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Cargo Professionals: Please Compare & Contrast B747 vs. A380

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JimNtexas

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 1, 2001
Posts
1,590
Just a question from the peanut gallery for cargo professionals.

From an operational point of view what are the differences between a new B747 freighter and a new A380 freighter?

I am wondering about things like useful load, cargo volume, and loading and unloading issues.

What factors would make a cargo operator choose one or the other if they were in the market for a new freighter?

I'm less interested in questions concerning fair or unfair
subsidies and more in the long term operational issues andassociated costs that
come with these airplanes.

Note: I'm not a student writing a paper, I'm just curious about the operation of these behemoths.

Even though this post is on the interview side, I am posting under
the authority of the "general issues" note on the
forum main page.
 
You can buy a 747-200 for less money than the value of the frieght you would haul on a average run. Or you can spend hundreds of millions of dollars on a new aircraft with unproven technology. either way you will only be able to charge a little more per mile for the airbus than the boeing but you will have a huge monthly payment on the airframe. But what do I know I just drive um! I'm not a bean counter.
TheDogsBollocks said:
One's bigger than the other!
 
the A380 can haul twice as much as an MD-10. and that would be more freight than the 747. so therefore more $$ will be generated per flight. and possibly this could offset the higher monthly payment on the airframe (an unfavorable attribute as mentioned above.) in the long run it could be cheaper....and imagine how profitable one would be when its paid off! oh yea....itll go almost 1000 miles farther.
 
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The 747 has been flying for 35 years and go on flying for 75+ more years.
The A380???????????????????????????and???????????????????????????????.

The 747 can fly into 285 airports world wide.
The A380 can fly into 29 airports by 2009.

No modifications needed at airports for the upcoming 747-Advance.
Bah-Zillions to modify the other 256 airports world wide that the A380 can't go to.

Number of 747's built: Over 1400
Number of A380 built: 1 (Test Aircraft)

Where is the A380 going to land in the event of an emergency if not close to the 29 airports it can land at by 2009?

A380 looks wrong so it will fly wrong.:p

A380 has a weight problem.

The 747 frieghter can load and carry larger single piece frieght then the A380.
 
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JimNtexas said:
Just a question from the peanut gallery for cargo professionals.

From an operational point of view what are the differences between a new B747 freighter and a new A380 freighter?

I am wondering about things like useful load, cargo volume, and loading and unloading issues.

What factors would make a cargo operator choose one or the other if they were in the market for a new freighter?

There's a plethora of articles out there describing the capabilities of the A380. Google and have fun. Here's one that happens to show a side-by-side comparison of the A380 and the 747.

A380 Makes Massive Debut

The A380F will carry more freight for a longer distance at a lower price than the 747F. In many of the airports where we operate, we are limited by the number of slots. We can only put one airplane in each slot, whether it's a Cessna 152, a Boeing 727, a Douglas DC-10, a McDonnell-Douglas MD-11, a Boeing 747, or an Airbus A380.

The A380 will get more freight to that slot. Period.


Whale Rider said:
The 747 frieghter can load and carry larger single piece frieght then the A380.

True. And it does a fine job serving that niche of the market. The far greater market, though, involves freight that fits standard sized containers. Those containers roll directly off of A300s and 727s and semi-trailers onto MD-11's and A380s. Special containers to take advantage of the peculiar dimensions of the 747 would involve loading and unloading of those containers each time the freight moved to or from the 747. Time and money lost.

If all we needed was something to haul BIG freight, we'd be paying Antonov to build us a fleet of An-225s. So far, the market barely supports the existence of even one of those.
 
TonyC said:
There's a plethora of articles out there describing the capabilities of the A380. Google and have fun. Here's one that happens to show a side-by-side comparison of the A380 and the 747.
TonyC said:
A380 Makes Massive Debut

The A380F will carry more freight for a longer distance at a lower price than the 747F. In many of the airports where we operate, we are limited by the number of slots. We can only put one airplane in each slot, whether it's a Cessna 152, a Boeing 727, a Douglas DC-10, a McDonnell-Douglas MD-11, a Boeing 747, or an Airbus A380.

The A380 will get more freight to that slot. Period.


I don't dispute that the A380 can carry more frieght than the 747 or go further. But to where? 29 airports by 2009 worldwide?? Now you have to have more smaller planes distribute that frieght from those 29 to go to airports where the 747 would go direct. Not to mention both pax and frieght A380's will all be going to those same airports creating a bigger mess than its suppose to clean up.

Hub and spoke is dying, point-to-point is the way to go as Boeing has been saying all along.
 
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Whale Rider said:
I don't dispute that the A380 can carry more frieght than the 747 or go further. But to where? 29 airports by 2009 worldwide?? Now you have to have more planes distribute that frieght from those 29 to go to airports where the 747 would go direct. Not to mention both pax and frieght A380's will all be going to those same airports creating a bigger mess than its suppose to clean up.

Creating a bigger mess? Cummon... How would an A380 create a bigger mess than a 747?

We have several city pairs between which we operate 2 MD-11's daily. A single A380 will replace them both. We have several routes that require stops to cross the ocean. The A380 will skip the stops.

It's not like A380s are going to go to airports that have never had airplanes before.

It's a growing industry - - grow with it, or get left behind. :)
 
TonyC said:
Creating a bigger mess? Cummon... How would an A380 create a bigger mess than a 747?
TonyC said:
We have several city pairs between which we operate 2 MD-11's daily. A single A380 will replace them both. We have several routes that require stops to cross the ocean. The A380 will skip the stops.

It's not like A380s are going to go to airports that have never had airplanes before.

It's a growing industry - - grow with it, or get left behind. :)


With only 29 airports to go to it can't do anything else but skip airports.:)
 
Whale Rider said:
With only 29 airports to go to it can't do anything else but skip airports.:)

Although HNL will be equipped, it'll probably just be a divert alternate now. :)
 

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