onsdag 5. august 2015
Boeing squeezes in more seats and at the same time consider heavier pax - How is that possible? Source: Curt Lewis
Boeing updates jet specifications: more seats, shorter range
Boeing Co said on Tuesday it had updated the technical specifications, or performance characteristics, of its jetliners to reflect the way airlines use them and also the trend toward heavier passengers, seats and cargo.
The world's biggest plane maker stressed that the airplanes themselves have not changed.
Instead, the specifications were altered a few days ago to better reflect their actual performance, a shift industry experts called long overdue.
Boeing increased the seat count on its main widebody planes, the 787 and 777, which makes the cost per seat lower for airlines. Seat counts for the narrow-body 737s remain unchanged.
Boeing cut the range for all of the planes, with the recently introduced 787-9 falling the most, by 665 nautical miles (1,230 km).
Those changes reflect the fact that the new premium seats, often lie-flat beds, are about 100 pounds heavier than in the past. Assumptions for passenger and luggage weights also are higher, but Boeing declined to say what assumptions it uses.
Boeing said it has not changed the way it markets the jets. But since it does not reveal specific data from airlines, "we develop generic numbers to explain the performance," Randy Tinseth, vice president of marketing, wrote in a blog post explaining the changes.
The larger seating capacity on its widebody jets was not an effort to show better operating economics, the company said.
Rather it reflects the fact that many airlines are flying with two-class configurations in widebody planes, rather than three-class.
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