Airbus has showed off its new A350 XWB, rolling out its first flyable plane on Monday fresh from the paintshop in company livery.
The aircraft is the first
in a family of super efficient passenger planes Airbus designed to go
head-to-head against rival Boeing's 787 Dreamliner and 777s.
"XWB" means "extra wide
body." There are three members in the A350 family: the A350-800, the
A350-900 and the A350-1000, which seat 270, 314 and 350 passengers
respectively, in three-class seating.
The largest of the three
lightweight carbon-composite aircraft, the A350-1000, is 73.88 meters
long and has a range of approximately 8,400 nautical miles, or 15,600
kilometers. The catalog price is US$320.6 million. As of March 31, there
were 110 orders for the A350-1000 among a total of 616 orders from 34
customers. Most orders, 414, have been for the A350-900.
The plane unveiled on
Monday at Airbus HQ in Toulouse, France is the latest milestone in what
has been a turbulent production history for the A350.
Critics have said the A350 program -- first launched in 2007 -- was a poorly-designed, hasty response to Boeing's 787.
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"The company, which was
hip-deep in sorting out A380 development, simply hadn't foreseen the
huge pent-up demand for a more efficient 250-seat airliner, and tried to
take the easy way out by offering a re-engined version of its A330,"
aviation journalist David Kaminski-Morrow, air transport editor of Flightglobal.com, told CNN in an earlier report.
Airbus reworked the design, configurations and technology to increase the plane's range and efficiency.
The unveiled plane, which Airbus have tagged "MSN001," will undergo final tests before its maiden flight expected in June.
Airbus said it took less
than a week to complete the aircraft painting. Last month, engines were
installed, ground vibration tests and flight test instrumentation
verification were completed.
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