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Why is the 757 being retired?

The main reason is that B757 faced a decline in market demand over time. The 757 was designed to fill the gap between the smaller 737 and the larger 767, and to serve medium-haul routes that required more capacity and range than other narrow-body aircraft.



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Customer interest in new 757s continued to decline, and in 2003, a renewed sales campaign centered on the 757-300 and 757-200PF yielded only five new orders. In October 2003, following Continental Airlines' decision to switch its remaining 757-300 orders to the 737-800, Boeing announced the end of 757 production.

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Boeing's decision to halt the production of the 757 means there's no new variant ready to serve the middle market segment and long-and-thin routes. Restarting production to bring an updated 757 to market would be a monumental challenge for the manufacturer.

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The 757 was withdrawn from use as the effect of the pandemic took hold, with 31 aircraft retired in March 2020. American Airlines permanently retired all A330s, B757s, B767s, CRJ-200s, and Embraer 190s last year. Earlier in 2021, American also retired multiple older B737-800s.

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According to Flightradar24 data, there are a total of 582 active Boeing 757 aircraft in Europe as of July 2023. 43% of these are passenger aircraft, and the remaining 57% are freighters (or are primarily used as cargo aircraft).

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Boeing's bet that the larger size would be popular just didn't work out. Apart from a few niche areas, airlines were just not interested in the extra capacity, given the reduction in range (and higher operating cost).

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A pilot's perspective Smith added that the 757 could get off the ground at a lower speed and use less runway than the 737, making it easier to operate for pilots flying out of smaller airports. Furthermore, the addition of winglets decreased the issue of wake turbulence that earlier 757s were known to generate.

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The popular twinjet has now been flying for 41 years. 41 years ago today, on February 19th, 1982, the Boeing 757 took to the skies for the first time. This came a week earlier than planned, and while the test aircraft encountered certain issues, the type became an FAA-certified airliner by the end of that year.

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The Boeing 757 is a mid-size twin-engine airliner. In service since 1983, it is more modern but smaller than the 747.

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For decades, Boeing's reputation largely rested on four excellent designs: the 747, 757, 767 and 777. Of these, the 757 has enjoyed the longest success without any significant redesign because Boeing engineers got the plane exactly right on the first go.

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Essentially, the 757 is a stretched 737 with a higher range and passenger capacity. The key difference really is that all the 757 variants are capable of flying transatlantic routes, whereas only the longest range 737 variant can do the same.

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Out of a total of 1,574 747s built over its lifetime, just around 100 are still in service. Most airlines had retired their 747 fleets in favor of a new generation of long-haul aircraft, which carry fewer people than the 450-passenger giant, and, with just two engines versus the 747's four, burn less fuel.

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easyJet did not have a fleet strategy to include the 757. Indeed, it would not have had a 757 flying for it at all were it not for a brief spell of crew shortages. According to conversations on the Aviation Forum, easyJet wet leased all four of its 757s to operate flights over the busy summer season that year.

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The type never really caught on as no other airlines purchased the type. Today, the 757M is still a very rare aircraft. At one time Pemco World Air Services, Vision Techology Systems and Precision Conversions all offered the 757.

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The 757 features a very efficient supercritical wing, which, during certain brief periods of flight during takeoff or landing, can produce a wake vortex stronger than that of a much larger Boeing 747 jumbo jet. Therefore, the [required] separation is longer than [for] other narrow-bodied airliners.

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Flight 301 shares the title of deadliest aviation crash involving a Boeing 757 alongside American Airlines Flight 77, both having 189 total fatalities, But in that crash, 64 were onboard that 757. Furthermore, Flight 301 is the deadliest aviation accident ever to have occurred in the Dominican Republic.

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