Would The A350neo Destroy Boeing?

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  • čas přidán 5. 02. 2021
  • Airbus is currently scouting in the market for a potential engine supplier for a re-engined A350 aircraft. The A350neo would feature new engines that are set to compete against the Boeing 777X. We’ll talk about the possibilities, and whether it would be a success in the current industry!
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Komentáře • 202

  • @tigersharkzh
    @tigersharkzh Před 3 lety +79

    No need for an A350neo to destroy Boeing, they're doing it to themselves with great efficiency.

    • @Tom-js3iz
      @Tom-js3iz Před 3 lety +1

      Nah they’ve learned their lesson and they are g now

    • @thorstenj.9639
      @thorstenj.9639 Před 3 lety +4

      Correct! Airbus should follow their own roadmap to improve their products. Considering tthat a NEO update could take 3+ year it wold be very clever to start now...

    • @thomascdurham9130
      @thomascdurham9130 Před 3 lety +2

      As long as Boeing is attached to The U.S. Defense tit, they will survive.

    • @prasad530
      @prasad530 Před 3 lety

      @@thorstenj.9639 Follow the same roadmap that produced the A380 failure?

    • @carlosandleon
      @carlosandleon Před 3 lety +1

      @@Tom-js3iz lol 4 months later another Boeing fuck up came to the surface, you sure they learned their lessons bro?

  • @scottbernard8824
    @scottbernard8824 Před 3 lety +17

    Sounds like Boeing's bean- counters are the real threat to Boeing.

  • @zacharynascimento3921
    @zacharynascimento3921 Před 3 lety +8

    The latest aircraft they neo’d was the a330...and it’s still relatively young, only coming out a few years before the 777.

  • @Sterlingjob
    @Sterlingjob Před 3 lety +11

    It’s called the rolls Royce ultra fan , but it’s development has been put on hold because of the stupid virus

  • @FreeSoul76
    @FreeSoul76 Před 3 lety +10

    A350 the most quite and comfortable on the sky I love flying with this aircraft.

    • @aseem7w9
      @aseem7w9 Před 3 lety

      definitely not the most comfortable. japan airlines boeing 787 has the widest and most comfortable economy seats in the world.

    • @KingofInterns
      @KingofInterns Před 3 lety +4

      @@aseem7w9 most 787s are 9 abreast (95% of them) this is super uncomfortable. A350 is wider and thus 9 abreast is much more comfortable. Also a350 is quieter than 787.

    • @aseem7w9
      @aseem7w9 Před 3 lety

      @@KingofInterns Yes I know 9 abreast 787 is bad thats why i said japan airlines 787. the a350 isnt too quiet than 787 just slightly.

    • @KingofInterns
      @KingofInterns Před 3 lety +3

      @@aseem7w9 Thats my point :) 787 was initially designed for 8 abreast but most carriers opted for cramming in 9 abreast. This means most people associate the 787 as being too crampt. Whereas the a350 was designed to accommodate 9 abreast which currently most carriers use. 10 abreast a350 however does exist with some LCCs but luckily it is rare...

  • @marvinenglish4547
    @marvinenglish4547 Před 3 lety +15

    The a220 a321 xlr a350 family is the real problem to Boeing

    • @andrewmcglashan6274
      @andrewmcglashan6274 Před 3 lety +2

      a220 not so much but the 321 xlr and the 350 yes

    • @alph5230
      @alph5230 Před 3 lety +10

      @@andrewmcglashan6274 Because Boeing doesn't have ANYTHING to rival the a220 😂😂

    • @Chris58851
      @Chris58851 Před 3 lety +2

      @@alph5230 They have something from 60's known as 737-7MAX aka the Frankenliner to rival A220.

    • @nntflow7058
      @nntflow7058 Před 3 lety +2

      Airbus own 50% of ATR. Which mean that Airbus also got money from ATR42 and ATR72. With Bombardier Q400 out of the picture now. Airbus is squishing Boeing from Top to Bottom.

    • @andrewlarson7895
      @andrewlarson7895 Před 3 lety

      @@alph5230 that will be changing boeing is in a sweet place right now.

  • @arturkasza3176
    @arturkasza3176 Před 3 lety +2

    This is a very nice video, with the A350s flying in different formations, and an interesting analysis. Interesting also why the major engine manufacturers run into problems with their super advanced engines. Isn't it all becoming too complicated?

  • @timothycook2917
    @timothycook2917 Před 3 lety +32

    What's up with the title? Neither are going to destroy. There's no end game. Both companies are producing great products for a public demand

    • @navgeekaviation
      @navgeekaviation  Před 3 lety +6

      It's good to pose the question I guess

    • @ant2312
      @ant2312 Před 3 lety +2

      Boeing producing great products? just lol

    • @Tom-js3iz
      @Tom-js3iz Před 3 lety +1

      @@ant2312 they have been for a very long time. Maybe if you weren’t such an ignorant Boeing hater you would have the mental capacity to understand

    • @stoje8405
      @stoje8405 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ant2312 yes they are, or maybe, they used to? remind you only boeing's newer products that have heavy problems like 737max and 787 (the reason i put 787 is because boeing is moving to SC for the 787s built after this which most airline would probably decline it)

    • @alaa-eldin_hamdan
      @alaa-eldin_hamdan Před 3 lety

      Now I see the effects of the delusional nationalistic Boeing cool aid. Boeing is a national embarrassment.

  • @chron123
    @chron123 Před 3 lety +3

    "A-Free-Fifty NEO"

  • @Sacto1654
    @Sacto1654 Před 3 lety +1

    I think several airlines are interested in an A350XWBneo that uses essentially a “shrunk down” variant of the GE9X engine. Especially with the 777 replacement cycle now starting very soon.

  • @erikc1775
    @erikc1775 Před 3 lety +6

    They should start thinking about it. Even If Boeing dies, it will only take some years for others to catch up, Airbus needs to stay ahead. Although I have to be honest, I will never fly on a Chinese aircraft. Not because it is Chinese or would be of bad quality, but because it is made by a brutal regime that needs to be stopped before it becomes too powerful. I will not support that regime more than necessary. As for Russian planes, the same applies for those.

    • @beavertown2006
      @beavertown2006 Před 3 lety

      You are very few who see this.

    • @JohnLee-
      @JohnLee- Před 3 lety

      I would much prefer the democracy bomb. Boeing are such good KILLING machine

    • @prasad530
      @prasad530 Před 3 lety

      It is ludicrous to suggest Boeing is going anywhere.

  • @jiajianhou426
    @jiajianhou426 Před 3 lety +4

    Still haven’t flew on the A350 and I want to so bad!

    • @chrismckellar9350
      @chrismckellar9350 Před 3 lety +1

      It is better than the B787.

    • @jiajianhou426
      @jiajianhou426 Před 3 lety +2

      @@chrismckellar9350 I flew on the B787 once and it was better than average. The only A350 flight I see myself getting on is a delta long haul. But delta tickets are hella more expensive than another airline’s b777 flight with the same route.

  • @nicholasmarshall9128
    @nicholasmarshall9128 Před 3 lety +2

    Depends on how long it will take for customers to receive their full order. IAG signed a massive order for the 737-max because of the production delays and airbus producing less a320s per month than promised. Yes an a350 neo would be the most efficient plane by far, but if you cant get it until long after you could get your full order of 777s (likely at a lower price), is it worth it?

  • @andrewmcglashan6274
    @andrewmcglashan6274 Před 3 lety +1

    The trent XWB 97's don't need replacing at all maybe only for the -900 with the XWB 87's but the -1000 Is going to be fine for another decade or two!

  • @simu31
    @simu31 Před 3 lety +1

    Airbus probably will, at some point, announce an A350NEO, but all the talk now is just people who don't know what they're talking about sticking "NEO" on the end of an aircraft type and thinking they're clever.
    I mean, first flight for the A350 was less than ten years ago, they're definitely *not* going to announce a re-engined version when more than half of deliveries are still outstanding.
    The next new aircraft Airbus will probably announce is the replacement for the A320 family, but even that is several years away, although design work is (apparently) still ongoing.
    Don't expect any major aircraft announcements from Airbus until after covid is passed and the aviation industry is back to some semblance of normality. Airbus themselves don't see that happening before 2025, so we've got quite a wait.
    Oh, and *no* it will NOT be a "Boeing killer." Airbus don't want that, the industry doesn't want that, and the public don't want that.

    • @stoje8405
      @stoje8405 Před 3 lety

      because if it's a killer which may dominate, there's almost no competition and therefore no new innovations, right?

  • @neilpickup237
    @neilpickup237 Před 3 lety

    To say that there will not be an A350 neo (or whatever they call it by then) is like saying that there is no longer sufficient demand for A350/777 type aircraft (as happened with the A380/747). Unless the demand for this type evaporates, it is just a matter of 'when' rather than 'will' it be produced. Who knows, we might even see a neo2 of the A330!
    As for the future of the 777x, it should be assured, but in market where composite fuselages seem to be the way to go - at least for new designs such as the A350 and 787, perhaps a re-engine with less extensive changes elsewhere may have been the better option to take. The current schedule is already 4 years behind, and that assumes that closer scrutiny of Boeing doesn't reveal anything requiring a significant change.
    While not expecting the 777x to fail, I believe that it's future is not as certain as many believe, and even though a significant upgrade, it may not be as successful as Boeing needs it to be.

  • @neilpickup237
    @neilpickup237 Před 3 lety

    Assuming that an A350 neo is inevitable, just how many more times does the 777x need to be delayed before the A350 neo is announced ahead of the 777x being introduced into service?

  • @rogerrussell9544
    @rogerrussell9544 Před 3 lety

    It takes a lot of lead time, what they decide today will be a few years down the road before it's on factory floor. Look at Boeing and the 797, they kept waiting and putting it off until they waited too long not to lose market share.

  • @hakanevin8545
    @hakanevin8545 Před 3 lety +11

    This video is full of wrong information. Airbus never had an A350Neo plan themselves. Actually GE approached Airbus and offered new engines, but Airbus rejected it as they calculated that the claimed efficiency increase will not worth development costs. Note that the plan is not only re-reengining A350, but it also requires redesign of the wings as in the case of 777X.

    • @hodb3906
      @hodb3906 Před 3 lety

      Wasn’t the whole redesign of the 777x wing for more efficiency? I doubt the change in engine had anything to do with it.

    • @hakanevin8545
      @hakanevin8545 Před 3 lety +2

      @@hodb3906 Both wing and new engine are for efficiency.

    • @hodb3906
      @hodb3906 Před 3 lety

      @@hakanevin8545 I know. But the engine had nothing to do with the redesign of the wing though.

    • @hakanevin8545
      @hakanevin8545 Před 3 lety +3

      @@hodb3906 They are connected. GE9X is bigger and more efficient than GE90, but it provides less thrust. You have to provide more lift to compensate thrust loss. This is achieved by larger wings.

    • @hodb3906
      @hodb3906 Před 3 lety +4

      @@hakanevin8545 Well more lift increases drag. Hence the higher AR ratios but lower sweep. However the GE9X doesn’t have less thrust. It has a lower thrust rating. It still has a higher maximum thrust and higher continuous thrust than the GE90.

  • @stuartd8233
    @stuartd8233 Před 3 lety +1

    The A350 is a beautiful comfortable efficient aeroplane, it needs no hype, it sells itself and Airbus need not concern itself too much with Boeing. Boeings biggest problem is not Airbus but itself.!

  • @Lee247Jamaica
    @Lee247Jamaica Před 3 lety +2

    Yeeeet

  • @chrismckellar9350
    @chrismckellar9350 Před 3 lety

    Airbus is hoping that Qantas will be the launch customer for the A350-1000 'extended range' for Project Sunrise. Qatar is also on an A350-1000 'extended range'. With regards to a A350neo, there is still plenty of time, as Airbus is looking at 2030. RR and GE and possibility PW should be working on the next generation of GTF engines that can operate on biofuel. if Airbus does release an A350neo it will be fueled by biofuel.

  • @larissaa3465
    @larissaa3465 Před 3 lety +2

    A jet that had its first flight in 2013, needing a neo variant?

    • @nntflow7058
      @nntflow7058 Před 3 lety

      The engines would only arrived after 2025. By then A350 would be 12 years of old.

  • @RashadKhanAviation2023

    No A350Neo till the A350 is old. The current A350 is good enough for us for now

  • @garyhughes9649
    @garyhughes9649 Před 3 lety +1

    Must be an old video the Genex GE engine now has most of its engine problems resolved it's a massive and fuel efficient engine new technology there are always some teething problems. There's a fair possibility the triple 7x will be the United Arab Emirates economical replacement to the A380

    • @mojamoja3962
      @mojamoja3962 Před 3 lety

      The 7x is replacing Emirate's aging 777 not the A380. Emirates will still be flying the A380 for quite a long time.

  • @G-546
    @G-546 Před 3 lety

    Navgeek Avaition you got a lot wrong about the a330neo. The a330neo was never so posed to get over 500 orders as the plane was built to keep costumers like AirAsiaX and Delta. The a330-800 actually has a longer range than the 787 by the way. The a330neo was also cheap for airbus to build as all of its technology was copied from the a350 and existing a330. The a330neo program only had 2 billion in development costs compared to the 32billion with the 787.

  • @richardwilcock2942
    @richardwilcock2942 Před 3 lety

    Personally i think engine manufacturers have pushed the technology to the limit. Perhaps it is best that they consolidate for a few years. Airbus could work up the A350neo to have GE or RR engines just in case. After all the A330neo was originally an initial concept to save a developing a new plane, the A350. i suspect Airbus are working on the concept, but will not invest until the market improves.

  • @G-546
    @G-546 Před 3 lety

    I think that now is the perfect time to announce an a350neo. It could be the end of the 777x. I don’t think that an a350 neo would do much to the 787.

    • @Tom-js3iz
      @Tom-js3iz Před 3 lety

      Why would you want to end the 777x? You really hate Boeing don’t you?

    • @G-546
      @G-546 Před 3 lety +1

      Zyphox I’m saying that if Airbus announced a a350neo now it could end the 777x. The 777x is actually my favorite Boeing plane but from a financial standpoint announcing an a350neo now would be the best time for Airbus to do it.

    • @stoje8405
      @stoje8405 Před 3 lety +1

      @@G-546 it would be perfect to make A350neo with almost same characteristics as A35K but with range of over 18K KM and better efficiency and no bleed air which would be genius to finally launch SYD-LHR flights😁

  • @harryperry5055
    @harryperry5055 Před 3 lety +2

    How has this got 756 views?

  • @user-dc4bl1cu2k
    @user-dc4bl1cu2k Před 3 lety

    A350neo would have been released as the original A350. As it stands the current Airbus 350 with it's lighter weight and lower price tag (if im not mistaken) mostly outsells the B777x in terms of orders. Neo would have been the launch plane.

    • @stoje8405
      @stoje8405 Před 3 lety

      isn't that the a330neo you're talking about?

    • @user-dc4bl1cu2k
      @user-dc4bl1cu2k Před 2 lety

      @@stoje8405 A330neo does not compete against the B777x. It competes against the dreamliner.

    • @stoje8405
      @stoje8405 Před 2 lety

      @@user-dc4bl1cu2k ah i got mistaken, i thought you were talking the original A350 (which is now the A330neo) yes it is the closest competitor to the 787

  • @vinzchannel01
    @vinzchannel01 Před 2 lety +1

    WTF is Triple X?? Triple 7x you mean

  • @NeonSamurai4381
    @NeonSamurai4381 Před 3 lety

    The A350neo can wait until 2035 and use Rolls Royce's ultrafan

  • @johniii8147
    @johniii8147 Před 3 lety

    The neo isn’t happening anytime soon. RR has put the next gen UltraFan on hold indefinitely until the next new airplane is launched.

    • @steinwaldmadchen
      @steinwaldmadchen Před 3 lety

      Or the other way round - A350NEO is spectulated as UltraFan's prime application, so if A350NEO halts, so does UltraFan.
      Boeing simply don't have the capacity to put forward a new aircraft yet, and even if they do, it's more likely a NMA/NSA-sized one and with GE.

    • @kazedcat
      @kazedcat Před 3 lety

      @@steinwaldmadchen Airbus will not wait for Boeing. Airbus is also constantly tweaking their planes into better variants. So they will use Rolls Royce's future engine when it is available. The problem is the propose engine need many technological development so it is not even sure if Rolls Royce can implement some of this technology.

    • @steinwaldmadchen
      @steinwaldmadchen Před 3 lety

      @@kazedcat They don't wait for Boeing, but for market recovery. Everyone in the industry are in survival mode, and long haul travel are expected to recover the last. Even if recovered, the market would be flooded by off-lease 77W or even 787/A350 for a few years.
      Plus, A321XLR and somehow A220 would take away some midhaul routes, bit by bit, regardless of post COVID19 recovery.
      So for now, A350NEO is probably the last thing Airbus should care. Some studies are under the water I guess, but likely launch is postponed for good.

    • @johniii8147
      @johniii8147 Před 3 lety

      @@steinwaldmadchen It’s the other way around actually it’s Rolls-Royce that’s killing off the new year for the moment just like they did with a 380 NE0. They simply don’t have the money to put into it right now an Airbus isn’t going to give them that money. There is no demand right now for a neo right now anyway

    • @kazedcat
      @kazedcat Před 3 lety

      @@steinwaldmadchen The engine is not ready this year or in 2025. If the engine becomes ready in 2030 and add 5 years for integration development then A350 NEO is likely to be flying in 2035. That is enough time for the market to normalize and grow again.

  • @tpplatfzft
    @tpplatfzft Před 3 lety +1

    A far better aeroplane the A350 is, especially in Economy. 3-3-3 is the King.

  • @AgeCobra
    @AgeCobra Před 3 lety +2

    No they wouldn't plus Boeing has it Military side.

  • @jatxemo6156
    @jatxemo6156 Před 3 lety

    I find a350 noisier than a380 inside but with ultrafan things might change

    • @gasviation9077
      @gasviation9077 Před 2 lety

      a380 is quieter than gliders i can't even hear the engine

  • @jatxemo6156
    @jatxemo6156 Před 3 lety

    Geared turbo fan

  • @jarheadcharlie2315
    @jarheadcharlie2315 Před 3 lety

    If the 350 needs a NEO already, Airbus needs to drop RR.

    • @steinwaldmadchen
      @steinwaldmadchen Před 3 lety

      Unless GE offer sth significantly advance of the game. GE9X is improved but not adequate over Trent XWB, and definitely doesn't put A350NEO ahead of the game.
      UltraFan-like leap is what Airbus needed, though RR in its current state is questionable.

    • @ant2312
      @ant2312 Před 3 lety

      well we aren't putting American engines on them

  • @GTPhan
    @GTPhan Před 3 lety

    For some Airbus A3XXNeo, what's Neo stand for ?

    • @normaal4663
      @normaal4663 Před 3 lety

      NEO .... New Engine Option ... just google for ''Airbus neo''

    • @GTPhan
      @GTPhan Před 3 lety

      @@normaal4663 For Boeing, what's MAX stand for? They just change 737MAX to 737Neo , Problem solved.

  • @ryeshelton7953
    @ryeshelton7953 Před rokem

    what about a 500+ passenger plane with carbon neutral engines that run on 100% SAF..... maybe Airbus A360 or A370.

  • @theflare_9755
    @theflare_9755 Před 3 lety

    wow, your voice is quite smooth

  • @aerohk
    @aerohk Před 3 lety +3

    I don't understand why Boeing still bother to stay in business at this point. They should sell the commercial division to Airbus

    • @CARBONHAWK1
      @CARBONHAWK1 Před 3 lety

      Because the 777 787 are currently hits in the industry.

    • @stoje8405
      @stoje8405 Před 3 lety

      you do know there won't be better, new innovation if there's no competition right? so no, competition is a great thing and all fanboys must realise that.

  • @bd5av8r1
    @bd5av8r1 Před 3 lety +1

    Like Andrew stated: Boeing is doing a good enough job destroying itself. :D lol

    • @RashadKhanAviation2023
      @RashadKhanAviation2023 Před 3 lety

      LOL 😂
      Boeing: I have to say this, but we are destroyed now.
      Boeing fans: NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
      Airbus: haha yes die trash

  • @stradivarioushardhiantz5179

    When 777-8 take its first delivery,,,,the Trent-XWB & GEnx unveiled the next-gen 🛫🤓

  • @phillipbranch8291
    @phillipbranch8291 Před 3 lety +1

    So, where was the part in this video about the a350 destroying Boeing?

  • @thomascdurham9130
    @thomascdurham9130 Před 3 lety +2

    NO!

  • @AmritDhillon
    @AmritDhillon Před 3 lety +2

    Too early

  • @drdoolittle5724
    @drdoolittle5724 Před 3 lety +9

    No need now, 777X is dead and gone now so why do Airbus need to meddle with what is perfection?

  • @simfly1
    @simfly1 Před 3 lety +1

    erm, an A350 is pretty much a NEO, and no, it won't destroy boeing. They both will succeed.

  • @CARBONHAWK1
    @CARBONHAWK1 Před 3 lety

    If they can’t make a freighter then Boeing still lives.

    • @kazedcat
      @kazedcat Před 3 lety +1

      777 freighter conversion is going to kill that market.

    • @ant2312
      @ant2312 Před 3 lety +1

      oh look here is he again with his rubbish

    • @chingweixion621
      @chingweixion621 Před 3 lety

      @@kazedcat very true

    • @Tom-js3iz
      @Tom-js3iz Před 3 lety

      Boeing won’t not live lol

  • @garyhughes9649
    @garyhughes9649 Před 3 lety

    Of course I bring up the A380 and I freely admit I am somewhat biased towards Boeing I'm an American I also freely admit the A380 is a fine jet but it was supposed to blow the 747 out of the sky no pun intended yeah it did not last for 20 years from a financial standpoint it was a disaster on the scale of Krakatoa. We both know there's a lot of ego in the aviation industry and part of the reason the A380 was produced was due to Ego ROM Airbus my biggest question about the whole A380 project was how in the name of all things holy did they're engineers Miss the calculations of the Incredible cost of flying that jet unless it's 99.9%. .9% of the time they had to have known the costs plus it was approximately 30 years later then the 747 which according to Boeing was almost to Big itself. It took near a decade from start to completion to build a 380 the 747 went from paper to production in about 30 months without near the computer power that has been available for the last 20 years. So you are damn right I bring up the A380 it's the white elephant in the room that I guess people don't want to talk but I am mystified by how the engineers got it wrong or what went wrong as I said it's a fine jet it's just too expensive to fly unless it's filled to capacity. I've read estimates as high as Thirty billion dollars that were involved with the R&D and start up production of the A380. I've just never heard a good explanation on how the plane miss the mark. Airbus was planning on selling at least a thousand of the A380 it didn't reach half that doubt they recovered they're huge investment I know everybody's choosing the hub-and-spoke theory didn't pan out Boeing was fortunate or lucky or whatever you want to call it did a lot of research maybe all the above but point-to-point flying became more the norrm. I also admit the 737 Max 8 is pathetic maybe the Band-Aid is good enough to do the job I don't know the 737 predecessors were very efficient and profitable Jets and I would bet money and lots of it that the triple 7X we'll end up doing the job for the United Arab Emirates that the A380 was going to do and still is to an extent it can carry 400-plus passengers and we both know twin jets are the future half the fuel roughly and a half engine maintenance when is pandemic disappears people will start flying again in large numbers.. Airbus builds some excellent Jets I never said they didn't but the A380 was going to be to Airbus what an apple is to apple pie so I will probably keep asking a question it's simple calculations on fuel usage operational costs and obviously they didn't get it right I've read 25000 to $30,000 cost per flight hour on the A380 the triple 7X is about half that and it will make an excellent freighter which is on the uprise and the A380 there again it has lots of volume but it's gross vehicle take off weight is used up by Fuel and the weight of the jet. If I have told any untruth here I apologize I did not intentionally lie about anything and all I did was present a couple facts and a question or two I never get any answer to. I'm not being sarcastic here they 380 is in some very good company the Concord pretty much failed for the same reasons it was very thirsty and required a lot of fuel and maintenance speed is expensive the ssts last crash didn't help things at all either buddy in aviation that has to happen once in awhile. And trust me I'm not the only one bringing up the quick and unfortunate demise of the A380

  • @UsmanAli-eh4oi
    @UsmanAli-eh4oi Před 3 lety

    A350 & A220, Boeing Killers!!!

    • @mmm0404
      @mmm0404 Před rokem

      0rders
      787- 1500
      a350 -900
      Boeing has not even released the 787F , 787-10ER and 787-9LR which will further destroy airbus in terms of sales

  • @luisk1568
    @luisk1568 Před 3 lety

    Def not one of your better titles.

  • @Speedster___
    @Speedster___ Před 3 lety +1

    Boeing seems to be the leader in long haul by a a slim margin. AB is far and away the leader in SH. Thanks Bombarier!
    Medium haul as in Tran-con in US it’s a draw IMO.

  • @peterrodriguez6029
    @peterrodriguez6029 Před 3 lety

    You'll see one A350 in the skies and airports for every 100 B787, hence, you tell me if the A350 will destroy Boeing. There's your answer!!!!

    • @normaal4663
      @normaal4663 Před 3 lety

      As of May 1 , 2021 there are 351 A350's in service and 1005 787's build ( so less will be in service ) so keep on dreaming with your 1 to 100 .....

  • @ambergris5705
    @ambergris5705 Před 3 lety

    What Airbus needs to do :
    First, a longer A220
    Then a shortened A350
    Then a replacement for the A320 family, but bigger, like the 757, which would slot between the biggest A220 and the smallest A350
    At that moment phase out the A330 and A320 neo families, since their duties have been taken over.
    If this gives a sufficient influx of money, make a longer version of the A350
    And Airbus will then have successfully replaced all the planes conceived before 2000 with newer, better and more efficient planes. To which Boeing cannot really answer, since they are still literally trying to get the 777X and the 737 max in the air.

  • @adamclabaugh1945
    @adamclabaugh1945 Před 3 lety +2

    They just developed the aircraft why would they need new engines already lmaooo

    • @spongebubatz
      @spongebubatz Před 3 lety

      They probably just add another engine option for customers. I don’t think it’s going to be called A350neo as it’s not more than an A350 with a second engine option just like it’s the case with most aircraft nowadays!

    • @steinwaldmadchen
      @steinwaldmadchen Před 3 lety

      @@spongebubatz I'm skeptical to this. In fact, A350 is already 10 years since first flight by 2025, by then a refresh would be necessary to remain competitive, both towards 787 or a more hostile environment regarding carbon emission.
      GE9X is better than XWB or GENx, but inadequate by then. So if GE offer anything, it has to be better.

  • @aseem7w9
    @aseem7w9 Před 3 lety +3

    Boeing can develop a 787 NG and destroy Airbus too

  • @mattevans4377
    @mattevans4377 Před 3 lety +1

    Boeing will always be king in the American market, plus it has freight planes.

    • @alaa-eldin_hamdan
      @alaa-eldin_hamdan Před 3 lety +1

      King of defective products?

    • @mattevans4377
      @mattevans4377 Před 3 lety

      @@alaa-eldin_hamdan I wasn't praising them, my bad. I more meant American companies will always buy American. Add in the freight market, amd I don't see them going bankrupt.

  • @Greatdome99
    @Greatdome99 Před 3 lety

    NO. Airlines as a group buy models from each on purpose to keep them alive and competitive. To have only one source of airplanes would be disasterous. and expensive--and I don't think the USA would tolerate not having a viable airframer in case of war or trade battles.

  • @MichaelKing4023
    @MichaelKing4023 Před 3 lety

    They do not need help they are doing a great job of doing that on there own. The Disaster that is both the 737 Max and 787 with all it major problems. Who would want anything from Boeing any more.

  • @marcoducceschi3849
    @marcoducceschi3849 Před 3 lety +1

    Next Airbus 350 will be a 2000 a stretch 1000 to kill off B777x

    • @Tom-js3iz
      @Tom-js3iz Před 3 lety

      Yeah, nah

    • @stoje8405
      @stoje8405 Před 3 lety

      I don't think they need to stretch 1000, cause you know, point to point is more popular

    • @stoje8405
      @stoje8405 Před 3 lety

      @Vincent Fong i don't think it's needed imo, point to point is more popular so i don't think we'll see spoke&hub aircrafts after the 777-9

  • @texasabbott
    @texasabbott Před 3 lety

    The A220-500LR with shortfield capability would utterly destroy Boeing.

    • @mmm0404
      @mmm0404 Před rokem

      Lol. By the time the a220-500LR is released , boeing will have already launched A 737 replacement with ultrafan engines . The a220-500 will only destroy the a320

  • @lucaspereira-drummer2847
    @lucaspereira-drummer2847 Před 3 lety +1

    🇧🇷This cannot happen kkkk, both have different demands

  • @Lee247Jamaica
    @Lee247Jamaica Před 3 lety +1

    Even if the a350neo came the 787 would have still been picked

    • @ant2312
      @ant2312 Před 3 lety

      no it wouldnt because the A350 is better

    • @stoje8405
      @stoje8405 Před 3 lety +1

      the 787 is NOT a direct competition against the A350 because A350 is aimed at 777 instead of 787, that's about the what airline needs, the only thing 787 wins is only at fuel burnt per seat and it's only by less than 5%! the current A350 already outclassed 787 in every way, except very slight fuel burnt per seat difference.

    • @Lee247Jamaica
      @Lee247Jamaica Před 3 lety

      @@ant2312 nah airlines prefer the 787 900+ have been built while 300 a350s have been built

    • @Lee247Jamaica
      @Lee247Jamaica Před 3 lety

      @@stoje8405 ok

    • @stoje8405
      @stoje8405 Před 3 lety

      @@Lee247Jamaica it would make sense if you compare the a330neo with 787 currently because they serve similar markets, and while 787 outperforms A330neo especially long ranges, neo can be efficient on shorter routes, and as a bonus, less additional pilot training, meaning despite the neo is using same fuselage as old A330s instead of new jet like 787/A350, it gives a surprisingly close competition to the 787, also have you heard 787s are going to be built only at South Carolina after this? it's going to be on the decline probably

  • @averagejoe9249
    @averagejoe9249 Před 3 lety

    A350 is getting old and outdated already. Definitely need a neo version

    • @ant2312
      @ant2312 Před 3 lety

      you've obvously never flown on one then hence the reason you are talking rubbish

    • @garyhughes9649
      @garyhughes9649 Před 3 lety +1

      G 546 the triple 7X it's going to be around for a long time it is the replacement for the 747 and the A380 in a much more economical version to operate. It's unfortunate for bowling they didn't have it flying 2 years ago like they'd hoped but once the pandemic is cleared off Airlines will be flying it alot on international flights it carries a huge passenger and cargo load and it's fuel efficiency due to the new engine and the extended wings we'll keep it in the air for a long time so few people are flying now compared to the Future I believe the triple 7x is bigger then most existing versions of the a350 and all of it versions.. Air Freight demand is sharply increasing so the triple 7X brighter version of Boeing 747 will be flying a long time just for Freight and passengers with the triple 7X. I suspect in the future Airbus will try and get a bigger piece of the Air Freight Market

    • @stoje8405
      @stoje8405 Před 3 lety

      what? apparently it's less than a decade! but it would be interesting to see neo version, hopefully can fly SYD-LHR so that maybe VS/BA/QF would order them to do so

  • @Dexter037S4
    @Dexter037S4 Před 3 lety

    No, because the USAF exists.

  • @kadenwright2051
    @kadenwright2051 Před 3 lety

    No.

  • @jlmarc01
    @jlmarc01 Před 3 lety +1

    Hahhahahaha, I don’t think so