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Can A380 work with one engine?

While it is possible for an A380 to operate on a single engine, it is not ideal as the aircraft would experience a decrease in speed, drag, and loss of altitude, making it crucial for the crew to restart the other engines or find a suitable airport for an emergency landing.



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Increases Passenger Capacity The Airbus A380, for example, has a passenger capacity of 853. Like most other wide-body airplanes, the Airbus A380 is powered by four engines. This allows it to carry more passengers than its two-engine and single-engine counterparts.

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Simple answer is: No. The A380 is massive as it is. It needs four just as massive, powerful turbofans to get it to speed. Taking the common engine choice of the A380, the Trent 900, produces 77,000 pounds of thrust each.

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Can planes fly on just one engine? Absolutely. That is what they are designed to do. By law, planes have to be able to fly from point A to point B, over water, on just one engine.

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If all of an airplane's engines fail simultaneously, the pilot will perform an emergency landing. As the airplane descends and decelerates, the pilot will begin to search for a safe area to perform an emergency landing. Ideally, the pilot will land on a nearby landing.

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Current title holder for the aircraft with the longest ETOPS rating is the Airbus 350-900, certified to fly for up to 370 minutes on one engine. That gives it a maximum diversion distance up to 2500 nautical miles, or 4630 kilometres.

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An A380 has four engines, each of which provides around 356.81 kN (80,210 lbf) of thrust. These four engines' combined thrust equates to around 1,427.24 kN (320,840 lbf), which powers the aircraft to lift it into the sky.

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The A380 production ended with the departure of former Airbus CEO Tom Enders due to a lack of demand; the company had 17 orders in the backlog. After Emirates cut its A380 order by 39 aircraft, leaving just 14 on the backlog, the final decision was reached to terminate production on the A380.

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In February 2019, Airbus announced it would end A380 production by 2021, after its main customer, Emirates, agreed to drop an order for 39 of the aircraft, replacing it with 40 A330-900s and 30 A350-900s.

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The arrival of the A380 in 2007 was poorly timed. The price of jet fuel had begun to creep up, and by 2007 was floating at around $4 a gallon. This made airlines shy away from the expensive to operate four engine jets of the 80s and 90s, and to look instead to fuel efficiency as a major deciding factor.

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This is due to the aircraft's large size and the amount of fuel it requires to make a single flight. On average, it costs around $20,000 to fill up an A380.

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The average hourly rental rate of the Airbus A380 is around 37,150 USD per hour.

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His personal jet, a Gulfstream G650ER with the call sign and tail number N628TS, completed a total of 134 flights in 2022, according to information compiled by Jack Sweeney, who runs a Twitter account tracking its movements. The jet cost an estimated $US2.

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How much do A380 pilots get paid? Looking at pay tables provided by APA, if American Airlines operated the Airbus A380 and the Boeing 747, effective May 2, 2023, captains on these aircraft would earn $402.28 per block hour during their first year of employment. By year 12, that would go up to $438.42 per block hour.

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Commercial airliners, such as the Boeing 747 and the Airbus A380, have a range of around 8,000 to 8,500 nautical miles. This means that they can fly for up to 20 hours without refueling, allowing them to travel long distances across the globe.

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Airbus states a fuel rate consumption of their A380 at less than 3 L/100 km per passenger (78 passenger-miles per US gallon).

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Conclusion. While it's very clear that a 747 cannot fly properly with the failure of three engines, we can see that a single functioning engine would at least extend the aircraft's distance and prolong its time in the air. Hopefully, this would buy enough time and distance for the 747 to reach a suitable landing spot.

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As with every Boeing airplane, the 787 includes many layers of redundancy for continued safe operation, and the electrical system is no exception. For example, Boeing has demonstrated that the 787 can fly for more than 330 minutes on only one engine and one of the six generators and land safely.

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In fact, airliners can fly quite well on just one. The Boeing 777 is certified to fly up to five and a half hours with one engine out.

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