Monday 20 June 2011

Aerospace 1 - Bombardier CSeries

My profile indicates that aerospace is a favorite subject of mine and, therefore, during this week of the Paris Air Show, it seems quite natural to write on this subject.

As we struggle to emerge from the recent recession, the aircraft industry is very cautious about predictions that attempt to balance future airline quantity requirements with related research into improving usage costs. Analysts predict that airlines will need $4 trillion worth of new aircraft during the next 20 years and, although there is an emphasis on eco-friendly aircraft, airlines focus on the financial bottom line. Thus, the two giants of the aircraft industry, Airbus and Boeing, should be concerned about the quiet ascendance of Bombardier into third place.

I have always been impressed by Bombardier’s innovation since visiting their early manufacturing facility at Cartierville in Montreal in the 1980’s (Originally, a small airfield used by Canadair). Their use of giant milling machines to produce fuselage side panels for the Challenger which did not require the conventional ribs and framing and, thus, reducing weight, together with laminar-flow wing surfaces for improved aerodynamics, was something that, being a sailplane pilot, impressed me quite a lot.

Thirty years of quiet innovation has brought Bombardier into serious competition with Airbus and Boeing, and the new CSeries aircraft is, in my opinion, bound to be a success. Not only is its composite airframe more advanced in design, but the new geared turbofan engine designed by Pratt & Whitney is causing the competition to swiftly play ‘catch up’. Airbus developing the new-engined A320neo compromise, and Boeing considering a whole new B-737 replacement (The new engine seems too large for the existing wing-to-ground clearance). Thus, it will be difficult for both companies to deliver ahead of the CSeries.

Finally, it is delightful to read that, on the first day, Bombardier has disclosed firm orders for ten of the CSeries at the Paris Air Show, with options for a further six. It is also noteworthy that Qatar Airlines CEO Akbar Al Baker, said, when asked whether he was considering another jet of similar size “The CSeries is a class above others in that category”.

It will be inspiring to dream of the industry’s ‘Big Three’.

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