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posted by martyb on Monday May 08 2017, @10:09AM   Printer-friendly
from the a-wing-and-a-player dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:

Just after 06:00 GMT, the first C919 rolled down and off a runway at Shanghai Pudong airport, to the sounds of applause of onlookers and plenty of senior officials who showed up to celebrate a milestone for Chinese industry.It touched down 75 minutes later after a successful flight.

The C919 is a competitor for Airbus' A320 and Boeing's 737 and will offer configurations of between 158 and 172 seats. The single-aisle twin jet will have a range of up to 5,500 km.

Built by the state-owned Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China (COMAC), the plane has taken nine years to get off the drawing board and into the air. COMAC's secured 99 firm orders for the plane, which is expected to enter service in the year 2020.

[...] There's nothing revolutionary about the C919 that you won't find in other airliners. But China's always keen to show it can match anyone when it comes to high technology, if only because politics and national pride demands that the nation be able to show it can meet its own needs.

[...] Plenty of nations worry that China's state-owned enterprises don't have to worry about little things like making a profit, which is felt to give them an unfair advantage. A story today in state-owned organ Xinhua headlined "China-made C919 no challenge to Boeing, Airbus dominance" therefore looks like a deliberate attempt to douse such worries.

But plane-makers everywhere will know that if the C919 proves a worthy rival, it will win orders because demand for this class of plane is high. Boeing and Airbus each have backlogs of thousands of their own single-aisle planes and struggle to increase production. Demand for C919-class planes is also expected to just keep climbing as flying becomes more affordable and more people around the world become prosperous enough to afford air travel, so a new entrant has a chance to cash in.

-- submitted from IRC


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday May 08 2017, @07:03PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday May 08 2017, @07:03PM (#506503)

    Mostly due (based on past reading) to thinly disguised import restrictions. US cars don't quite meet the Japanese requirements on many small counts. All these changes are required to import cars into Japan and the US companies don't put in the effort to make their cars compliant. Also, Japan is right hand drive (like UK) and not too many US cars are designed to be made with steering on either side.