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United Puts Final Touches on Their Order for 737s
United Airlines put final touches on their order for 737s. (www.chicagotribune.com) Más...Sort type: [Top] [Newest]
Okay so let me get this straight...United dumped their entire fleet of 737-500s and 300s only to merge with Continental to have a whole fleet of 300s, 500s, 700s, 800s and 900s....And they kept the Airbuses instead...Im sorry but Boeings fly rings around the Buses..
You really have to hand it to the overall design and flexibility of this aircraft to evolve and adapt over its 45 year history. As a passenger, I do miss the 2-3 seating of the DC-9/MD-80/B717 series, but I'm sure the 73 does the job most cost-effectively when considering narrowbody, non-light equipment (thinking to myself, I hope this doesn't spur an Airbus vs. Boeing discussion). It would be interesting to see what MD would have offered if they survived.
The Boeing design philosophy was based on the 707 fuselage. Re-use of tooling, drawings, etc. and took this concept and applied it to the 720, 727, 737 and was a point of discussion when applied to the 757. Eastern had planned for the 757 to replace the 727s. Since the 707 was 3-3 seating, so it was for 720, 727, 737 and 757.
Trivia time. The original 707, the "dash 7", was 2-3 seating. When Douglas announced the DC-8 with 3-3 seating, Boeing went back and enlarged the "707" to 3-3 seating and 1 inch wider cabin so they could brag that the 707 offered the largest cabin.
The DC-9 was an original design based on requirements which lead to the 2-3 seating arrangement. The DC-9 series, MD-80, MD-90 and B717 are all based off the original DC-9 design and maintained the 2-3 seating. It is cheaper to evolve from a certified baseline rather than a new design requiring new certification.
Trivia time. The original 707, the "dash 7", was 2-3 seating. When Douglas announced the DC-8 with 3-3 seating, Boeing went back and enlarged the "707" to 3-3 seating and 1 inch wider cabin so they could brag that the 707 offered the largest cabin.
The DC-9 was an original design based on requirements which lead to the 2-3 seating arrangement. The DC-9 series, MD-80, MD-90 and B717 are all based off the original DC-9 design and maintained the 2-3 seating. It is cheaper to evolve from a certified baseline rather than a new design requiring new certification.
I'm not so sure about that theory, maybe you should read this article that was in Boeing's Frontier Magazine back in 2004.
http://www.boeing.com/news/frontiers/archive/2004/february/i_history.html
http://www.boeing.com/news/frontiers/archive/2004/february/i_history.html
I did not see anything in the article that conflicts with what I wrote. Re-phasing of some of the language, but I think what they said and I said are in agreement.
Interesting article -- good History and trivia of the naming convention -- but, I do see David's interpretation for both Boeing and especially MD. Each model essentially built upon the previous for modern tech of the day and customer demands. In contrast, the 777 seems (in my mind) to stand alone as a ground-up design as well as the DC-10 for the Douglas folks (unfortunately resources were lacking for the latter).
It will be interesting to see what the breakdown will be.