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Saturday, January 2, 2016

The first pictures of the new Boeing 797 (1,000 passengers) Airliner

Over 40 seats wide with 8 aisles – heck it
would be easy to get lost on a plane with that
many seats and 1,000 passengers and a
crew of 50-ish!

THEY COPIED AND EXPANDED UPON THE DESIGN
AND TECHNIOLOGY OF THE B-2 BOMBER !!!
Get ready it's almost here...
BOEING 797



It can comfortably fly 10,000 Miles (16,000 km)
at Mach 0.88 or 654 mph (1,046 km/h) with 
1,000 passengers on board !
They have kept this secret long enough.
This shot was taken last month!

The BOEING 797


Boeing is preparing this 1,000 passenger Jet Liner that could 
reshape the Air Travel Industry.  Its radical 'Blended Wing 
 Fuselage' design has been developed by Boeing 
in cooperation  with NASA Langley Research Centre.  

The mammoth aircraft  will have a wing span of 265 feet 
(compared to 211 feet for current 747), and it has been 
designed to fit within the newly created Air Terminals 
for the 555 seatAirbus A380, which is 262 feet wide.

The new 797 is Boeing's direct response to the Airbus A380, 
 which has racked up orders for 159 already.  Boeing decided 
to kill its 747X Stretched Super Jumbo in 2003 after little 
interest was shown for it by airline companies, but continued 
to develop its 'Ultimate Airbus Crusher', the 797 at its 
Phantom Works Research Facility inLong Beach, California.
The Airbus A380 had been in the works since 1999 and has 
accumulated $13 Billion in development costswhich 
gives Boeing a huge advantage.  More so because Airbus 
is thus committed to the older style tubular structure for 
 their aircraft for decades to come.




There are several big advantages in the 'Blended Wing 
 Fuselage' design, the most important being the lift to drag 
ratio which is expected to increase by an amazing 50%
resulting in an overall weight reduction of the aircraft 
by 25%, making it an estimated 33% more fuel efficient 
than the A380, and thus making the Airbus's 
$13 Billion Dollar investment look pretty shaky.


'High Airframe Rigidityis another key factor in the 
'Blended Wing Fuselage' technology.  It reduces 
 turbulence and creates less stress on the airframe which 
adds to fuel efficiency, giving the 797 a tremendous 
10,000 Mile range with1,000 passengers on board 
cruising comfortably at Mach 0.88 or 654 MPH
which gives it another advantage over the tube-and-wing 
designed A380's 570 MPH.

The exact date for introduction of the 797 is as yet unclear, 
but the battle lines are clearly drawn in the high-stakes war 
for future civilian aircraft supremacy.
NOW HOW COOL IS THAT?

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