Airbus A300B2 - The first production version. Powered by General Electric CF6 or Pratt & Whitney JT9D
engines (the same engines that powered the Boeing 747–100, "the
original jumbo jet") of between 227 and 236 kN thrust, it entered
service with Air France in May 1974. The prototype A300B2 made its first
flight on 28 June 1973 and was certificated by the French and German
authorities on 15 March 1974 and FAA approval followed on 30 May 1974.
The first production A300B2 (A300 number 5) made its maiden flight on 15
April 1974 and was handed over to Air France a few weeks later on 10
May 1974. The A300B2 entered revenue service on 23 May 1974 between
Paris and London.
- A300B2-100: 137 Metric Ton MTOW
- A300B2-200: 142 Metric Ton MTOW, with Krüger flaps, first delivery to South African Airways in 1976
- A300B2-300: increased Maximum Landing Weight/Maximum Zero Fuel Weight
A300B2/B4 - Two 227kN (51,000lb) General Electric CF6-50Cs or 236kN (53,000lb) Pratt & Whitney JT9D-9 turbofans.
A300B2-200 - Typical high speed cruising speed 917km/h (495kt), typical
long range cruising speed 847km/h (457kt). Range with 269 passengers and
reserves 3430km (1850nm). A300B4-200 - Same except range with 269
passengers and reserves 5375km (2900nm), range with max fuel 6300km
(3400nm).
A300B2-200 - Operating empty 85,910kg (189,400lb), max takeoff 142,000kg (313,055lb).
A300B4-200 - Operating empty 88,500kg (195,109lb), max takeoff 165,000kg (363,760lb).
Wing span 44.84m (147ft 1in), length 53.62m (175ft 11in), height 16.53m (54ft 3in). Wing area 260.0m2 (2798.7sq ft).
Flightcrew of two pilots and a flight engineer. Seating for between 220
and 336 single class passengers in main cabin. Typical two class
arrangement for 20 business class and 230 economy class passengers.
Belly cargo compartments can carry 20 LD3 containers.
A300B2 and B4 orders stood at 249 when production was completed in 1984.
Approximately 145 in service in late 2002, including 75 freighters.
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Medium range widebody airliner
The Airbus A300 is significant not only for being a commercial success
in its own right, but for being the first design of Europe's most
successful postwar airliner manufacturer.
Aerospatiale
of France, CASA of Spain and the forerunners of Germany's
DaimlerChrysler Aerospace and British Aerospace formed the Airbus
Industrie consortium in the late 1960s specifically to develop a twin
engined 300 seat widebody `air bus' to fill an identified market gap.
The
original 300 seat airliner design matured into a smaller 250 seater,
the A300 designation gaining a `B' suffix to denote the change. Two
prototype A300B1s were built, the first of these flying from Toulouse,
France on October 28 1972, the second on February 5 the next year. The
General Electric CF6 was the powerplant choice for initial A300s.
Following the prototype A300B1s was the 2.65m (8ft 8in) longer A300B2,
the first production version which first flew in April 1974. The B2
entered service with Air France on May 23 1974.
Subsequent
versions included the B2-200 with Krueger leading edge flaps and
different wheels and brakes; the B2-300 with increased weights for
greater payload and multi stop capability; the B4-100 a longer range
version of the B2 with Krueger flaps; and the increased max takeoff
weight B4-200 which featured reinforced wings and fuselage, improved
landing gear and optional rear cargo bay fuel tank. A small number of
A300C convertibles were also built, these featured a main deck freight
door behind the wing on the left hand side. Late in the A300B4's
production life an optional two crew flightdeck was offered as the
A300-200FF (customers were Garuda, Tunis Air and VASP).
Production of the A300B4 ceased in May 1984, with manufacture switching to the improved A300-600.
Older
A300s are now finding a useful niche as freighters, with a number of
companies, in particular DaimlerChrysler Aerospace Airbus, offering
conversion programs.
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