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MarkNovack -> RE: INCREDIBLE PLANE ! LOOK ! (3/14/2005 10:14:31 AM)
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I say, what incredible BS is written all around here. Subsidy this, rudder problem that, never sell, needs new runways. I'm ashamed of you fellows. Here comes a magnificent airplane, indeed a 1st world combined effort (is Airbus a vacuum?) and you writing about one country being behind in technology or having a crash etc., etc., etc. folks, at least do your research before jaw-jacking away and sounding ignorant. Pay-off? Currently, AB is 1/3 commited for number sold for pay-off. Not bad for an airplane that has yet to fly. Does anyone here really think it won't fly? Duh! When Beoing launched the 747, it gambled the existence of the entire company and won. Capacity sells. Plus, with the amount of lives (real families with children and spouses living happily like you and I) depending on this for economic futures, I think this has been well thought through. Only for the longest routes? Japan wants a dozen yesterday for their short business routes. They predict capacity runs all day long 7 days per week. Low luggage carriage also because of the business travel nature. Real profit potential. Runways? Nope, most runways that this airplane would serve are already big enough and the wheel base places less weight per wheel than already accomadated heavies. Some will need taxiways widened and ramps, gates, and services will need expansion. Hey, the 747 was accomodated when it was a lot bigger jump in capacity...the first couple of years were difficult, but the industry accomodated it quickly. Airport expansion...lots of jobs. All it takes is the will and belief of the people. Body Count? It could be horrible. For now, 555 is the max planned load. The world did'nt stop flying the 747 after Tennerif. The world numbs with 150,000 body counts from tsunamis and earthquakes. I don't think the world will quit the AB. Plus, with reliability being what it is today, thats a long shot off. Why look for the accident? Think safety first. Or is it just habit to see the negative? Could'nt even use their own motors? Does that even need answering? That just childish writing. Volatile technolgy has advantage in being supported around the world. So does expanding the receding brain trust. Government subsidy? Sure. Why not. Its a social democracy, not pure capitalism. The US industry gets plenty of government support in many ways too. One is simply through paying full to double price on government travel options. Research grants and supremely high purchase prices on standard line items painted olive drab help also. Some is just plain creative accounting as scandals that riddled the industry 5-10 years ago showed. Unfortunately, this I know after several years in budgetary operations. It does'nt really matter, in the end the result is still an economic boost to all. The industry supports millions of people and nobody is going to let it go bankrupt. Entire economic sections of industry would drop dead. The airplane industry is a bit like a nuclear reactor. You can't just shut it off because it loses money sometimes. The US has purchased airplanes just to keep certain companies in operation because they can't afford to lose the expertise...the brain trust is so priceless. Should a particular need arise tomorrow, a dufunct industry is not just going to turn on like a lamp and start churning out airplanes. This is a continuous casting process where turning it off could mean losing it. It has become so vital to our way of life that it funded directly or indirectly, spoken or unspoken. Economic impact from the aviation industry is somewhat greater than so many horrendously pork barrelled money drain projects that receive funding directly and publicly. Frankly, I'd love to divert about 90% of NASA's exploration budget into our aviation industry because I don't give a hoot-n-hell if there is water on Mars or not. Want water, I have water right here. 3.2 billion dollars to read about what MIGHT be there. Uhh, duhh, it MIGHT be water, uh, it MIGHT have been a river, duh, look, a rock (want rocks, my house is made of stone), there might be little green creatures crawling all over Ur@nus, or what do they call it now, Urektum? Cargo is the key! Commercial shippers are champing at the bit already. This one is easy to see why. Load that sucker full to capacity. Cargo does not care if other cargo sits too close. Leg room does not apply. FedEx, UPS, traitors, all they care about is profit. Why gripe? Love Boeing? Show your loyalty. Buy stock and their T-shirt! I get the magazine. The next big bet flies out in 2008, a medium sized jet for shorter hops. Lots can happen between now and then. Airbus stock is available for immediate gain...or loss. Hopefully, the two aircraft will each compliment one another in a market when and where a huge number of airframes are going to come of age requiring replacement. Lastly, thinking that a grand failure for Airbus would mean a boon for Boeing might be a bit narrow minded unless you really believe that we function in an economic vacuum. World confidence in aviation is very important also. I guess there are two final ways to handle to pressure from the A380. Gripe and complain to the union, twist your employers until the company squeeks to a halt while halfsteping on the job sulking in depression, or rise the the challange, stand together, give 110% and show the world who can still build the worlds finest aircraft. It may be a shot now to our national industrial pride, but that's no reason to go off showing the world how we can debate the issue like children. Go look at the airplane, see how it does, and then if its feasible, build a bigger and better one or find that SST technology that is efficeint for mass transit. Build a better mousetrap and the world will beat a path to your door. BUT IT SURE IS ONE BIG UGLY WHALE...NO BEAUTY CONTESTS BEING WON WITH THE A380 TODAY!!! Give it a nice cellulite paint job, it reminds me of my Aunt who worked for NASA. She was the size of a piano...physicist and optical specialist (not glasses, telescopes), not an astronaut...LOL!!! She was so big she had her own sattelites. And the undercarriage...looks like a centipede. However, the wings are beautiful. That I must say. Wonderful shape on the wings. Like a big ugly humpbacked whale with pretty flippers. Mark Enola Gay, i just love how thats starred out!!!
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