SFGate: Father of 747 Sees Big Things for New Jet

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Wednesday, December 14, 2005 (AP)
Father of 747 Sees Big Things for New Jet
By ELIZABETH M. GILLESPIE, AP Business Writer


   (12-14) 03:39 PST Everett, Wash. (AP) --

   Decades after he engineered Boeing Co.'s original jumbo jet, the father =
of
the storied 747 said Tuesday that he expects big things from the latest
version of the double-decker behemoth.

   Speaking to some 2,000 employees gathered for a celebration at the
assembly plant in this city north of Seattle, Joe Sutter noted that the
current version of the plane, the 747-400, has been the hottest seller of
any 747 model yet.

   The company has sold more than 700 of them since 1985, according to its
online database of orders and deliveries.

   "I predict the 747-8 will match that market and might even surprise the
marketeers," said Sutter, who retired in 1986 after 40 years at Boeing and
now works as a consultant to the company.

   Boeing announced last month that it was launching the 747-8, a bigger,
more fuel-efficient version of the four-engine widebody plane. It's
designed to compete with rival Airbus SAS' A380 superjumbo, which will
overtake the 747 as the world's largest commercial jet when it enters
service next year.

   So far, Boeing has won orders only for the freighter version of the 747-=
8,
which will be about 18 feet longer than the current freighter model.

   The passenger version will seat 450 people in a standard three-class
configuration, up from 416 in the current model, and will feature a
redesigned interior. It will be nearly 12 feet longer than the current
747, and will be capable of flying 9,200 miles.

   Both versions of the current 747 are nearly 232 feet long. The A380 is
about 240 feet long and will carry about 550 passengers in three classes
or 800 passengers in a single class. It, too, will be capable of flying
about 9,200 miles.

   Jeff Peace, vice president and general manager of the 747 program, said
Boeing has marketed the 747-8 to several interested airlines and expects
an order for a passenger version of the plane sometime next year.

   Sutter, 84, recalled the early days of the 747 program, when his wife
would dread going to the grocery or playing bridge with her friends,
because people would ask her what her husband was thinking, designing such
an enormous plane.

   "The question, 'Will this thing ever fly?' was actually asked," Sutter
said, drawing chuckles from the crowd. "The market people in New York
thought it might be a white elephant, and people were predicting that 200
of these airplanes would be the maximum market. ... Those 200 airplanes
have now stretched out to 1,400 airplanes, and all of the airplanes that
were being developed at the same time as the 747 have disappeared."

   Industry analysts have predicted that the 747-8 will steal potential A380
customers away from Airbus, based in Toulouse, France, and owned mostly by
European Aeronautic Defense & Space Co.

   In a recent interview, Airbus spokesman Clay McConnell said the company
remains confident that it will win at least half of the market's jumbo jet
orders over the next 20 years.

   "This is the sixth derivative of the 747. It's a plane that can be offer=
ed
out there at a relatively low cost — smart and entirely predictable
move on their part. We still think we have a better product," McConnell
said.

   Kourosh Hadi, a chief product development engineer, said designs for the
747-8 will be finalized by 2007. Boeing will begin building the plane in
2008, run the first test flight in early 2009 and deliver the first plane
in September of that year.

   ___

   On the Net:

   www.boeing.com/commercial/747family/index.html -------------------------=
---------------------------------------------
Copyright 2005 AP

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