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Step Inside Airbus’ 10,000th Plane
*Singapore Airlines A350 Headed for San Francisco
Airbus celebrated the delivery of its 10,000th aircraft, and Singapore Airlines’ seventh A350 plane which will launch on Singapore’s new route to San Francisco this month.
It is one of 67 A350s that Singapore Airlines has ordered from Airbus, and was decorated with a special 10,000 livery to mark its significance.
The A350 is the airline industry’s latest state-of-the-art plane, and promises to quickly become a passenger favourite.
It is fitted with flyer-friendly features, including environmental improvements to address cabin dryness, keep the temperature comfortable, and reduce jet lag. The A350 comes with roomy bins which can fit standard carry-on luggage for all passengers onboard, plenty of overhead space, so the cabin doesn’t feel cramped even at the back of the plane, and ambient lighting which not only helps airlines set a mood but can also help regulate onboard sleep cycles on those longer journeys.
Singapore Airlines has made its A350 extra special by featuring the latest version of its Business class seata dreamy and restful cocoonand its new Premium Economy cabin which is a significant upgrade from what is already a feature-rich and comfortable Economy class.
Though both companies say that it just worked out that Singapore’s A350 would mark this special 10,000 milestone, it is a very appropriate coincidence.
Singapore Airlines has been a long-standing and loyal Airbus customer, taking its first Airbus plane in 1979 (an A300B4), and the Singapore Airlines Group has bought every type of plane Airbus makes.
Singapore Airlines was also first to fly the A380, with much fanfare, back on Oct. 27, 2007. Singapore will also be first to launch Airbus’ new ultra long range version of the A350, which will reopen the world’s longest flight from Singapore to New York in 2018, and also serve Los Angeles. That’s a good 16-19 hours to enjoy the most modern aircraft in the skies.
There has been speculation on what might be inside this Ultra-Long Range A350 when it takes off, but we learned from Singapore Airlines that it will have only two cabin classes.
We are not at this time ready to reveal the details, but it can be assured that whatever we put onboard will be something that our customers will absolutely love, airline CEO Goh Choon Phong told Travel + Leisure. I’m not at liberty to share that at the moment. Just wait to be wowed!
While we wait to be wowed, we’re always free to speculate.
We know that the airline needs to keep the cabin light-weight on this plane, to keep the fuel use efficient over that long a distance. The airline has already said that there would be 170 seats on-board, and there has been talk that the airline would make this cabin focused around Business passengers, keeping a limited number of Economy seats.
But what if Singapore Airlines decided that a flight this long calls for an extra-special Economy experience? Then fitting the airplane with its Business Class and Premium Economy seats would be a great idea. It would be the first time anyone has ever flown a plane with just those two classes and would feature the two best cabin products the airline offers right now.
We focus a lot on customer experience, and it goes beyond just the product itself, it’s the way that we connect our passengers, said Goh Choon Phong. Each new aircraft that is delivered gives us an opportunity to relook at how to improve the passenger experience even further.
Singapore Airlines also made it clear on Friday that it remains committed to the other Airbus signature aircraft: the A380.
This a plane so popular with passengers that it has its own reservations site where you can find flights from every airline that flies the plane. But because of its size, some have questioned whether the A380 is fated to go the way of the also loved jumbo 747.
Cheaper and more efficient narrow body planes are all the fashion right now. The A380 is a good plane for major city pairs, where there’s a large demand, but airports have to build special facilities for itand it’s an expensive plane for airlines to fly if all the seats aren’t filled.
For its part, Singapore Airlines likes enduring classics, and plans to stand by the plane.
Despite what some might have speculated, we’ve been committed to this ultra-large aircraft type that is the A380, with five more on delivery from the second-half of next year, Goh Choon Phong said.
This new A380, to be delivered, will feature all new cabin products that have been developed over the last few years. We do not want to say much at this point in time, but we can promise that when they are introduced next year they will wow our customers and will again ensure that we retain the industry leading position on products.
For its part, Airbus couldn’t be happier about this 10,000th aircraft milestone.
Ten-thousand is an astonishing number. The founders of our company were true visionaries, but even they could not have foreseen our 10,000 aircraft by the year 2016, Airbus CEO Tom Enders said. In the 1970s we were producing at a rate of half an aircraft per month. Today, we deliver more than 600 aircraft per year and the ramp-up is continuing.
Airbus has said it expects to have the next 10,000 plane project in about ten years’ time.
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