Boeing
Unveils Its Jumbo Killer
Scott Francher, Boeing's vice
president and general manager of airplane development, talks about the company's
777X during a press briefing at the Boeing Tokyo office.
Boeing (BA)
forever changed aviation in 1970 when it introduced its 747 jumbo jet, whose
size and range revolutionized flying and became a cultural icon in the process.
It's since gone on to log orders for more than 1,500 of the humpbacked
behemoth's various models. But now the world's No. 1 maker of commercial
aircraft is poised to offer a model that may kill off its best-known
creation.
Betting it can capture the operating economies of a huge plane
in a smaller one, Boeing is undertaking a radical makeover of its smaller 777
jet that will be ready to take flight by decade's end. The new 777X model will
boast the biggest engines ever put on a plane, a record wingspan that can be
shortened by having the tips fold up after landing, and lower operating costs.
Cramming all this cost-saving technology into a smaller plane that operates with
two engines-rather than the four needed by jumbos-could herald an end to the
race to build ever-larger jets that's driven much of modern aircraft
design.
The 777X will be the first twin-engine jet able to ply long-haul
routes with payloads comparable to the larger jumbos. That's likely to
accelerate airlines' shift away from mammoth, four-engine fuel-guzzlers such as
Boeing's latest 747-8 and Airbus's (EADSY) double-decker A380. "My assumption is
the 747 is dead, or will be dead in a year or two," says Adam Pilarski, senior
vice president at aerospace consultant Avitas. Like the 747 four decades ago, he
says, the 777X is aimed at a market segment where it lacks a direct rival and
"may have a very good run."
The first model, the 777-9X, will be able
to fly as far as 8,000 nautical miles with more than 400 passengers while
burning 20 percent less fuel than the current 777, now the world's biggest
twin-engine jet. A second variant, carrying about 350 people, will follow and
push the range past 9,400 nautical miles-far enough for a New York-Singapore
nonstop flight. Experts expect airlines to approve. "It's just very difficult to
stop the compelling, strong economics of the big, long-range twin airplanes,"
says John Plueger, president of Los Angeles-based jet lessor Air Lease
(AL).
Even though Boeing's board has yet to grant final approval for
the plane's launch, Boeing already has grabbed an $11 billion order from
Lufthansa (LHA:GR) for 34 of the jets. Peter Arment, an analyst at Sterne, Agee
& Leach, predicts the tally may reach "well over 100 orders" worth more than
$34 billion at list prices after the plane's expected unveiling at the Dubai
Airshow in mid-November.
By rolling out an aircraft that will eliminate
the need for a megajumbo at many airlines, Boeing may cannibalize sales ofits
own 467-passenger 747-8, whose $356.9 million list price makes it the aircraft
manufacturer's most expensive model. George Ferguson, a senior analyst with
Bloomberg Industries, says Boeing has little choice but to take that risk, since
Airbus in 2014 is set to begin deliveries of its new midsize A350 widebody,
which will compete head to head with the current 777. Explains Pilarski, a
former executive at McDonnell Douglas, which Boeing bought in 1997: "If they
continue with the status quo, the 777 will begin losing market
share."
The 777 is the top-selling plane in Boeing's lineup. Able to
carry as many as 350 people, it lists for $320.2 million for the largest model,
although discounts are common on all planes for launch customers and those
ordering in bulk. The catalog price of the 777X, expected to be about $340
million based on Lufthansa's order, hasn't been made public.
Most
airlines' interest in jumbos cooled years ago. Boeing has won only 40 orders for
the passenger version of the 747-8, which entered service in 2012, and has
received none so far in 2013. Instead, Boeing has drawn far more excitement from
customers over its much smaller (210 seats to 330 seats), super-efficient 787
Dreamliner. Still, Randy Tinseth, Boeing's vice president for marketing, insists
the 747 remains critical to the company's goal of offering a range of products
to satisfy demand for planes with 200 to 500 seats. "We're bringing the 777X to
the market eyes wide-open with how it will fit in the family," he says. "We're
confident the 747-8 will be a great airplane to complement what we're doing
there."
Airbus, a latecomer to the jumbo market with the A380's 2007
arrival, defends its jet as being in "a totally different size and comfort
category than the 777X," says Senior Vice President Chris Emerson. Typically
configured with seating in the low 400s to the low 500s, the A380 has amassed
259 orders, although none in 2013.
Boeing's newest 777 will borrow the
swept carbon-fiber wing developed for the 787 Dreamliner, expanding to a span of
233 feet, the largest ever on a Boeing commercial jet, according to Aspire
Aviation, a Hong Kong-based consultant.
With the broader wing, the 777X
will need 15 percent less thrust from its new General Electric (GE) engines than
required on the current 777-300ER, even though the new plane will have 50 more
seats. Each engine will produce 102,000 foot-pounds of thrust, giving a 777X
about as much propulsive power as five of Boeing's pioneering four-engine 707s
from the 1950s.
The biggest design breakthrough features relatively
simple technology: a hydraulic actuator to fold the hinged wingtips after the
jet lands. That will let the 777X dodge rules limiting jumbos to airports with
specially widened taxiways and gates. Operating costs will be lower, since the
wider wings would otherwise cause the planes "to take up two whole gates, and
you'd have to pay for that proportionally," says Hubert Horan, a former airline
executive who's now a Phoenix-based consultant.
Plueger says the 777-9X
clearly heralds the end of the line for less-efficient, out-of-production
versions of the 747, such as the jets that Lufthansa is replacing. "We see the
9X as an airplane that will finally serve the role of eliminating all of the
remaining 747-400s out there," he says.
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