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European Airbus consortium is counting on the A380 to help it
keep its edge over Boeing, while the U.S. company says it
believes the future lies in smaller long-range airliners.
Thousands of enthusiasts cheered
outside the perimeter fence as the plane, carrying a six-man
test crew, landed after completing a series of tests of
equipment and in-flight procedures on the world's heaviest
commercial airliner.
``You handle (this aircraft) as
you handle a bicycle. It's very, very easy to fly,'' chief test
pilot Jacques Rosay said after fellow pilot Claude Lelaie landed
the $285 million plane.
The A380, as long as eight London
buses and with enough room on its wings to park 70 cars, heralds
a new era in passenger travel, just as the supersonic Concorde
jet set new standards by breaking the sound barrier in 1969.
But Airbus faces a tough battle
with Boeing and is still short of selling 250 of the A380s,
which it says is the break-even point. Some experts say it will
have to sell almost three times as many to make a profit.
Boeing said it was pleased the
flight test passed successfully and congratulated Airbus. ``We
always thought it would fly because that's what airplanes do,''
Boeing Chief Executive James Bell said.
``And we also thought our bet on
the mid-range market was a better bet and we think our orders
traffic is sustaining that, so we're 2 and 0,'' he said
referring to two big orders Boeing announced this week.
BOEING GOES FOR DREAMLINER
Boeing has vowed to end the
dominance of Airbus, which has outsold the Chicago-based plane
maker in every year since 2001, and the two rivals are locked in
a struggle in which each accuses the other of having unfair
subsidies.
Boeing has been focusing on a
much smaller money-saver in the 787 Dreamliner which is due in
2008, and has won two big deals in the past few days with Air
India and Air Canada worth a total of around $13 billion.
The A380 will now make up to
2,500 hours of test flights to pave the way for it to enter
service in the second half of 2006.
European aerospace group EADS has
an 80 percent stake in Airbus and British defense firm BAE
Systems has a 20 percent stake. It has taken Airbus nearly five
years and some 12 billion euros ($15.68 billion) to develop the
A380, including 1.45 billion euros of cost overruns.
The A380 ended the four-decade
reign of Boeing's 747 jumbo as the biggest airliner to have
flown. It looks like a 747 with the upper deck stretched all the
way to the tail.
The French cabinet burst into
applause when President Jacques Chirac announced the A380 had
successfully taken off. Chirac hailed its safe return as a
``total success'' of the project which had written a new page of
aeronautical history.
``It is a magnificent result for
European industrial cooperation and an encouragement to pursue
this path of building a Europe of innovation and progress,'' he
said.
His close ally German Chancellor
Gerhard Schroeder saluted a victory for European industrial
policy: ``This shows that when we work hard ... we can be the
best in the world.
Airbus has a combined 154 orders
and commitments from 15 customers and Airbus Chief Executive
Noel Forgeard said he expected more orders this year, although
not in the next few days. He gave no details.
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