En observant korrespondent ombord på M/S Celebrity Eclipse på vei vestover i Kanalen i går, tok dette bildet:
Foto: Tom N. Gram
Bildet førte til en nærmere undersøkelser for å avdekke logistikken bak deletransporten av flyet. Her er historien:
Four million
parts, 30 countries: How an Airbus A380 comes together
Howard Slutsken, CNN • Updated 24th January 2018
World's largest passenger airliner: The double-deck,
four-engine Airbus A380 is the world's largest passenger airliner, measuring
close to 73 meters in length and holding as many as 853 passengers. Photo: Per Gram - Farnbororugh 2010
(CNN) — It's the middle of the night in the
sleepy French town of Lévignac, in the countryside just outside of Toulouse.
There are people lined up along the town's main road, waiting for a
parade to begin. But there are no marching bands or decorated floats at this 1
a.m. event.
Instead, a convoy of six trucks appears, each pulling an enormous
trailer carrying a massive component of the world's largest passenger airliner,
the Airbus A380.
The crowds applaud as the plane's wings, fuselage sections and
horizontal tailplane slowly inch their way through the provincial town -- a
procession that's repeated every few week
The Airbus fleet travels through the town of Lévignac.
Courtesy Airbus
Giant airplane kit
The Final Assembly Line (FAL) for the double-deck, 500+ passenger A380
is in the Jean-Luc Lagardere plant, a purpose-built facility at
Toulouse-Blagnac Airport in southern France.
It's also the site of the Airbus corporate HQ and flight test
department, and where single-aisle A320s and wide-body A330 and A350s are
built.
Since its first delivery to Singapore Airlines in 2007, more than 200
A380s have rolled off the line in Toulouse. Most of the planes, more than 100
aircraft, are flown by the Dubai-based Emirates airline.
As with other Airbus projects, the manufacturing of components for the
A380 are spread among the company's facilities throughout Europe, and parts
come from suppliers all over the world.
The megajet's wings are built in Broughton, Wales; fuselage sections
come from Hamburg, Germany and Saint-Nazaire, France; the horizontal tailplane
is made in Cadiz, Spain; and the vertical tail fin is also manufactured in
Hamburg.
Getting these huge pieces of airplane to the FAL is a tightly
orchestrated logistical process, overseen by Arnaud Cazeneuve, oversize surface
transportation manager for Airbus.
From rivets and bolts, to seats and engines, an A380 is made up of
about four million individual parts produced by 1,500 companies from 30
countries around the world.
"One A380, to me, is six components -- three fuselage sections,
two wings, and the horizontal tailplane," says Cazeneuve.
Ro-ro ships
The parts too big to travel by air are transferred to France on
specially designed vessels.
Courtesy Airbus
Airbus has a fleet of three specially designed vessels to transport the
A380's major components to a floating pontoon dock in Pauillac, just inland on
France's Atlantic coast.
The roll-on, roll-off -- or ro-ro -- ships carry the six completed A380
sections from Airbus facilities in Wales, Germany, France, Italy and Spain.
"There is no crane activity needed," Cazeneuve tells CNN
Travel.
"Each production plant puts the sections on the transport jig, and
a special multi-purpose vehicle goes under the jig to move it.
"I don't have to touch the section, just transfer the component
from one transport means to another."
Six by sea, one by air
While the six major components of an A380 are enjoying a sea cruise,
the plane's vertical tail fin flies from Hamburg to Toulouse.
The fin's first flight isn't on the outside of a plane, but inside one
of Airbus' A300-600ST Super Transporters -- better known as the Beluga.
These highly modified cargo carriers started life as wide-body
passenger jets. Each plane's cockpit has been dropped to accommodate a
cavernous cargo bay that's been grafted atop the fuselage.
The fleet of five Belugas link Airbus facilities in Europe, carrying
components to FALs for all of Airbus' planes.
Even though the Beluga is designed to carry oversized cargo, it can
only accommodate the vertical fin of the A380 -- all of the other major
sections of the megajet are just too big.
Meanwhile, in Pauillac, the A380's six major components are unloaded,
and then moved to one of two barges for the next stage of the trip to Toulouse.
The barges make four return trips over eight days, traveling 95
kilometers up the Garonne River to Langon. But from there, it's still another
240 kilometers to the FAL in Toulouse.
As each major component arrives in Langon, it's transferred to a
specially designed trailer. Once all six sections arrive, the road trip to
Toulouse can begin.
Related content
Road trip
The convoy travels across specially
modified roads from Langon to Toulouse to deliver the components.
Courtesy Airbus
Traveling only at night, the convoy takes two evenings to cover the 240
kilometers to Toulouse, on the Itinéraire à Grand Gabarit (IGG)
-- a secondary-road route that was modified to handle the extreme size of the
A380's sections.
"Between Langon and Toulouse, before the A380, there was a road
managed by the French authorities," says Cazeneuve.
"When we developed the project, we came to the authorities saying,
'we would like to transfer these big components on this route.'"
Airbus paid 57% of the road upgrade cost of 171 million euros ($205
million), and the government paid the remaining 43%, recognizing the economic
benefit brought to the region by the A380 project.
Roads were widened, and obstructions shifted from the roadside. Over
6,500 trees were planted, three to four times the number that were removed.
Dedicated bypass roads were built, to make it easier for the convoy to
navigate around some of the 21 towns and villages on the route.
As well as a slew of other changes, roundabouts were rebuilt to allow
the trucks to pass directly over the center of the traffic circles.
More than 35 kilometers of bicycle and horse paths were created,
utilizing the new wider right-of-way.
These huge airplane parts are on their way to becoming an A380, the
world's largest passenger liner.
Courtesy Airbus
Hero's welcome
"When you're driving on the road, you feel that this is used by
the A380," says Cazeneuve. "You know that this is something different
than a normal road."
A calendar showing the planned convoy dates is available on the IGG
website, and local residents are reminded three days before each convoy begins
its trip, via roadside display boards.
As the trucks move through the night, the route is closed in sections
to regular traffic, for both the safety and security of the convoy -- and then
there's the town of Lévignac.
Instead of using a bypass, the convoy travels directly though the
center of the town. This is the one section of the IGG where each truck is
accompanied by spotters, walking alongside the trailers -- and for good reason.
"There is just 50 centimeters clearance on each side between the
component and the buildings. People in the buildings are watching the
components go by, right in front of their windows," says Cazeneuve.
Once through Lévignac, it's just an hour's drive to the convoy's final
stop, at the FAL in Toulouse.
Although he might lose some sleep, Cazeneuve regularly heads out from
Toulouse in the middle of the night.
"I go quite often to see the convoy, to see that everything is
running well."
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