A321LR conducts longest
flight on route from Seychelles
30
March, 2018 - SOURCE: Flight
Dashboard - BY: David Kaminski-Morrow - London
Airbus's
A321LR test aircraft has arrived back in Toulouse after conducting its
longest-distance flight so far in the certification campaign, operating from
the Seychelles.
The jet (D-AVZO) landed at the
airframer's headquarters just before 06:00 on 30 March after a near-11h flight
from the island of Mahe in the Indian Ocean territory.
Airbus tells FlightGlobal that
the aircraft was fitted with all three additional centre tanks.
Configured with the equivalent
of 162 passengers, and transporting five crew and 11 technicians, the aircraft
departed the Seychelles around 21:00 on 29 March.
The great-circle route between
the origin and destination is just over 4,100nm.
But Airbus says its flight-test
engineers have calculated – when factors including headwinds on the route are
taken into account – that the aircraft effectively flew 4,700nm.
Its route took it over Ethiopia
and Egypt, before the jet headed north-west to Toulouse upon reaching the
Mediterranean Sea.
"Everything was
flawless," the airframer says. The flight was designed to test cabin and
fuel-management systems on the CFM International Leap-1A-powered aircraft.
Airbus says the A321LR, which
recently underwent hot-weather trials in Sharjah, will shortly be flown to
Kiruna in Sweden, in a maximum take-off weight configuration, for cold-weather
testing.
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