Boeing Quietly Pulls Plug on the 747, Closing Era of Jumbo Jets

DEAD7

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Boeing Quietly Pulls Plug on the 747, Closing Era of Jumbo Jets


The last 747-8 will roll out of a Seattle-area factory in about two years, a decision that hasn't been reported but can be teased out from subtle wording changes in financial statements, people familiar with the matter said. It's a moment that aviation enthusiasts long have dreaded, signaling the end of the double-decker, four-engine leviathans that shrank the world. Airbus SE is already preparing to build the last A380 jumbo, after the final convoy of fuselage segments rumbled to its Toulouse, France, plant last month. Yet for all their popularity with travelers, the final version of the 747 and Europe's superjumbo never caught on commercially as airlines turned to twin-engine aircraft for long-range flights. While Boeing's hump-nosed freighters will live on, the fast-disappearing A380 risks going down as an epic dud.
 

BigMoneyGrip

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The more streamlined twin engine planes are cheaper to operate and can fly a longer distance than the 747 and Airbus and can hold the same amount of passengers with the longer fuselages
 

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Quietly? They’ve been doing it and it’s no secret.

They need to pull the plug on the air max 737 with all the scandals surrounding it
 

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The more streamlined twin engine planes are cheaper to operate and can fly a longer distance than the 747 and Airbus and can hold the same amount of passengers with the longer fuselages
damn how do you know this.
Boeing Quietly Pulls Plug on the 747, Closing Era of Jumbo Jets


The last 747-8 will roll out of a Seattle-area factory in about two years, a decision that hasn't been reported but can be teased out from subtle wording changes in financial statements, people familiar with the matter said. It's a moment that aviation enthusiasts long have dreaded, signaling the end of the double-decker, four-engine leviathans that shrank the world. Airbus SE is already preparing to build the last A380 jumbo, after the final convoy of fuselage segments rumbled to its Toulouse, France, plant last month. Yet for all their popularity with travelers, the final version of the 747 and Europe's superjumbo never caught on commercially as airlines turned to twin-engine aircraft for long-range flights. While Boeing's hump-nosed freighters will live on, the fast-disappearing A380 risks going down as an epic dud.
It's part of the culture so sad, but I prefered the 767 and 777
 
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