The Aircraft-Size PARADOX!

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  • čas přidán 9. 06. 2024
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    Why is it that short-haul aircraft are becoming bigger and bigger while Long-Haul aircraft are becoming smaller? What are the mechanism's behind this change and how long can a single-isle aircraft actually become?
    This is the question we will be trying to answer in todays Mentour NOW video, enjoy!
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    Below you will find the links to videos and sources used in this episode.
    Sources
    • How Boeing Builds a 73...
    • Repainting our Virgin ...
    • #A320 Family, unbeatab...
    • Brace Yourself for TTB...
    • Introducing #ZEROe
    • Best Of: GE Aviation a...
    • We 've just ordered mo...
    • Boeing completes first...
    • The New Boeing 737 MAX 10
    • In the Making: First #...
    • United - Her Art Here:...
    • History of the A320… s...
    • In the Making: First #...
    • Voice of the customer:...
    • Inside the A380's cabin
    • Emirates Fleet at Duba...
    • Southwest Airlines Fli...
    • In a Blink: Denver | S...
    • Pratt & Whitney GTF™ E...
    • E-Fan X: Wind tunnel t...
    • United - Go behind the...
    • United - Eco-Skies: LA...
    • Heathrow slot sells fo...
    • Icelandair's Hekla Aur... v
    • United - On board with...
    • GE Aviation Family Tre...
    • In the Making: First #...
    • Boeing 777X My Dreams,...
    • Boeing 787 Dreamliner:...
    • Boeing CEO Dave Calhou...
    • #A321XLR takes off for...
    • Episode 09: Flightpath...
    • A330-900 First Flight:...
    • In the Making: First #...
    • A340-600 final assembl...
    • Airbus A350-1000 Type ...
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 858

  • @MentourNow
    @MentourNow  Před rokem +26

    Get a Exclusive NordVPN deal here ➼ nordvpn.com/mentournow It's completely risk-free with Nord's 30-day money-back guarantee! ✌

    • @edvardnilsson9555
      @edvardnilsson9555 Před rokem +1

      Du har blivit fet precis som jag. Ger lögnerna dig sömnproblem som du dövar med mat?

    • @fourthdeconstruction
      @fourthdeconstruction Před rokem

      hope you're ok. you look different. I'm a long time viewer.

    • @tomhejda6450
      @tomhejda6450 Před rokem +1

      VPN services are villains. Please stop getting themas sponsors. Thank you.

    • @KK-fg1mi
      @KK-fg1mi Před rokem

      Planes are getting bigger but the seats are getting smaller. Some of the economy class seats and the space in front of them is pathetically tiny.

    • @kennyg1358
      @kennyg1358 Před rokem

      ​@Karl with a K 😊😊

  • @jojr5145
    @jojr5145 Před 10 měsíci +33

    Having been the 757 a few times, the experience of getting on and off the plane actually wasn’t that bad compared to the 737 or 320. The big reason I noticed why is because the airlines didn’t typically use the door near the cockpit for boarding and disembarking, they used one closer to the wing / center of the aircraft. This meant about 2/3 of passengers went aft and 1/3 went forward, which significantly sped up this process. Wish more planes used this approach.

    • @cpgoef6
      @cpgoef6 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Ya, I don’t see why Airbus didn’t do this with the A321. It’s painful getting on an off versus the middle door on a 757. The same goes for the 737-9. I can’t imagine the 737-10

  • @PsRohrbaugh
    @PsRohrbaugh Před rokem +73

    You've mentioned it in other videos, but type rating is also important. Airlines want as much compatability between pilots and aircrafts as possible. A new aircraft which requires specially trained crew is a hard sell.

    • @taseefr3959
      @taseefr3959 Před rokem +2

      Great point!

    • @jlinkels
      @jlinkels Před rokem +5

      Agreed. That is why Boeing presented the 373 MAX as "nothing changed"

  • @lawrenceedger292
    @lawrenceedger292 Před rokem +103

    When the 757 first came along, I was sure the 737 would stop being built and the 757 would be its replacement. Boy was I wrong!

    • @gteixeira
      @gteixeira Před rokem +24

      The 757 was built for performance and the 737 was built for economy. Shockingly, airlines rather saving money.

    • @MyJerseybean
      @MyJerseybean Před 5 měsíci +4

      I agree, I think Boeing stopped building one of the best Narrow Body Aircraft it ever produced, far better than the 737 will ever be.

  • @TonyM132
    @TonyM132 Před rokem +74

    The Icelandair airplane shown a few times while you're talking about the 757-300, the first time even with "54.4 meters 178 feet" captioned on the screen below it, is actually the shorter 757-200 variant. That is registration TF-FIU, a 155 ft long 757-200 painted in the "Aurora Northern Lights" special livery.

    • @mattscarf
      @mattscarf Před rokem +13

      Indeed, and then they switched to the -300 to illustrate the -200 😂

    • @emerald39
      @emerald39 Před rokem +2

      This video is only for entertainment purposes

    • @MrReasonabubble
      @MrReasonabubble Před rokem +12

      @@emerald39 not sure why you're saying it's only for entertainment purposes.
      This video and the host channel are clearly meant to be providing insight, information and education. As such, it's important that the images should be consistent with the narration.
      I'm sure the channel owner would welcome these points - I certainly would if it were my channel.

    • @noob.168
      @noob.168 Před rokem +3

      @@MrReasonabubble A pilot should be focused on flying. This is for fun only.

    • @williamjglover
      @williamjglover Před 11 měsíci +1

      Ackchyually

  • @mike03a3
    @mike03a3 Před rokem +134

    Part of the capacity increase can be attributed to an ever decreasing space per seat.

    • @stephenspackman5573
      @stephenspackman5573 Před rokem +22

      Yes, there was more than one moment where I thought, wait, but we're forgetting the hating-the-passengers component in these decisions :-}.

    • @Edax_Royeaux
      @Edax_Royeaux Před rokem

      I remember flying home from Athens, having to eat meals in such an awkward and contorted way because I there was so little space for my arms to properly use a fork and knife. Too often I would just grab the hot food container and bring it to near my mouth, instead of bothering to try and eat from the seat tray.

    • @MegaLokopo
      @MegaLokopo Před rokem +5

      @@stephenspackman5573 You can't blame the airlines, you voted for your money and are forcing them to fight for the lowest price. If you want more space pay for more space and when demand for more space is high enough more seats will have more space.

    • @princekamoro3869
      @princekamoro3869 Před rokem +1

      @@Edax_Royeaux So exactly like Brian Regan's portrayal of flying?

    • @Edax_Royeaux
      @Edax_Royeaux Před rokem +5

      @@MegaLokopo That's not how that work. If the airlines want to make air travel so miserable, then fewer people will fly. If fewer people will fly, the airlines will then move to make their planes even more cramp and efficient to compensate for fewer flights. The biggest factor for airlines is fuel, so they will always strive for efficiency, giving you more seat space is the opposite of that.

  • @anorlunda
    @anorlunda Před rokem +67

    I remember the Super DC8 or Stretch DC8. We did a go around at JFK one day in the early 70s. I was stilling in the back. During initial climb-out, the fuselage started bending like a piece of wet spaghetti. I could see waves of flex moving aft/forward in the cabin. It took 2-3 seconds for the wave to move the length of the cabin. I should have been scared, but instead I was fascinated.

    • @bokusimondesu
      @bokusimondesu Před rokem +12

      Yep, it's interesting to sit in the rear and loose sight of the front end of the aisle.

    • @EscapeTheCloudsOfficial
      @EscapeTheCloudsOfficial Před 11 měsíci +9

      Years ago, I was in the last row of a Virgin Atlantic A340 on an aisle seat. As we were on approach, the FA's had secured the curtains between each cabin section and I could look down the entire length of the cabin. I could clearly see the whole tube flexing and shuddering and warping, and heard the metal groaning and creaking. I asked the FA in his seat beside me if that was normal. He shrugged and said, "Yeap." And that was an A340-300. I could imagine how that would look on a -600.

  • @AlbertusMagnus_44
    @AlbertusMagnus_44 Před rokem +210

    I remember when a 737 could barely fly from Seattle to San Francisco. Now 737s can fly coast to coast and San Francisco to Honolulu. I know efficiency is good, but at some point you will find passengers who don't want to fly extra-long trips in a single aisle aircraft. Six hours is about my limit for a single aisle non-stop flight. Anything longer and give me a 787 (always preferred) or a 777.

    • @stevesmoneypit6137
      @stevesmoneypit6137 Před rokem +33

      My limit is 4 hours. And boarding is insane in the stretched versions.

    • @MentourNow
      @MentourNow  Před rokem +47

      Yeah, I would tend to agree with you.

    • @toomanyuserids
      @toomanyuserids Před rokem +54

      I don't care about aisles, I care about seat pitch.

    • @suserman7775
      @suserman7775 Před rokem +28

      Number of aisles is barely relevant during cruise. It's deboarding where 2 aisles makes a difference. During cruise you probably like the wider planes because they're TALLER and consequently more spacious.

    • @suserman7775
      @suserman7775 Před rokem +18

      Why is this video forcing the topic of Hydrogen? What's the relevance?
      Hydrogen is a terrible idea and pretending it has potential benefits is dishonest.

  • @g7eit
    @g7eit Před 11 měsíci +27

    In 1979 I stood next to a 747, I was just 12. I couldn’t get my head around how this huge metal thing managed to stay in the air for so long. This is a concept I’ve been battling to this day.

    • @raccoon874
      @raccoon874 Před 8 měsíci +3

      same here!! but back in 1976... MEA beauty

  • @mrichards55
    @mrichards55 Před rokem +254

    Passengers are getting bigger too. When Kevin is spilling over to one and a half seats it’s difficult to put him in the middle of three.

    • @MentourNow
      @MentourNow  Před rokem +75

      That’s actually a good point

    • @rainscratch
      @rainscratch Před rokem +37

      Fares could be based on per KG/Pound of passenger weight? Larger or smaller seats supplied accordingly.

    • @oberstvilla1271
      @oberstvilla1271 Před rokem +16

      @@rainscratch But that would be very discriminatory against overweight people and would certainly bring a shitstorm to the airline.

    • @KaiHinLkh
      @KaiHinLkh Před rokem +69

      ​@@oberstvilla1271 Discrimination is defined as the unjust or prejudicial treatment of different categories of people, while a person occupying more than one seat when they only paid for one is a stone-cold fact, not a prejudice. If the airline charges hundreds of dollars for a piece of luggage that's 1 KG overweight, it is only fair to charge someone more for bringing 30 KG in themselves and occupies half of someone else's seat.

    • @oberstvilla1271
      @oberstvilla1271 Před rokem +27

      @@KaiHinLkh That is correct in principle. However, it should be borne in mind that severe obesity can be the result of an illness. And charging sick people a higher airfare is highly questionable from an ethical point of view.

  • @sonic2000gr
    @sonic2000gr Před rokem +28

    I am mostly intrigued about 7J7. Please make a video about it!

  • @1wwtom
    @1wwtom Před rokem +7

    In the book "Skunk Works" by Ben Rich who worked for and later took over with Kelly Johmson's retirement, he told that they looked into Hydrogen for the SR71 but concluded that it would be too expensive to use considering all they would have to do to Store and Use it as a fuel.

  • @skunkmakgakga
    @skunkmakgakga Před rokem +7

    i really enjoy your videos when you mention both airbus and boeing at the same time

  • @whatever8282828
    @whatever8282828 Před rokem +18

    I love every mention of the "Flying Pencil" 757-300. I think I sure would hate to be a passenger on it. I can't recall if maybe I was, maybe decades ago, but I am amused and also chagrinned to see tales of it taking *forever* to exit the plane after landing! It surely looks better on the outside than the inside.

    • @andy_in_colorado7060
      @andy_in_colorado7060 Před rokem +8

      I was trying to remember if I'd been on one of the 757-300s myself. I think I most likely have been at some point. As I recall, the 757 was one of those aircraft where if you were important, you turned left when you boarded, otherwise you went back with the rest of the vermin to the right.

    • @vbscript2
      @vbscript2 Před rokem +6

      I've been in them several times with Delta. Delta's interior on it is actually pretty nice for a domestic config. It's at least on par with any other narrowbody out there for comfort in a config that doesn't have flat-bed seats installed. It does take a while to deplane when you're in the back, though.
      One nice thing about both the -200 and -300, though, is that boarding and deplaning are typically done from the L2 door rather than L1 (or even both L1 and L2 if parked at a gate that has 2 jet bridges.) So, everyone seated behind the L2 door doesn't have to walk past everyone in front of it to board or deplane. While the A321 does have a full-size L2 door, at least in North America, airlines do not use it for boarding because it's too close to the #1 engine to safely get a jet bridge in there.
      The -300 also has another pair of full-size exit doors behind the wing, so that creates another row of economy seats with nearly-unlimited legroom in the first row of the economy section behind the L3/R3 doors.

    • @whatever8282828
      @whatever8282828 Před rokem

      @@andy_in_colorado7060 I don't think so.

    • @rainscratch
      @rainscratch Před rokem

      I think the Flying Pencil looks ridiculous whichever side you are on.

    • @vbscript2
      @vbscript2 Před rokem +2

      @@whatever8282828 Yes, the 757 is indeed an aircraft that is often boarded through the L2 door, so you turn left to go to First (or sometimes also the few rows of economy+) or right to go to the main economy cabin(s). Personally, I highly prefer that regardless of whether I'm seated in First or in economy.

  • @willardSpirit
    @willardSpirit Před rokem +60

    If we're going an elliptical body might as well do a flying wing plane for super efficiency!

    • @elbuggo
      @elbuggo Před rokem +4

      Or a Burnelli!

    • @cruisinguy6024
      @cruisinguy6024 Před rokem +6

      I’m actually surprised a flying wing has not entered civil service yet

    • @johnnyliminal8032
      @johnnyliminal8032 Před rokem +3

      @@elbuggo Always nice to learn of a new type or make of airplane. I searched for images, found different models/types, all utilizing the body as a wing component. Thanks!
      Seems this configuration would benefit from use of a turboprop (x2) or a 7J7-type external/free fan.

    • @johnnyliminal8032
      @johnnyliminal8032 Před rokem +4

      @@cruisinguy6024 The metal fatigue has likely been the engineering crux. In even just a blended wing body design, the interior space (desired as pressurized, different than military platforms that support just a few souls) available is by definition not circular, and so not simple to make it a pressure vessel.
      I am mystified that FLAPPING WINGS are not yet a thing. Birds obvs have efficiency dialed, and some kinds do insane long flights. Not sure how Reynold’s Number would factor into that for big airframes, but Pterosaurs flew between continents - my reference for that is a vid (one of two on Pterosaurs) from the YT chan of the Royal Tyrrell Museum.

    • @briancavanagh7048
      @briancavanagh7048 Před rokem +4

      I believe the blended wing type design does not lend itself for “smaller” aircraft due to the cabin dimension requirements is not compatible with the wing chord/depth for the smaller aircraft. Where the size trade off is will be interesting to see. But the biggest disadvantage for the blended wing will be the inability to vary the aircraft size, seating wise easily. Its not as easy where you can just lengthen the fuselage compared to the tube & wing type design. Another problem with blended wing type design is the magnitude of single individual parts required to achieve the unique shape required. Whereas the fuselage tube is symmetrical and easier to produce with plenty of common parts. Maybe it will be the robot controlled production line that finally gets us the blended wing into service.

  • @yohannessulistyo4025
    @yohannessulistyo4025 Před rokem +11

    Short haul widebodies are basically Asia's primary target. There are a lot of exclusive widebody fleet airlines until recently, like Singapore Airlines, Cathay Pacific, Emirates, and so on. Some of them have to fold back their feeder operations and absorb its narrowbody fleet.
    SIA has been using A310 for most of its regional short routes and medium low density ones. They used A330-300 briefly to fill the gap, and currently is still forever looking for something similar. As you mentioned, the turn around time and cargo capacity is simply unbeatable.

    • @lzh4950
      @lzh4950 Před měsícem

      Some of SIA's shorter widebody flights are to slot-constrained airports e.g. SIN-CGK/HKG (which for instance has 1/2 the no. of runways as YYC but has almost 5x the number of passengers). It rented A333s to replace its older B772s while waiting for its order of 78Xes to be delivered (it'd originally ordered 789s but diverted them to Scoot, which meanwhile is taking delivery of the even smaller E2, to serve smaller regional destinations e.g. USM)

  • @fomfom9779
    @fomfom9779 Před rokem +29

    This has been going on for a long, long time in the industry. DC-1, DC-2 and DC-3, in the 1930's, for example.

  • @--Dani
    @--Dani Před rokem +17

    Canceling the beautiful 757 was a stupid move at the time I thought because I loved the looks, now they probably wish they had 757max for the market

    • @dougrobinson8602
      @dougrobinson8602 Před rokem +8

      There is literally no other aircraft that does what the 757 does. United and Delta will be flying them until fatigue issues become unmanageable. The combination of passenger capacity, cargo capacity, and incredible short field/ high altitude and hot field performance is unmatched. I agree that the 757 is only the second most beautiful airliner because of the Concorde. I still remember the feeling of awe when I got to do my first overnight inspection on one. Quickly followed by frustration trying to figure out how to properly open and close the passenger doors!

    • @toomanyuserids
      @toomanyuserids Před rokem +2

      It's not beautiful. But yeah, it's brutally effective at what it can do.
      Unfortunately that does fractionally impact its economics but airline economics are all in the fractions.

    • @thomasbaker6563
      @thomasbaker6563 Před rokem

      ​@@dougrobinson8602 VC10 used to be a pretty stellar aircraft for hot and g
      High take offs, and actually pretty.

    • @aseem7w9
      @aseem7w9 Před rokem

      Would a 757 max even be worth it? The 737-10 alone has almost outsold the whole 757 family so I can't see the 757 max being anything other than a niche product for how much they'd have to invest.

  • @Deltarious
    @Deltarious Před rokem +19

    Including how complex and challenging hydrogen logistics are likely to be was a great choice and is a real key factor. A suggestion I have for videos like this though is to maybe try to include direct side-by-side size comparisons when talking about different aircraft types, particularly narrow vs widebody. I believe that in most people's heads a twin engined aircraft is one 'fixed' size somewhere around the size of a 737 whereas your 777s are literally in a different size league to them and the fuselage of the 737 is about the same diameter as a GE90 on the 777. This way people can better visualise both extremes of the spectrum and they can really start to understand how interesting it's getting in that middle ground where they're starting to get closer and closer in size

    • @onyxorigin
      @onyxorigin Před rokem

      That would actually make it first-class!

  • @Raminagrobisfr
    @Raminagrobisfr Před rokem +76

    yet the DC-8 had the "series 60" versions that was 57 meters long.
    Still the longest single aisle airliner ever.

    • @MentourNow
      @MentourNow  Před rokem +38

      Yep, that’s the I’ve I was referring to

    • @Boffin55
      @Boffin55 Před rokem +8

      And they built 107x DC8-63, vs only 55x 757-300s

    • @TonyM132
      @TonyM132 Před rokem +5

      @@Boffin55 Don't forget the DC-8-61 was the same length as -63 and had 88 examples built. Adding to the 107 -63's, that makes 195 longest DC-8's.

    • @ahmadtheaviationlover1937
      @ahmadtheaviationlover1937 Před rokem +1

      That’s long

    • @toomanyuserids
      @toomanyuserids Před rokem +6

      The Super 60s were very comfortable and re-engined lasted for decades

  • @Paolo8772
    @Paolo8772 Před rokem +7

    The DC-8 stretch was epic in its day; I remember loving to fly in them in '78-'79 .Domestic flights in North America United Airlines; I'm guessing a DC-8 super 61. Even female flight attendants who were still referred to as stewardesses at the time were bragging about the fact that it was longer than a DC-10 "by 3 feet" Good times for an 8 or 9 year old like I was at the time.

  • @jfmezei
    @jfmezei Před rokem +5

    One must not forget that Boeing is now catering to airline accountants by certifying aircraft with greater seta density.
    The 787 did not sell as an 8 across aircraft but when Boeing started to pitch it as a 9 across aircraft, airline accountants applauded and sales came in by the hundreds, and once the narrow seats of the 787 were accepted by airlines, Boeing certified the 777 as 10 across with the narrower seats. And it is important for those who forget that the 787 was designed as a replacement for the 767 because the 767 was losing all sales against the 8 across 330, and when Boeing launched the 787, Airbus's first response was a mild update to the 330 and Steven Udvar Hazy told Airbus to go back to drawing board and it came back with the 350, originally also 8 across, but after Boeing started to sell the 787 as 9 across, Airbus added the "XWB" after the 350 and widened its fuselage to handel 9 across too. And the passenger 767 stopped being sold for passenger flights.
    A 777 with 10 across narrow seats and reduced seat pitch doesn't have much difference in capacity compatred to a comfortable 747. yet, the ecoomics of a twin engine 777 against 747 are indeniable. So by allowing densification of seats in the 777, Boeing killed the 777. But as a result, flying coach si no longer pleasant, especially not for a trans pacific flight 15 hour on a 777.
    As long as airlines fill their planes with fancy yield management pricing, they will continue to reuce seat pitch and make seats narrower to make coach as miserable as accountants can. The 321 now has positive image for oongr flights because it generally has wider seats in coach than the 787 and 777 and 350.
    On twin aisle narrowbody: the 767 was a great aircraft for passengers but terrible for accountants. Only one extra seat per row added at the cost of all the extra structural weight to support the wider fuselage and the second aisle, and the cargo area still too small to accomodate standars containers. This is one reason Boeing made sure the 787 was as good or better than the 330 which had hige advantage over the 767.
    The problem with your argument is that it isn't one OR the other, it is one AND the other. An airline could fly A380s hourly between JFK and LHR while flying A321 between Cleveland and Stockholm. There are routes where the large planes are better and routes where smaller planes are better. And the problem in USA is one of religion where airlines such as Delta , Continental and American have a "no big plane" religion and prefer to be inefficient on certain flights in order to avoid having big planes. Especially since domestically they compete on frequency and how their flights are ranked by the airline reservation systems.
    Note that the smaller 737 MAX is not yet in production since it is not a priority due to low sales (Southwest only). My guess is that whe there is a total refresh of the nattowbody product, the focus will be on what size will the 737/320 be optimized for, with variants up and down. Airbus has the 220 optimized for the 130-140 passengers, so its next plane will likely be optimized for for the 321 size with 320 being smaller, and a 322 being offered. And Boeig's 737 replacement (or "NMA)" will be optimized for the larger 737, with the enxtended version covering the 757-200 and a smaller version. Had boeing concluded its purchase of Embraer, it would have had somethint to fiull the gap at the lower end, so now it remains to be seen how it fills that gap.
    In terms of tech: it is not yet clear to me whether the bets made with 787 (composide one piece fuselage plugs, all electric system etc) have paid off and would bve used for a new aircraft. the 787 hasn't exactly been a production success. It might be cheaper to spit out aluminium aircraft with bleed air it the produtio costs are much lower and operating costs only slightly higher than a all carbon plane.

  • @murphsmodels8853
    @murphsmodels8853 Před rokem +80

    Another limit to how long planes can get and how many passengers can be crammed into them is the FAA's requirement that in an emergency, they have to be able to be evacuated in 90 seconds.

    • @TimothyChapman
      @TimothyChapman Před rokem +19

      Wouldn't that just mean more exits are needed?

    • @innocento.1552
      @innocento.1552 Před rokem +12

      ​@@TimothyChapman i think more exits might be problematic. You can't jump off too close to the engines which inconveniently are in the middle of planes

    • @murphsmodels8853
      @murphsmodels8853 Před rokem +8

      @@TimothyChapman Exits require large holes in the fuselage. Plus added weight. Airlines won't pay for that. They'll just cut a few more inches out of the gap between seats to add more people.

    • @marcmcreynolds2827
      @marcmcreynolds2827 Před rokem +9

      @@innocento.1552 "which inconveniently are in the middle of planes" (MD-80 just laughs...)

    • @tonyverhulst9948
      @tonyverhulst9948 Před rokem

      @@murphsmodels8853 Well, Ryan Air will pay for that with the 737 max 10 order

  • @johngeorgegately7402
    @johngeorgegately7402 Před rokem +1

    Just a passenger. First flight was 1968 -- B727 National Airlines, DCA to PBI. 55 years later it is impossible to believe that passenger comfort is ever considered in new designs. The seats are narrower & harder (ask me about a red-eye nonstop from LAX to CLT during which the pain in my legs and hips became excruciating. Last time for that. I'll gladly take the layover @ DFW. Wait -- did I mention the space between rows? How about my knees jammed against the seat in front of me! And then the passenger reclines -- aaagghhh! I should get my hairstylist license and do their hair since their head is in my lap. Flying has become less expensive, but the cost is in comfort. I'd rather pay more -- thank you very much.
    Your channel is among my favorites.

  • @rosscorr
    @rosscorr Před rokem +10

    Shame the 787-3 could not be made to work as on paper it looks pretty good. Personally I hate flying on the 737! Being tall it is very uncomfortable, the A320 is a little better.

  • @mikebauer6917
    @mikebauer6917 Před rokem +1

    Standing “seating” is another option for shorter flights. As a taller than average flyer I’m all for this.

  • @chrisjeanneret5091
    @chrisjeanneret5091 Před rokem +7

    Listening to all the different directions in aircraft size, configuration and logistics that the airline industry seems to be headed at the same time made me think of Juan Browne's commentary on how inefficient the industry can be sometimes. He was referring specifically to staffing and training, but I suspect it applies to many areas.

  • @thomasward4505
    @thomasward4505 Před rokem +3

    I like seeing the assembly-line shots that you show of them building various parts of the airplanes

  • @theengelsbak
    @theengelsbak Před rokem +1

    Absolutely love your videos. I’ve been watching for years and seeing the channels grow makes me so happy.
    I would love to hear your perspective on why there has been a ton of ground incident/accidents. Planes hitting each other when taxing, planes hitting light poles etc… seems alot of these things are occurring more frequently as of now.
    Much love from a fellow Scandinavian!! 🇩🇰🇸🇪!!

  • @abodamdfr2298
    @abodamdfr2298 Před rokem +4

    I am eagerly waiting for a new video of aviation accidents and incidents in your other channel❤ I love them soooo much!! Thank you for interesting me with these types of videos as I am an aviation enthusiast and maybe dreaming of becoming a pilot in the future but still not sure

  • @paulfromperth5713
    @paulfromperth5713 Před rokem +2

    I used the Perth - London non-stop flights last November and it was much better than having to make a stop or change flights. They were long flights but much less of a hassle.

  • @PratonicSky
    @PratonicSky Před rokem

    Excellent insight. Thank you you Mentour 🙏🏽

  • @rainscratch
    @rainscratch Před rokem +1

    Excellently detailed and on point analysis.

  • @TiptronicSS
    @TiptronicSS Před rokem +2

    15:43 looks very Star Trek TNG 😄

  • @EliteGroupInternational
    @EliteGroupInternational Před rokem +1

    Completely fascinated, I love your channels.
    I’d love to see a video about ATC systems and the importance of communications between pilots and controllers

  • @22vx
    @22vx Před rokem +6

    Always interesting and informative 👍 thanks Petter!

  • @michaelsheargold
    @michaelsheargold Před rokem

    Great video thanks Mentor!!!

  • @GeoStreber
    @GeoStreber Před rokem +8

    In the last few days I flew in the following aircraft for the first time:
    777-300ER AMS-->GRU with KLM
    A350-900 GRU-->CDG with Air France
    A220-300 CDG-->CPH with Air France
    I liked the 777 the least, and both Airbusses more or less identically. That 220 is glorious though, and holy shit the size of the turbines on the A350

  • @keinlieb3818
    @keinlieb3818 Před rokem +7

    Are planes getting longer or is seating space getting more cramped? I just took a flight on Friday and had to seat coach because business was sold out and my knees were right into the back of the person in front of me. He kept giving me dirty looks because my knees were in his back and finally I told him "I'm sorry I'm so tall, what would you like me to do to remedy this situation?" We finally talked and he apologized and know my height is just something I have no control of and as long as leg space keeps getting reduced, this is going to continue to happen. Especially since people are getting taller on average, not shorter.

  • @Hans_R._Wahl
    @Hans_R._Wahl Před 11 měsíci

    Thank you very much for this very informative thoughts!🙂👍

  • @CaptainKremmen
    @CaptainKremmen Před rokem +3

    The preference for direct flights is much more pronounced when they are short. For long-haul flights, many people will take a connection to get an A380. If the direct alternative is a single-aisle plane, even more people will go out of their way to avoid that option. If you're flying for 20 hours, a few extra hours to avoid a single-aisle plane is worth it.

  • @luisdestefano6056
    @luisdestefano6056 Před rokem +1

    One possible explanation for the ever increasing size of single aisles is 1) the ever increasing costs of pilots, well above inflation, 2) a natural increase in traffic, to the tune of 2-4% per year, and 3) somewhat lower COC costs per seat km. For a 1-2,000NM distance, an A321NEO is more competitive than say a MAX8 or an A220. Provided obviously that the bigger craft can be filled to capacity. Consequently, the sweet spot is A321s. Not the smaller A220s or MAX7. Things are different for twin aisles. Single aisles have almost always almost exclusively used on point to point routes. Twin aisles went the opposite way. The big copernican jump came about from 707s to 747s. They flew substantially further and for a fraction of the cost per seat km. The snag was that such big planes required that a lot of seats be filled, day in, day out, high or low season. So a hub and spoke model was created, which exists to this very day. And double spokes. Typical examples were found in the North Atlantic routes. For example, American passengers per concentrated in New York, taken to London, and then distributed from there to European destinations, and viceversa. A380 was a further expansion of this scheme. But then came 767, A330, 787 and A350, all of which offered comparable COC per seat km than the bigger craft, but very importantly far easier to fill. And the possibility to offer 2 daily departures rather than one, a situation greatly favoured by business travellers. As a consequence, the bigger 747s and A380s went the way of the dinosaurs. Further, this market fragmentation has also affected A350-1000 and 777-9. Their sales are not doing well at all, and this has been going o for some time. In this case. 787-9 and A350-900 are today in the sweet spot of the twin aisle market. Sales for 787-8, and even more A330-800 are quite disappointing.

  • @MV_96
    @MV_96 Před rokem +3

    Great explanation! Really interesting.

  • @steve3291
    @steve3291 Před rokem +1

    Fantastic analysis and an interesting shift. I must say since COVID I am doing less long haul and more short haul myself.

  • @Redbirdgangipad
    @Redbirdgangipad Před rokem +36

    I am 6th in comments! Seriously great content. I am really impressed that you were both a luggage handler and a firefighter before becoming a pilot. I think the crew resource management in flying has a place in fire and EMS. Particularly with our large scale incidents.

    • @MentourNow
      @MentourNow  Před rokem +26

      Absolutely. I wouldn’t be as much of a pilot if it wasn’t for my previous experiences.

    • @rainscratch
      @rainscratch Před rokem +2

      @@MentourNow CRM should apply everywhere there as occupation where you are not working alone. A happy coordinated team means a job well and safely done.

  • @history_leisure
    @history_leisure Před rokem +4

    I can see the A321 being popular with US and A320 low-cost carriers because of the major US Domestic and near international destinations like Mexico and the Caribbean that are popular and can fill the void of the B757/767 replacement in those parts

  • @Herowebcomics
    @Herowebcomics Před rokem +2

    This is awesome stuff to think about!
    Planes could be getting more efficient soon!

  • @TheCondoInRedondo
    @TheCondoInRedondo Před rokem +2

    I worked in military and commercial aerospace in the 1970s. "Flying Pencil" was a name for the stretched DC-8, more than a decade before the first Boeing 757 ever rolled out of Renton.

    • @offshoretomorrow3346
      @offshoretomorrow3346 Před 8 měsíci +1

      And a Dornier in WW2.
      The stretched DC9 was known as The Long Beach Sewer Pipe.

  • @Middy_37
    @Middy_37 Před rokem +6

    Longest single isle aircraft isn't the 757-300 or any of the DC-8's, the title is held by the Russian TU-144 at 66 meters (65.7 metres or 215.6 feet according to Encyclopedia Britannica) And Concorde is about 62 meters long

    • @StevePemberton2
      @StevePemberton2 Před rokem +3

      Thanks for the reminder. Although as far as categories go I'm pretty sure that supersonic has its own category. But Tu-144 has the distinction of being the longest single-aisle supersonic🙂

  • @richardlewis4288
    @richardlewis4288 Před rokem +2

    I don’t know how you make so many amazing videos! Thank you!

    • @MentourNow
      @MentourNow  Před rokem +1

      We do what we can! Glad you liked it

  • @thepalace2446
    @thepalace2446 Před 9 měsíci +1

    @mentournow - you have hit the nail on the head when you said “have you had to wait for people to reach seat before removing their back packs etc” I am paraphrasing but ffs you would have thought people had a bit more foresight… imagine this on a 250 seat single isle plane. Especially when they have an archaic boarding process like tui 🤦‍♂️ 🤦‍♀️ 😮😢

  • @Hamachingo
    @Hamachingo Před 11 měsíci +1

    I assumed long-haulers got smaller because people hate having to transfer at a hub and direct flights got cheap enough. Having basically the same plane for short and medium trips makes sense for airlines, you can certify pilots, crew, maintenance for one plane and only pay a bit extra for upgrading that certification to the longer/shorter version.

  • @terencenxumalo1159
    @terencenxumalo1159 Před rokem

    good work

  • @mightymo-ij9pz
    @mightymo-ij9pz Před rokem +4

    There is another way to make a larger plane fit in a gate built for a 36 meter wingspan: have more wings. Think of something like a Piaggio Avanti scaled up, it’s a configuration that naturally works with something like a RISE engine

    • @imagseer
      @imagseer Před rokem +2

      I think I read somewhere that biplane wings cannot give twice the lift as they are working in the same air space. They only developed them in the early part of the last century because they couldn't build engines which were powerful enough and the extra wings gave the aircraft more robustness. Also additional wings add to the drag plus parasitic drag from struts etc. Maybe one day if engines can become much more efficient a biplane design could be used to save space in airports. But that's like the tail wagging the dog.

    • @mightymo-ij9pz
      @mightymo-ij9pz Před rokem

      The Piaggio Avanti doesn’t have struts though, the wings are in tandem. Neither is it a Canard, both sets are true wings

    • @oadka
      @oadka Před rokem

      You have no idea what I would give to see something like that. Imagine an aircraft with all of those improvements. Elliptical fuselage, truss braced wings with folding wing tips, forward wing and maybe even a boundary layer thruster. Its efficiency would be unparalleled. Might be particulary useful for hydrogen based aircraft where they really want to decrease fuel tank volume.

    • @lzh4950
      @lzh4950 Před měsícem

      Or they might use folding wings e.g. 777x, 737 MAX (whose wings nautrally curl outwards when in flight to extend their wingspan)

  • @williamantico7768
    @williamantico7768 Před 7 měsíci

    I liked that 7J7 . That plane looked really cool.

  • @jasonhoch7105
    @jasonhoch7105 Před 26 dny

    Highly elliptical pressurized fuselages have already been used with success. I used to fly on them all the time: the beech 1900 series. By far, the funkiest looking commuter plane I’ve ever flown on.

  • @comanche180
    @comanche180 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Thanks!

  • @pgn0
    @pgn0 Před 11 měsíci

    The dH106 tee looks cool, one on order!

  • @garthmacleod
    @garthmacleod Před 11 měsíci

    Finally a video that doesn't make me terrified of flying!

  • @CriticalThinker1967
    @CriticalThinker1967 Před rokem +4

    I grew up in Adelaide SA, a city of 1.4mil that for many years had no direct international flights. We always had to fly to Sydney or Melbourne first.
    The introduction of twin engine wide bodies saw direct international flights beginning and I think something like the A321XLR might open up even more direct international flights.
    Even in 2023 our flight to France to France in October still requires us to go via Melbourne…which is 70 minute flight in the opposite direction

    • @Coolsomeone234
      @Coolsomeone234 Před 11 měsíci

      I mean you could fly via Qatar or Singapore airways

    • @radicallyrethinkingrailwaysina
      @radicallyrethinkingrailwaysina Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@Coolsomeone234
      Exactly. Adelaide people like to whinge but still choose to fly Qantas and are thus responsible for what they get.

  • @raccoon874
    @raccoon874 Před 8 měsíci +2

    *the problem with the MAX series, as told to me by a pilot, is the fact that it is flying on engine vs wings - it's gotten too big for a comfortable wing span ratio, thus taking lot more runway to take off.. an issue with hot days at altitude*

  • @tomtheplummer7322
    @tomtheplummer7322 Před rokem

    Love the tee blue up brown down.

  • @marybaker8582
    @marybaker8582 Před 11 měsíci

    I like how you said “squeeze in more passengers”. Lol. Seats seem to shrink more every year”.

  • @mr88cet
    @mr88cet Před 11 měsíci

    Interesting! I remember the talk about the 7J7, but I hadn’t heard (or at least I don’t recall) that it was discussed as a double-aisle.

  • @T3ki1a_
    @T3ki1a_ Před rokem +9

    I need bars, restaurant and bedrooms in my planes 😤 or I'll bring back liner ships 😤

  • @williamfence566
    @williamfence566 Před rokem +4

    Would be interesting how many passengers when booking opt for the seats with more room ( a cost on the budget airlines ) . First class and private flights are a different bracket but on commercial slots I'd pay extra just for the sake of comfort if the flight is 5-6 hours point to point.

  • @RikSandstromCalifornia
    @RikSandstromCalifornia Před rokem +4

    Another GREAT video. I really appreciate you balanced perspective and presentation of details . As a long time aircraft/aviation fan, I would like to know if you have done (or would do) a video an how (specifically) Airbus got the upper hand on Boeing. I could be wrong, but way back when Airbus was started didn't they receive massive subsidies from European governments? If so, how did this affect Boeing's ability to compete? I'm sure that there are many other factors, but I would really like to know how much subsidies may have affected the competition. Thanks so much. 😺😺😺

  • @raccoon874
    @raccoon874 Před 8 měsíci +1

    *they need to start making TRIANGULAR airplane bodies, like Toblerone bars*

  • @claybrown6140
    @claybrown6140 Před rokem +8

    Hey man, I'm currently a firefighter in the States and I'm strongly considering a career change. do you have any videos outlining the path to becoming an airline pilot? particularly the education side of things. Did your job as a FF help prepare you for this line of work?

    • @MentourNow
      @MentourNow  Před rokem +9

      I have several of my VERY early videos, over on the Mentour Pilot channel, talking about this.
      The firefighter job gave me a lot of understanding about that part of the operation, for sure.
      Also, check out www.theairlinepilotclub.com for more specific guidance.
      Good luck! 🍀

    • @claybrown6140
      @claybrown6140 Před rokem +4

      @@MentourNow awesome, Thank you!

  • @tomc.2808
    @tomc.2808 Před rokem +1

    I just came back from E.U., both flights from US and back were late - our lugggage was lost in both ways. 1 hour waiting in passport line in Brussels, and 1hour waiting in security line in N.Y. They changed our schedule during flight back to US and we had to trvale in four different airplanes. Its VERY BAD my friend...

  • @georgeherod4252
    @georgeherod4252 Před rokem

    Really interesting

  • @davehall8584
    @davehall8584 Před rokem +1

    Absolutely awesome video Petter!

  • @elgordoloney5743
    @elgordoloney5743 Před rokem +6

    Great & insightful video, the "flying wing" design is a consideration for future aircraft design...
    Keep up the Above Average work!

    • @stevehines
      @stevehines Před rokem

      See exterior truss example on the river Singapore almost same fuselage design

  • @Jocanguro
    @Jocanguro Před 10 měsíci

    Fantastic, your videos are very interesting, congratulations, especially the economic considerations, on the choice of planes and strategies.
    In this regard, it would be interesting, I don't know if you've already done it, an analysis of the costs of individual tickets, compared to the cost of a flight, and how the companies manage to carry out important flights (Rome-London) at ridiculous costs without failing, in short an examination of the total cost of a flight, cost of airports, personal cost, fuel and final income, but all in broad terms, just to be understood by everyone ... thank you very much greetings

  • @ahmadtheaviationlover1937

    6:23 that pronunciation of humongous though 😂😂😂😂😂

  • @Boodieman72
    @Boodieman72 Před rokem +1

    I can think of two US airlines that use 747's however they are cargo / charter flights, Atlas Air and Kalitta Air.

  • @rainscratch
    @rainscratch Před rokem +1

    757-300 Flying Pencil. Yep that just about sums it up. Always thought this was the goofiest looking aircraft.

  • @KJAkk
    @KJAkk Před rokem +1

    I recently went on a trip and was reminded that I hate 777 economy class seating. The E175 I flew on for my connection to Chicago was more comfortable.

  • @john_hind
    @john_hind Před rokem +1

    If you are going for an elliptical fuselage, 'tall body' seems advantageous over 'wide body'. Double-decker with two single-aisle decks would allow double the passengers in the same footprint without the boarding time issues. Yes it needs the air bridges updating, but potentially just new equipment in the same footprint.

  • @kleeblattchen38
    @kleeblattchen38 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Just to clarify though, the A330's in asia aren't the first airbus wide bodies to operate short haul routes at all... A300's and A310's were extensively used on short haul and domestic flights even in Europe back in the 90's (with Lufthansa for example)... I mean that was actually the main purpose of the A300, it still lacked the range to operate longer long haul flights despite it getting better etops clearances that previous twin engine jets... the same goes for boeing, maybe a smaller wide body with similar range to 737's was a new concept in the 80's but there were even purpose built 747 for japanese carriers to operate domestic routes... you could actually say wide body short haul operations were already booming in the 80's and have experienced a decline over past decades in some places because a lot of these jets have since been retired like the aforementioned 747's and A300's and Lufthansa for example hasn't operated wide bodies on short haul routes regularly ever since...

  • @studentjohn35
    @studentjohn35 Před rokem +1

    Yes! Let's discuss absurdly small SEAT PITCH!

  • @andrewmole745
    @andrewmole745 Před 5 měsíci

    Thank you for this very interesting and thoughtful video.
    One point of information, however - composites _do_ experience fatigue, and this is affected by a number of factors. The fatigue mechanisms may be different from metals, however. For example, composites can suffer from delamination over time due to cyclical loading.

  • @mycosys
    @mycosys Před rokem +1

    Excellent article! Really interesting.
    FWIW i think we're more likely to see a fuel like methanol as a hydrogen carrier for fuel cells, either direct or indirect. The energy density per volume is 4-5 times higher and comparable with kerosene, and the handling is equally comparable.

  • @konigsegg_1to1
    @konigsegg_1to1 Před rokem

    8:36 GRYMT!

  • @jakubterchovan7557
    @jakubterchovan7557 Před rokem

    "The aircraft is only making money while it's in the air."
    Yes, new merch coming soon! I need this:)

  • @JMPDev
    @JMPDev Před rokem +3

    RIP legroom

  • @jamiesuejeffery
    @jamiesuejeffery Před rokem +2

    Don't forget that Boeing, Northrop-Grumman, and Skunkworks put a lot of money into U.S. military aircraft. One can guarantee that the technologies developed for military aircraft will find their way into commercial aircraft as well. I don't know anything at al about Airbus and their military side of things.

  • @grandv12
    @grandv12 Před rokem +5

    The size paradox not only happens in the aircraft industry, but also in the car world

    • @MattMcIrvin
      @MattMcIrvin Před rokem +3

      I've noticed that each individual model of midsize and compact car keeps creeping up in size, and then they keep introducing new models at the low end to be small. The Honda Civic used to be a tiny subcompact, smaller than the Fit/Jazz that was introduced at the small end later on when the Civic had grown out of that niche.

    • @kubek555
      @kubek555 Před rokem

      new Mini is the size of old BMW X5 😅😅

    • @illdeletethismusic
      @illdeletethismusic Před 11 měsíci

      with cars it"s easy to slightly upsell most customers compared to a previous generation, and obviously selling more car can increase profit.
      it just has to be gradual enough to keep most of the same target group

    • @zwerko
      @zwerko Před 9 měsíci

      True, with one major exception-while the cars are growing larger, the number of passengers they carry remain the same which, overall, results in more comfortable and in many cases safer ride. With aircraft, it's exactly the opposite...

    • @lzh4950
      @lzh4950 Před měsícem

      @@MattMcIrvin Honda also sells the City/Grace subcompact sedan probably to slot in-between the Jazz/Fit & Civic

  • @oadka
    @oadka Před rokem +2

    The reduced boarding and deboarding times for double aisle aircraft might make it very attractive for short trips. The time saved might probably allow the airline to operate 1 more trip in the same day with the aircraft.

    • @lzh4950
      @lzh4950 Před měsícem

      Or you might do what RyanAir does & rent another airstair to let people board from the rear too

  • @PatrickImboden
    @PatrickImboden Před rokem +1

    I flew last week on an A321 on row 38... last row... i hated the long waiting time to disembark... I always liked more the wide-body airplanes... the narrow body airplanes just seem so "cheap".... I don't know why, but for me the wide body just have more class.... maybe because I flew so many time in the 747 as a child... and I used to love it.

  • @user-uh6kq2wh9g
    @user-uh6kq2wh9g Před 4 měsíci

    the sizing trends for twin aisle aircraft I believe is due to airline shifting to twin engine configuration from anything more than that.
    Twin engine aircraft are becoming larger while 3-4 engine passenger airliner are going away

  • @762rk95tp
    @762rk95tp Před rokem

    Probably best phrase to describe A321XLR isn't "point to point", but "long and skinny". The route airlines can fly with it is long range flights that wouldn't be economical at all with any widebody.

  • @Lucien86
    @Lucien86 Před rokem +1

    15:00 The thing with an elliptical fuselage is that it would be under much higher stress than a round fuselage. The reason round is so popular is that the structure isn't fighting its own internal air pressure - this makes it stronger for a given weight.. Its a particular problem in spacecraft (which are always round) but also applies to aircraft as well.

    • @avkay12
      @avkay12 Před 6 měsíci

      Is the 787 round?

    • @Lucien86
      @Lucien86 Před 6 měsíci

      @@avkay12Sorry I was talking about the section of the cabin. Virtually all airliners rely on the same self-supporting (at pressure) round shape.. Same principle as a diving tank or rocket fuel tank - or balloon.

  • @ericfielding2540
    @ericfielding2540 Před rokem +9

    If they want to make two aisles, I sure hope they make the plane wider and not even narrower seats. I barely fit now.

  • @traceytracey1
    @traceytracey1 Před rokem +1

    After seating first/business class, why don't airlines load from the back? Seems like it would streamline boarding.

  • @quicksilverst2506
    @quicksilverst2506 Před rokem

    I read an article about a designer who designed double decker type of new seats for the planes.

  • @GustavoRodrigues
    @GustavoRodrigues Před rokem

    There are studies from BBD for the eco-jet that may point to use the body as part of the entire wing (blended wing-body).
    Openfans are red herring for gearbox development.

  • @Flexflex744
    @Flexflex744 Před rokem +5

    I recently flew a 757-300 and it's length was absolutely massive inside.

  • @donaldwest8130
    @donaldwest8130 Před rokem +1

    The MD DC 8 or the flying hotdog pushed the limits of the day.
    There are those who swear you could see the fuselage flex in EXTREME weather/crosswinds while landing when sitting in the last row.

  • @terrymoore1830
    @terrymoore1830 Před rokem +2

    I think that wide bodied aircraft could be a commercial success for the US market as it could accommodate the waistline of a lot of the passengers.