Boeing production in 2024 expected to be less than half of rival Airbus

theguardian.com

10 points by throwup238 a day ago


ggm - a day ago

I enjoyed 2 decades of flying for work. My preference for airbus was founded on experience in air. a 747 top deck is a counter case, that aside (or the nose) I always found airbus both quieter, and nicer to be in.

But, the duopoly had a benefit, it was what australians call in politics "keep the bastards honest" qualities. The price of the product, it's safety record, had the element of "the competition is there" -albiet with some dirty fighting around state support. It amazed me how clearly the word went out to US carriers not to buy airbus (if this is a myth, I apologise. It feels true)

But noise and comfort aside (looking at you 777. those engines) I would say "if its not Boeing I'm not going" has fully inverted. I don't know another professional fly-for-work person who wants to be booked on a Boeing jet.

Let that sink in. It had a catch phrase as the only rational safe choice. and they completely fucked it up.

I have a bias. I've flown Bombardier, Embraer, Comac, De Havilland as well. I just prefer the airbus product, for probably highly irrational reasons, engine noise aside.

I have no idea if the embedded certification stuff is also in airbus, but after the spate of "we did this to avoid having to entirely re-certify pilots even though the flying experience really is different" incidents, it felt like a system of checks and balances, manufacturers actually getting externally reviewed for compliance and fit-for-purpose has gone out the window. I am not saying HAS. I am saying FEELS LIKE.

The "vent battery to outside" and "reboot plane no later than every 51 days" 787 incidents I can laugh off. Kinda.

black_13 - 7 hours ago

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