Flight test engineers speak with Airbus Chief Executive Officer Fabrice Bregier after the maiden flight of the Airbus A350-1000 in Colomiers near Toulouse |
Europe’s largest twin-engined passenger jet, the Airbus A350-1000, took to the skies for the first time on Nov. 24, seeking to grab the spotlight from Boeing’s popular 777.
The lightweight carbon-fiber Airbus (AIR.PA), 7 meters (yards) longer and able to carry 40 more people than A350s already in service, began a three-hour debut flight at just after 0940 GMT (4:40 a.m. ET), watched by some of the airline bosses who have invested in the $356 million jet.
The 366-seat A350-1000 was designed to break Boeing’s (BA.N) virtual monopoly in the lucrative “mini-jumbo” segment, typically involving large twin-engined jets carrying 350 people.
It is a larger cousin to the new-generation A350-900, which entered service last year. Both are built from similar advanced materials to Boeing’s mid-sized 787 Dreamliner in a race between planemakers for fuel savings and better passenger comfort.
The aircraft involved in Toulouse debut on Nov. 24 is one of three test planes facing a winter of intensive flight testing before the A350-1000 enters service in the second half of 2017.
Fabrice Bregier, chief executive of Airbus, added he was confident the A350-1000 would be delivered on time next year.