A340 sales were winding down Airbus increased the MTOW of A330-300 and it rightly became a big sales success. If Boeing can get similar improvements in payload/ range with the 787-10 it should follow a similar sales trajectory as the A330-300. .
FLALEFTY wrote:I looked up some of AA's A321 & B788 seat layouts for comparisons:
Here's the standard A321NEO (196 seat) layout for AA:
https://www.seatguru.com/airlines/Ameri ... 321neo.php
Here's the special, Transcon A321CEO (102 seat) layout for AA:
https://www.seatguru.com/airlines/Ameri ... 21_new.php
Here's the standard B788 (234 seat) layout for AA:
https://www.seatguru.com/airlines/Ameri ... 87-8_A.php
seahawk wrote:This was only possible because the A340 was a direct sibling, so that the MTOW was already in the design. This is not the case of the 787. There is no higher MTOW sibling.
flipdewaf wrote:I have done about 12-15 flights on the dreamliner on a variety of airlines and classes (AA, BA, AI, AC, QR, ET) Y, Y+, C. and id choose it over any of the last gen in Y+ and C and probably the last gen if going Y. compared to an A350 I do not know as I haven't been on one yet! *Mutter about bloody covid*
Okcflyer wrote:Commercial aircraft are extremely complex and difficult to get right. There are thousands of critical decisions, each with the potential to cause multiple billions of dollar in delays or overruns. Most here are viewing this on a totality basis, and there is no black or white answer. Lockheed left the market. MCD ran themselves out of business. Russia couldn't keep up with western progress. China has been hard at work for a decade and they don't even have a legit competitor for 40 year old technology (A320). This business is hard and about the only major modern program that has been successful from essentially day 1 without major missteps is the A320 family.
In the case of the 787, we should break it down and analyze what went right and what went wrong. Frankly, the "rights" are probably more important than "whoops, we shouldn't have done that" which become the wrongs.
The Rights:
- Boeing's prediction on the market direction was spot on. Literally could not have been better. They correctly determined there would be massive fragmentation as more non-stop city pairs opened up, and this would put pressure on the traditional flows through strategic hubs. In hindsight this is easy to see but for them to get this so right at the time is incredible, especially as historical performance in both the aviation market and other transportation markets proved to be inversely true.
- Because they got the above right, the nailed the capacity and range requirements of the airplane. Even today some 20+ year later from when these decisions where being made, they're still spot on the mark. They often win tenders because it's design goals most closely match the requirements of today.
- They nailed the fuselage width. Their strategy to lead with a "comfortable 8-wide" but making sure it 9-wide with standard seats was possible was pure genius. This gave them a ton of flexibility long term, and, critically, prevented undercutting their own product (777) too early in the process. By setting their performance targets based on 8-wide, they left themselves the option of going 9-wide to claw back unit-economics when something (which was inevitable) came up with made the thing heavier/less efficient. And it bought them the necessary space to keep it from competing against 777 opportunities early on. Even today, it's the best size dollar wise. While passengers love the A330, it's a bit too narrow for optimum. Had Airbus made the A330 the width of the 787 way back when, they would never have had to invest and build the A350, and they wouldn't have been as badly destroyed by the 77W with the A346 as they were.
- Overall marketing: No other commercial airline program has been even remotely as successful as the Dreamliner is/was. It's still perceived to be more advanced and better than it actually is, even within the airline industry, due to the momentum they built early on which cemented it's leading perception. Boeing got maximum value out of these efforts.
The Questionable Parts (and in some cases, the things they got wrong):
- All-electric architecture. I don't see the ROI this investment had. In hindsight, I think they probably would have kept to a more traditional architectural with latest and greatest predictive maintenance. I think the under-estimated predictive maintenance capabilities on pneumatic and hydraulic systems and convinced themselves they needed to go all-electric when that wasn't actually required.
- Barrel construction: Not as weight or maintenance efficient as originally assumed. Required ridiculous investment up front for the massive autoclaves and dreamlifters. In hindsight, should have one with composite panels.
- Risk sharing / supply chain: Due to the massive risks they were taking with the all electric systems and new composite barrel construction, they sought more than usual risk-sharing partners on the supply chain side, and one way to do this without giving up too many of the future returns was to use them to do more of the manufacturing process. While this has historically worked out, what they didn't account for well enough is how to manage this properly and what happens when 1 or 2 weak links drives the rest of the supply chain into the ground.
- Engines -- not sure the dual supplier of engines really worked out. Boeing got burnt by RR in the end.
Overall, they got more right than they got wrong. They should followed the 80/20 rule better with systems architecture and barrel construction. They could have gotten 80% of those benefits for 20% of the cost and risks. Those two pieces is what drove the program off the walls.