Winging it desires to bring this Article to its reader attention
by re-posting the below article from the
First Boeing 777X tipped
for 2018
The first Boeing 777X will trundle off the production line in
2018, a Boeing exec has revealed, as the airline edges closer to commercial
flights of the new long-range jets from 2020.
That debutante is likely to be the Boeing 777-9X, although the X
will be dropped as the plane makes its journey from blueprint to blue skies, to
become the 777-9.
It will be followed by the smaller but longer-range Boeing
777-8X, or 777-8 (note the nod to the naming conventions adopted for the
Boeing 787 Dreamliner).
Bob Feldmann, Boeing's vice president for the 777X project,
told The Seattle Times that the first 777X will
roll off an early production line – one currently used to ramp up Boeing 787
production – in 2018.
Boeing is on track on finalize the 777X's design configuration
later this year. "It’s an exciting time as we begin to define the
world’s next great airplane" Feldman says.
The manufacturer has already notched up orders for 286 of
the 777X jets, with the lion's share going to 777 stalwart Emirates in 35 of
the 777-8s and 115 of the 777-9s.
Gulf neighbor and rival Etihad has inked a deal for 8 777-8s and
17 777-9s.
Qatar Airways, Cathay Pacific, Lufthansa and ANA have all
opted for the larger 777-9 alone with orders.
The X factor
The latest addition to Boeing's best-selling 777 family,
the 777X is being spruiked as "the largest and most efficient
twin-engine commercial jet in the world, with the lowest operating cost per
seat of any commercial airplane."
The 777-9X is spec'd for 400 passengers in a three-class
cabin layout with a peak range nudging past 15,185km (8,200 nautical
miles).
The 777-8X will trim the seat count to 350 passengers but
with a maximum range over 17,220km (9,300 nautical miles).
In both cases, improved design and new-generation engines will
see the planes burn less fuel than today's 777s.
Long wings for the win
Part of that advanced design: sweeping wings made
from carbon-fibre composites rather than metal, which span 235
feet (71.6 meters) to boost aerodynamic efficiency.
However, the tips of those wings will fold up when the 777X is
on the ground to reduce the wingspan by some 7 metres (23 feet).
These 'swingtips', as Boeing calls them, are required to
make the 777X fit into airport boarding gates and taxiways designed for the
other members of the 777 family rather than demand expensive airport
modifications.
(It's not exactly a new idea: Boeing patented it in 1995
for the original Boeing 777, and while no airline ever ticked this option box
on their order, a full-scale model of the folding wingtip is on display at
Boeing's Museum of Flight in Seattle.)
Inside the Boeing 777X
Boeing will also adapt key aspects of its 787 Dreamliner series
to shape the passenger experience of the 777X.
The 777X will include a lower effective cabin altitude of
6,000 feet; oversized windows set higher into the cabin; and what Boeing
promises will be "economy class seat widths up to 18 inches
wide," although the choice of configurations and seat widths will in
the end fall to airlines buying the big bird.
The rest of the creature comforts which Boeing has in mind for
the 777X – which is slated to begin production in 2017, with first
commercial flights from 2020 – are a mash-up of the Boeing 777 family interior
with the 787's cabin innovations.
For starters the cabin altitude will be pegged at 6,000
feet and humidity levels boosted, with both traits being "comparable to
the 787 Dreamliner" in order to reduce the effects of inflight fatigue and
jetlag.
Also like the Dreamliner, the enlarged windows of the 777X
will be positioned higher on the fuselage so they're at eye level for a
larger percentage of passengers, to allow more light into the cabin and a sense
that there's an 'outside' out there from even the dreaded middle seats.
There should be lower cabin noise thanks to new engine nacelle design, better
cabin insulation and even the installation of twice as many air nozzles which
will funnel triple-filtered air at reduced velocity for less noise.
Boeing also says the 777X will introduce an "all-new
interior design that allows airlines to customise their cabin architectures by
class."
"This innovation includes an adaptable suite of parts that
facilitates choices in overhead ceiling and stow bin configurations, allowing
airlines to create the feeling of separate and distinct cabins that meet both
airline and passenger needs."
Boeing suggests this as a possible high-tech 777X cabin, perhaps
assuming that Tron Airlines is the launch customer...
Of course, no modern jet can get by without LED mood lighting,
so that's a given right out of the box.
"The 777X will redefine the total passenger
experience" promises Dennis Eng, Boeing's Director for 777X
Interiors.
"All of the interior features we are exploring and
designing into the new airplane are working together as a package to create an
exciting new passenger experience."