Arikah Map

Airbus A300

Airbus A300
Airbus A300:Luft.a300b4.d-aias.750pix.
Lufthansa A300B4-600
Type Airliner
Manufacturer EADS (Airbus S.A.S.)
Maiden flight 1972-10-28
Introduced 1974-05-30 with Air France
Status Production to cease in 2007
Primary users United Parcel Service (52)
FedEx (49)
American Airlines (34)
Japan Airlines (23)
Thai Airways (21)
China Eastern (13)
Number built 552
Variants A300-600ST Beluga
This article is about the airliner. For information on the bomber, see Aero A.300.

The Airbus A300 is a short to medium range widebody aircraft. Launched in 1972, it was the first twin-engined widebody in the world, and the first aircraft created by the Airbus consortium of European aerospace companies, which is now fully owned by EADS. The A300 (along with the A310) will cease production in July 2007. Freighter sales are to be fulfilled by a new A330-200F derivative.[1]

By the end of June 2006 a total of 561 A300 had been ordered and 552 delivered.


Contents

Development history

The mission requirements were given by Frank Kolk, an American Airlines executive, in 1966, for a Boeing 727 replacement on busy short to medium range routes such as US transcontinental flights. His brief included a passenger capacity of 250 to 300 seated in a twin-aisle configuration and fitted with two engines, with the capability of carrying full passengers without penalty from high altitude airports like Denver. American manufacturers responded with widebody trijets, the Douglas DC-10 and the Lockheed L-1011 Tristar, as twinjets were banned from many routes by the FAA.

French president Charles de Gaulle resented the US domination of civil aviation and wanted a European airliner that could compete with American designs. Concorde was part of the answer, designed for intercontinental routes; the other was the A300, designed to meet Kolk's US domestic requirements.

Airbus A300:American Airlines A300
Enlarge
American Airlines A300

In September 1967 the British, French and German governments signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to start development of the 300 seat Airbus A300. An earlier announcement had been made in July 1967 but had been complicated by the British government's refusal to back British Aircraft Corporation's (BAC) proposed competitor, a development of the BAC 1-11, and instead supported the Airbus aircraft.

In the months following this agreement both the French and British governments expressed doubts about the aircraft. Another problem was the requirement for a new engine to be developed by Rolls-Royce, the RB207. In December 1968 the French and British partner companies (Sud Aviation and Hawker-Siddeley) proposed a revised configuration, the 250 seat Airbus A250. Renamed the A300B the aircraft would not require new engines, reducing development costs. To attract potential US customers, American General Electric CF6-50 engines powered the A300 instead of the British RB207. The British government was upset and withdrew from the venture: however, the British firm Hawker-Siddeley stayed on as a contractor, developing the wings for the A300, which were pivotal in later versions' impressive performance from short domestic to long intercontinental flights. (Years later, through British Aerospace, the UK reentered the consortium.)

Airbus A300:Olympic Airways Airbus A300B4-600R
Enlarge
Olympic Airways Airbus A300B4-600R

Airbus Industrie was formally set up in 1970 following an agreement between Aérospatiale (France) and Deutsche Aerospace (Germany) (joined by CASA of Spain in 1971). Each company would deliver its sections as fully equipped, ready-to- fly items.

In 1972 the A300 made its maiden flight. The first production model, the A300B2, entered service in 1974. Initially the success of the consortium was poor but by 1979 there were 81 aircraft in service. It was the launch of the A320 in 1981 that guaranteed Airbus as a major player in the aircraft market - the aircraft had over 400 orders before it first flew, compared to 15 for the A300 in 1972.

The A300 is the first airliner to use just-in-time manufacturing techniques. Complete aircraft sections were manufactured by consortium partners all over Europe. These were airlifted to the final assembly line in Toulouse by a fleet of Boeing 377-derived Aero Spacelines Super Guppy aircraft. Originally devised as a way to share the work among Airbus's partners without the expense of two assembly lines, it turned out to be a more efficient way of building airplanes (more flexible and reduced costs) as opposed to building the whole airplane at one site. This fact was not lost on Boeing, which, over thirty years later, decided to manufacture the Boeing 787 in this manner, using outsized 747s to ferry wings and other parts from Japan.

The A300 cemented European cooperation in aviation. Its first flight was commemorated on a French three-franc stamp.

Technology

Airbus A300:Egypt Air Airbus A300-600R
Enlarge
Egypt Air Airbus A300-600R

Airbus partners employed the latest technology, some derived from the Concorde. On entry into service, in 1974, the A300 was very advanced and influenced later subsonic airliner designs. The technological highlights include:

Later A300s incorporate other advanced features such as

All these made the A300 a perfect substitute for the widebody trijets such as McDonnell Douglas DC-10 and Lockheed L-1011 for short to medium routes. On the early versions, Airbus even used the same engines and similar major systems as the DC-10.

In-service

After the launch, sales of the A300 were weak for some years, with most orders going to airlines that had an obligation to order the locally-made product - notably Air France and Lufthansa. At one stage, Airbus had 16 "whitetail" A300s - completed but unsold aircraft - sitting on the tarmac.

Indian Airlines was the world's first domestic airline to purchase the A300. Some are still flying today for the airline.

In 1977 U.S. carrier Eastern Air Lines leased four A300s as an in-service trial. Frank Borman, ex-astronaut and the then CEO, was impressed as the A300 consumed 30% less fuel than his fleet of Tristars and then ordered 23 of the type. This was followed by an order from Pan Am. From then on, the A300 family sold well, eventually reaching the current total of 858 on order or delivered.

The aircraft found particular favour with Asian airlines, being bought by Japan Air System, Korean Air, Thai Airways International, Singapore Airlines, Malaysia Airlines, Philippine Airlines, Garuda Indonesia, China Airlines, Pakistan International Airlines, Indian Airlines, Trans Australia Airlines and many others. As Asia was not restricted by the FAA 60-minutes ruling for twin-engine airliners which existed at the time, Asian airlines used A300s for routes across Bay of Bengal and South China Sea.

By 1981 Airbus was growing rapidly, with over 300 aircraft sold and options for 200 more planes for over forty airlines. This fact was not lost to Boeing which responded with the Boeing 767.

The A300 provided Airbus the experience of manufacturing and selling airliners competitively. The basic fuselage of the A300 was later stretched (A330 and A340), shrunk (A310), or modified into derivatives (Airbus Beluga).

The A300 is reaching the end of its market life and is now mainly sold as a dedicated freighter. The largest freight operator of the A300 in the United States is Federal Express, which, at January, 2006, had 95 A300/310 aircraft. United Parcel Service (UPS) also has started using freighter versions of the A300. The current version is the A300-600R and is rated for 180-minute ETOPS. The A300 has enjoyed renewed interest in the secondhand market for conversion to freighters. The freighter versions - either new-build A300-600s or converted ex-passenger A300-600s, A300B2s and B4s - account for most of the world freighter fleet after the Boeing 747 freighter.

In March 2006 Airbus announced the closure of the A300/A310 line making them the first Airbus aircraft to be discontinued. The final airframe (a A300-600) is expected to be delivered in July 2007 and Airbus has announced a support package to keep A300s flying commercially until at least 2025.

Variants

Airbus A300:This A300B1 was the first Airbus ever to enter service with an airline. It has been used as a fire brigade training structure at Brussels National airport since 1990 and was destroyed on July 9, 2003.
Enlarge
This A300B1 was the first Airbus ever to enter service with an airline. It has been used as a fire brigade training structure at Brussels National airport since 1990 and was destroyed on July 9, 2003.
Airbus A300:Islandsflug Cargo A300C4-605R
Enlarge
Islandsflug Cargo A300C4-605R

Specifications

MeasurementA300B4A300-600RA300-600F
Seats 2-class 266 266
Length 54.08 m or 177' 3" 54.08 m or 177' 3" 54.08 m or 177' 3"
Span 44.85 m or 147' 2" 44.85 m or 147' 2" 44.85 m or 147' 2"
Height 16.62 m or 54' 6" 16.62 m or 54' 6" 16.62 m or 54' 6"
Weight empty 90,060 kg or 198,132 lb 81,900 kg or 180,700 lb
MTOW 165,900 kg or 364,980 lbs. 170,500 kg or 375,100 lb
Cruising speed mach 0.80 mach 0.80 mach 0.80
Maximum speed mach 0.82 mach 0.82 mach 0.82
Range fully loaded   6,670 km or 5,300 nm 2,950 nm
Max. fuel capacity   18,000 USG or 68,150 litres 18,000 USG or 68,150 litres
Engines CF6-80C2 or PW4156 CF6-80C2 or PW4156
Cockpit Crew Two Two Two

A300 Deliveries

 2006  2005  2004  2003  2002  2001  2000  1999  1998  1997  1996  1995  1994  1993  1992  1991  1990  1989 
49128911881361417232222251924
 1988  1987  1986  1985  1984  1983  1982  1981  1980  1979  1978  1977  1976  1975  1974  1973  1972  1971 
1711101619194638392615151384000

Incidents

References

  1. ^ Airbus aims to fill freighter void with A330 derivative. Flight International (2006-03-14).
  2. ^ "Navy Missile Downs Iranian Jetliner", Washington Post, 1988-07-04. Retrieved on 2006-08-03.

Related development<h3>

<h3>Comparable aircraft<h3>

<h3>See also<h3>

Categories


International airliners 1970-1979 | Airbus | Airbus aircraft | Jet aircraft

Find

Find

Find