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How heavy is an A380 fully loaded?

Hint: Plan ahead. With the Airbus A380 weighing in fully loaded at 1,265,000 pounds, you might think stopping it within a reasonable distance after landing would require a Phalanx of Heavy-duty thrust reversers.



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The Antonov An-225 Mriya ('Dream' in Ukrainian) is well known for holding the record as the heaviest plane in the world. But did you know it also set some 123 other world records during its lifetime?

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The 747 will accommodate 470 passengers at the manufacturer stated capacity while the the A380 can carry 550 passengers. The A380 is taller, wider and heavier than the 747–8. The 747–8 is longer by about 4 metres. The double deck runs the entire length of the A380 but only a third of the length of the 747–8.

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The A380 features an 8,200 nautical-mile range (15,200 km), enabling it to service some of the longest routes in commercial aviation.

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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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What is the longest flight in the world by distance? The longest flight in the world by distance is New York (JFK) to Singapore (SIN) on Singapore Airlines clocking in at 9,537 miles. What plane can fly the farthest in the world?

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Because of the shape of an A380 wing, a supercritical design, with a slightly curved upper surface, airflow over the top of the wing can achieve supersonic or supercritical flow before the entire aircraft goes supersonic.

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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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When all is said and done, the Airbus A380 needs 3,000 m (9,800 ft) of runway to take off fully-loaded, while the Boeing 747-8 requires 3,100 m (10,200 ft).

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“We've developed the most passenger preferred aircraft in the world,” Airbus head of business analysis and market forecast Bob Lange says. So why has Airbus decided to kill it? The main reason the company will halt production of A380 after 12 years, from 2021, is the low number of planes sold.

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That was one of the reasons Air France, the first European airline to fly the jet, decided to ditch A380 on August 5. The estimated cost of upgrading economy and business classes, at over $45 million (£37m), was just too much compared to investing into newer aircraft instead.

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Every airliner has to figure out how to fit its landing gear into its fuselage. The Airbus A380 and Boeing 747 both have big, beefy, complex gear that has to rotate, twist, bend, and do yoga to get into its allocated space.

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