Monday, November 13, 2006

Airbus A380 to take off for round-the-world test flight

By Shirlom LeStout,
WNS France Correspondent

TOULOUSE - The Airbus A380 will take off from France on Monday for a round-the-world test mission, in the final hurdle before the superjumbo becomes the largest passenger plane in service. The A380 will leave the southern French city of Toulouse at 10:00 am (0900 GMT) for Singapore in the first of seven stops in Asia, an Airbus official told AFP. The crew will then touch down in Australia, South Africa and Canada during the 17-day round of technical tests. On-board engineers and certified test pilots will put the plane through its paces under simulated commercial conditions, including test landings at key airports, refueling practices and maintenance work.

The 150 hours of flying, which are expected to be the last major tests before approval from regulators next month, come at a difficult time for Airbus amid a hailstorm of bad publicity for its star project. Airbus has been forced to push back its timetable for deliveries of the A380 three times because of problems encountered when wiring the cabins, with delays now estimated at about two years. US mail group FedEx announced on November 7 it had cancelled an order for 10 cargo versions of the A380 because of delays to deliveries of the aircraft. Its competitor Boeing, however, has gone from strength-to-strength on the back of buoyant demand for its 787 Dreamliner jet.

The flight to Singapore on Monday will carry pilots from European and US certification bodies, the European Aviation Safety Agency and the Federal Aviation Administration, who will be on board to monitor the aircraft. It is capable of carrying 555-840 passengers depending on the seating lay-out chosen by the airline. The A380 is forecast to enter service in the second half of next year with Singapore Airlines, which has ordered 10 of the planes. Sixteen airlines have placed a total of 149 firm orders.

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home