Surprisingly the 767 lives on!

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jis

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UPS just announced their latest order for 767 freighters.



In all 80 new 767s have been ordered in 2021!

Looks like it is primarily FedEx and UPS ordering it, beyond the USAF Tanker order. But they keep coming back for more.
 
They must be getting huge discounts given how much of a fiasco 2019 and 2020 have been for being (respectively -87 and -1026 (!) net orders these years, compared to +768 and +268 for Airbus)
 
The 767 is a very reliable airplane. Its avionics are identical to the B-757 which allowed a common type rating for pilots. The fuel consumption for the airplane is also very good. Its fuel consumption at cruise for each engine is just 2/3rds of each engine of a B727 at cruise. So, cruise consumption is just about 1/2 of a B727. Fuel burn for takeoff and climb is a little higher than a B-727 so total consumption is somewhat over 1/2.

But then you take in the additional cargo capacity of a B-767 is much more. There still is need to use B-727s. Smaller station loads do not need a capital expensive B-767 that would run over half empty,

The experiment of a converted B-737 might prove economical as one less engine and one less crew member. 737s use same JT-8s as B-727s.
However there has been a few -727s with a more powerful and less fuel consumption engines mounted on the two pods keeping the JT8 in center engine,
 
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Caravelle was an interesting plane. I flew in a Air France one in 1966 London Heathrow to Paris Orly.

Well many 380s are still flying. It is manufacturing that has been discontinued. 727 manufacturing was discontinued in 1984 after 1,832 were built.

The 767 was introduced in 1982 and so far 1,236 have been built as of November 2021, and manufacturing continues. I didn;t realize that it has 3 DoD variants, and one DoD variant that was canceled after design but before any were built.
 
Caravelles= The noisiest aircraft taxing in or out of the gate. Most ground crew either had earmuffs or escaped indoors when one was around. I hated them as well.

Forgot that the real solution forsmaller than B-767s are the B-757s. That airplane of course same rating as B-767 had identical interior so could use 727 compatible igloos. As well could carry 2 or 3 more of those igloos. The 757 came out of efforts to lengten 727s that prove bad idea because of problem of tail strikes.

My thoughts were a B-757 Strech would have been much better than the B-737 max. Wider interior, engines in proper location that would mean no MCAST, Flexible with ability to carry more passengers, Good cargo plane to replace both 727 and the few 737 freighters. Only downer IMO is 757s sit higher above ground with longer landing gear which is why engines are in correct location. i
 
My thoughts were a B-757 Strech would have been much better than the B-737 max. Wider interior, engines in proper location that would mean no MCAST, Flexible with ability to carry more passengers, Good cargo plane to replace both 727 and the few 737 freighters. Only downer IMO is 757s sit higher above ground with longer landing gear which is why engines are in correct location. i
There are aviation experts and enthusiasts who agree with you, and several detailed articles and videos on the subject.
 
There are lots of 737 being converted to freighter use, but not the old ones with JT-8 all CFM-56 . Noise regs and high fuel consumption as well as maintenance costs make those old ones tough to keep using. Lots of classics (300s mostly) and even some next gens on the market to convert.
 
My thoughts were a B-757 Strech would have been much better than the B-737 max. Wider interior, engines in proper location that would mean no MCAST, Flexible with ability to carry more passengers, Good cargo plane to replace both 727 and the few 737 freighters. Only downer IMO is 757s sit higher above ground with longer landing gear which is why engines are in correct location. i
The B757 was already stretched once and barely sold in that configuration. MCAS was not the core problem. A manufacturer and regulator that are willing to sell an unsafe 737 would be just as willing to sell an unsafe 757.
 
Wow, I didn't know there were any 727's still flying. Ironic to see 10 year old A380's getting munched up and 727's staggering along.

I flew on one of UAL's last Caravelles. Thought it was a DC-9 until I saw the tail. It even had a rear airstair!

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IFL Group is still operating a 727 daily I think for UPS from Louisville to New Orleans. Now the UA Caravelle is a golden oldie. Remember United and Air France's flying them when I worked at MIA. Then spent 33 years with UPS.
 
I see the occasional B757 when I'm out and about. Usually in Charlotte they are right next to 36R where the freight depot is. I have to say I really like the B757 variant they use for Air Force Two. That Lowery paint scheme on it just looks absolutely magical on it. I've never stepped foot on a B757 actually. I've only been on one B767 on Air Canada Rouge. However when I play Airline Empires online I generally amass a large fleet of B767s, B777s, and B738/739 aircraft. Then a handful of CRJ900s for some regional filling. B767s are versatile great aircraft. I wish AA hadn't gotten rid of theirs.
 
I've flown on 757's more than my fare share. I enjoy them!
I flew across the ocean on Delta 757's out of Boston more than once. A truly versatile aircraft. Shame more were not built and they shortsightedly ended production.

767 living on is a surprise indeed.
 
I have flown many TATL 757 routes under Continental and then United - EWR to EDI, MAN, BRS, TXL, HEL, and of course scads of flights MCO - EWR - MCO mainly for the lie flat Domestic FC seats on the international over-water 757s, all with Rolls Royce engines.

I have also flown the 767 EWR - TXL. Tegel did not have any gate with aerobridge capable of handling 767s so they got parked in at a field stand and access to/from terminal was via bus. Now of course there is no TXL anymore with BER finally coming on line.
 
I have flown many TATL 757 routes under Continental and then United - EWR to EDI, MAN, BRS, TXL, HEL, and of course scads of flights MCO - EWR - MCO mainly for the lie flat Domestic FC seats on the international over-water 757s, all with Rolls Royce engines.

I have also flown the 767 EWR - TXL. Tegel did not have any gate with aerobridge capable of handling 767s so they got parked in at a field stand and access to/from terminal was via bus. Now of course there is no TXL anymore with BER finally coming on line.

The best deplaning experience I had was on an Aeroflot B777-300ER in SVO. For some reason they parked us on a remote hard stand. I was like in Heaven. And in my AA uniform as well.
 
The best deplaning experience I had was on an Aeroflot B777-300ER in SVO. For some reason they parked us on a remote hard stand. I was like in Heaven. And in my AA uniform as well.
I have disembarked from a United/Continental 777 at Heathrow many times before they moved to the Star Alliance T2. Even done so from a few Air India 747s many moons ago. And even 707s even further back. Heathrow seemed to be perpetually short of gates. Oh yes at Hong Kong Kai Tak from Pan Am 747. Kai Tak had very few gates with aerobridges. It was mostly hard stand and bus.
 
Every flight out of Oz is a long-distance one, with hubs to Europe mainly in the Gulf States (UAE, Qatar, Dubai all about 17hrs away), or SE Asia (Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand about nine hours), so when our borders are open we get a goodly range of aircraft types to experience.

I'm strongly biaised in favour of the A380 and Qatar, but I understand economics is acting against the A380 in the market.

I reckon when things get moving again, our hubs to Europe and even the USA will likely be Chinese as the three or so big Chinese airlines capture our travel dollars. They seem to fly Boeings mostly on long-hauls last time I had a look. The chances are that one of them'll have me in a seat whenever it's safe to get moving again.
 
Wow, I didn't know there were any 727's still flying. Ironic to see 10 year old A380's getting munched up and 727's staggering along.
To my knowledge only one company has been willing to give a retired A380 a real chance at a second life and even they eventually returned it. If a heavily discounted secondhand A380 cannot make a profit as a Hajj shuttle, humanitarian evacuator, and PPE shipper then scrapping may be the only option.

The 380 was unfortunately not designed to be a very good or efficient freighter. The 350 OTOH is potentially excellent.
IIRC the initial consideration of a freighter version was scrapped very early in the design process. As a result even a potential conversion process for the secondary market was deemed unworkable.

I reckon when things get moving again, our hubs to Europe and even the USA will likely be Chinese as the three or so big Chinese airlines capture our travel dollars.
Any particular reason why? I've yet to see a compelling inducement to ride any of the Chinese airlines. Poor reviews, clumsy connections, indifferent service, etc.
 
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