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Airbus A310

The Airbus A310 is a wide-body aircraft, designed and manufactured by Airbus Industrie, then a consortium of European aerospace manufacturers. Airbus had identified a demand for an aircraft smaller than the A300, the first twin-jet wide-body. On 7 July 1978, the A310 (initially the A300B10) was launched with orders from Swissair and Lufthansa. On 3 April 1982, the first prototype conducted its maiden flight, and the A310 received its type certificate on 11 March 1983.

A310
An A310, landing gear and flaps extended, from Air Transat, formerly one of its largest operators
Role Wide-body aircraft
National origin Multinational[a]
Manufacturer Airbus Industrie
Designer Airbus Industrie
First flight 3 April 1982; 40 years ago (1982-04-03)
Introduction April 1983 with Swissair
Status In limited service
Primary users Mahan Air
ULS Airlines Cargo
Iran Air
Ariana Afghan Airlines
Produced 1981–1998
Number built 255[1]
Developed from Airbus A300
Variants Airbus A310 MRTT
Airbus CC-150 Polaris

Keeping the same eight-abreast cross-section, the A310 is 6.95 m (22.8 ft) shorter than the initial A300 variants, and has a smaller wing, down from 260 to 219 m2 (2,800 to 2,360 sq ft). The A310 introduced a two-crew glass cockpit, later adopted for the A300-600 with a common type rating. It was powered by the same General Electric CF6-80 or Pratt & Whitney JT9D then PW4000 turbofan jet engines. It can seat 220 passengers in two classes, or 240 in all-economy, and has a flying range up to 5,150 nmi (9,540 km). It has overwing exits between the two main front and rear door pairs.

In April 1983, the aircraft entered revenue service with Swissair, and competed with the Boeing 767-200, introduced six months before. Its longer range and ETOPS regulations allowed it to be operated on transatlantic flights. Until the last delivery in June 1998, 255 aircraft were produced, as it was succeeded by the larger Airbus A330-200. It was available as a cargo aircraft version, and was also developed into a military variant, the A310 MRTT multi-role transport, then tanker.

Development

Background

 
The A310 (background) is a shrunken version of the Airbus A300 (foreground)

On 26 September 1967, the British, French, and West German governments signed a memorandum of understanding to commence the joint development of the 300-seat Airbus A300.[2][3][4] This collaborative effort resulted in the production of the consortium's first airliner, known as the Airbus A300. The A300 was a wide-body medium-to-long range passenger airliner; it holds the distinction of being the first twin-engine wide-body aircraft in the world.[5][6][7][8] The design was relatively revolutionary for its time, and featured a number of industry firsts, making the first use of composite materials on a commercial aircraft; during 1977, the A300 became the first ETOPS-compliant aircraft, which was made possible due to its high performance and safety standards.[9] The A300 would be produced in a range of models, and sold relatively well to airlines across the world, eventually reaching a total of 816 delivered aircraft during its production life.[10]

During the development of the earlier A300, a range of different aircraft size and capacity were studied by the consortium; the resulting Airbus A300B proposal was one of the smaller options. When the A300B1 prototypes emerged, a number of airlines issued requests for an aircraft with greater capacity, which resulted in the initial production A300B2 version. As the A300 entered service, it became increasingly apparent that there was also a sizeable market for a smaller aircraft; some operators did not have enough traffic to justify the relatively large A300, while others wanted more frequency or lower aircraft-distance costs at the expense of higher seat-distance cost (specifically Swissair and Lufthansa). At the same time, there was great pressure for Airbus to validate itself beyond the design and manufacture of a single airliner. In response to these desires, Airbus explored the options for producing a smaller derivative of the A300B2.[11]

Design effort

"We showed the world we were not sitting on a nine-day wonder, and that we wanted to realise a family of planes . . . we won over customers we wouldn't otherwise have won . . . now we had two planes that had a great deal in common as far as systems and cockpits were concerned."

Jean Roeder, chief engineer of Airbus, speaking of the A310.[7]

In order to minimise the associated research and development costs for the tentative project, Airbus chose to examine several early design studies performed during the A300 programme. The company ultimately chose to prioritise its focus on one option, which became known as the A300B10MC (standing for Minimum Change). As envisioned, the airliner's capacity was reduced to a maximum of 220 passengers, which was viewed at the time as being a desired capacity amongst many airlines. However, such a design would have resulted in a relatively small fuselage being mated to a comparatively large wing and oversized undercarriage; such an arrangement would have, amongst other things, made the aircraft consume an unnecessarily larger amount of fuel as it carried heavier weight than what was otherwise required.[12]

Another problem for the programme was presented in the form of inflation, the rate of which in the United Kingdom (one of the early members of the Airbus consortium) was around 35 per cent during 1979–80. This factor was responsible for significantly raising the program's development costs and, as a knock-on effect, increase the per-unit cost of the resulting airliner.[12] During the development of the A300, British manufacturer Hawker Siddeley Aviation (HSA) had been appointed as the subcontractor to perform the manufacturing of the wing of the aircraft; shortly afterwards, the British government chose to withdraw from the newly formed venture during 1969. During 1977, HSA subsequently merged with three other British aircraft companies, resulting in the formation of British Aerospace (BAe). By this point in time, the British government had publicly indicated its intentions to rejoin the Airbus programme. During May 1976, the French government entered into a series of discussions on cooperation, during which its representatives stated that the placing of an order by British Airways (BA) was a condition for the re-admission of the United Kingdom into Airbus Industrie as a full partner.[13]

However, both BA and Rolls-Royce had not relinquished their will to collaborate with the Americans in future aircraft endeavours and, in BA's case, procure American aircraft. During the late 1970s, BA sought to purchase two separate types of aircraft in development by American company Boeing, initially known as the 7N7 and 7X7, which would develop into the 757 and 767, the latter of which being an intended rival to the upcoming A310, as well as the existing Boeing 747. Independent of the British government, BAe commenced its own dialogue between itself and American aircraft manufacturers Boeing and McDonnell Douglas, for the purpose of assessing if BAe could participate any of their future programmes, although the company's chairman, Lord Beswick, publicly stated that the overall aim of the firm was to pursue collaboration in Europe.[13] At the 1978 Farnborough Air Show, Eric Varley, the British Secretary of State for Industry, announced that BAe was to rejoin Airbus Industrie and participate as a full partner from 1 January 1979 onwards. Under the negotiated arrangement, BAe would be allocated a 20 per cent shareholding in Airbus Industrie, and would perform "a full part in the development and manufacturing of the A310".[14]

From late 1977, prior to the Varley announcement, BAe had already commenced work on the design of the new wing at its facility in Hatfield. However, due to negotiations with Britain on its return to the Airbus consortium being protracted, alternative options were explored, including potentially manufacturing the wing elsewhere.[7] At the same time as the British efforts, French aerospace firm Aérospatiale, German aircraft manufacturer Messerschmitt-Bölkow-Blohm (MBB), and Dutch-German joint venture company VFW-Fokker were also conducting their individual studies into possible options for the wing of the prospective airliner.[citation needed]

Programme launch

 
The A310-200 prototype, featuring the liveries of Swissair (left) and Lufthansa (right), the first customers.[14]

At the April 1978 Hanover Air Show, Airbus exhibited a model of the proposed A310. Its wing area, at 219.25 m2 (2,360.0 sq ft) was slightly larger than that studied, at 209 m2 (2,250 sq ft); its passenger cabin was twelve frames shorter than the A300,[b] accommodating typical passenger loads of 195 in two-class, or 245 in economy.[14] However, during the next twelve months, almost every aspect was further refined. On 9 June 1978, Swissair and Lufthansa developed a joint specification for the aircraft, and within a month, announced that they would place the launch orders. On 15 March, Swissair became the first airline to place a firm order for the type, announcing that it would acquire ten aircraft, with a further ten under option, to replace its McDonnell Douglas DC-9s on its major intra-European routes. Lufthansa was quick to place a $240 million ten-aircraft order; additional orders from French operator Air France and Spanish airline Iberia shortly followed.[14]

Increasingly strong interest in the tentative airliner, coupled with the recovery of the industry during the late 1970s, contributed to Airbus deciding to put the A310 into production on 7 July 1978.[15] During the latter half of 1978, an order for ten A300s was placed by independent British airline Laker Airways, satisfying Airbus's demand for the placing of a British order for their aircraft.[7] On 1 April 1979, Lufthansa decided to raise its commitment for the type to 25 aircraft, along with 25 options. Two days later, Dutch operator KLM signed its order for ten aircraft and ten options at £238 million.[14][16][17] On 6 July 1979, Air France announced that it had raised its order from four to thirty-five airliners.[citation needed] Other airlines announcing orders for the A310 during 1979 included Martinair, Sabena, and Air Afrique.[16][17]

Initially, a pair of distinct versions of the A310 had been planned by Airbus; the regional A310-100, and the transcontinental A310-200. The A310-100 featured a range of 2,000 nmi (3,700 km; 2,300 mi) with 200 passengers, whilst the A310-200 possessed a higher MTOW and centre section fuel, being able to carry the same load a further 1,000 nmi (1,900 km; 1,200 mi).[18] Basic engines offered for the type included the General Electric CF6-45B2 and Pratt & Whitney JT9D-7R4. At one point, British engine manufacturer Rolls-Royce was openly considering offering an engine for the A310, the Rolls-Royce RB.207, however, it ultimately chose to discard such efforts in favour of a smaller three-spool design, the RB.211.

Entry into service

The range of the A310 exceeds that of the A300 series, with the exception of the A300-600R, which in turn surpasses that of the A310-200. The greater range of the A310 contributed to the airliner being used extensively by operators on transatlantic routes. The A300 and A310 introduced the concept of commonality: A300-600 and A310 pilots can cross-qualify for the other aircraft with one day of training.[citation needed]

Sales of the A310 continued through the early 1980s. On 3 April 1982, the prototype A310-200 airliner conducted its maiden flight; by this point, the type had accumulated a combined orders and options for 181 aircraft, which had been placed by fifteen airlines worldwide, which was a better start than the original A300. The launch customer of A310, Swissair, became the launch operator in April 1983.[15] Over time, it had become clear that the longer-range series −200 aircraft was the more popular of the two models on offer. During 1979, in response to the lack of demand for the A310-100, Airbus decided to stop offering the lower gross weight model which had been originally proposed for Lufthansa; as a consequence, none of this variant were ultimately manufactured.[16]

Sales and production end

 
In 1988, an A310 was delivered to Interflug: the first Airbus for an Eastern-bloc airline.

During the early 1990s, demand for the aircraft began to slacken; there were no new A310 passenger orders placed during the late 1990s, in part due to the introduction of the newer and more advanced Airbus A330 during this time. As a result, on June 15, 1998, the last delivery of an A310 (msn. 706, reg.UK-31003) was made to Uzbekistan Airways.[19] The A310, along with its A300 stablemate, officially ceased production during July 2007, though an order from Iraqi Airways for five A310s had remained on the books until July 2008. The remaining freighter sales were to be instead fulfilled by the new A330-200F derivative.[20]

The A310 has been commonly marketed as an introduction to wide-body operations for airlines based in developing countries. The airliner was replaced in Airbus' range by the highly successful A330-200, which shares its fuselage cross-section. Between 1983, and the last aircraft produced in 1998, 255 A310s were delivered.[1] The A300 and A310 established Airbus as a competitor to Boeing, and allowed it to go ahead with the more ambitious A320, and A330 / A340 families.[citation needed]

As of July 2017, thirty-seven A310s remain in commercial service; major operators are Air Transat and Mahan Air with nine aircraft each; Fedex Express (six), and seven airlines operating thirteen aircraft between them.[21]

The Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) currently operates a fleet of five Airbus CC-150 Polaris, civilian Airbus A310-300s, originally owned by Wardair, and subsequently Canadian Airlines International, after the airlines merged. The aircraft were then sold to the Canadian government, and have been converted for use as the primary long-distance transport aircraft as part of the Royal Canadian Air Force's fleet of Royal Canadian Air Force VIP aircraft.

Design

 
The A310 has front and rear main doors, and a smaller emergency exit wing door over the wing.
 
2-4-2 economy cabin
 
Two-crew cockpit

The Airbus A310 was a medium- to long-range twin-engined wide-body jet airliner. Initially a derivative of the A300, the aircraft had originally been designated the A300B10. It was essentially a shortened variant of the earlier aircraft; however, there were considerable differences between the two aircraft.[22] Specifically, the fuselage possessed the same cross-section, but being shorter than the A300, it provided capacity for a typical maximum of 200 passengers. The rear fuselage was heavily re-designed, featuring altered tapering, while involved a move aft of the rear bulkhead to create additional capacity; this same design change was later transferred back to later variants of the A300, such as the A300-600 and A330/A340 fuselages.[22] The A310 also had a different emergency exit configuration, consisting of four main doors (two at the front and two at the rear of the aircraft), and two smaller doors over the wings.[citation needed]

The wing of the A310 was redesigned, possessing a reduced span and wing area, and incorporating simpler single-slotted Fowler flaps designed by British Aerospace shortly following its decision to join the Airbus consortium.[22] Other changes to the wing included the elimination of the outer ailerons, which were occasionally referred to by the manufacturer as being "low speed ailerons", and the addition of electrically actuated spoilers. The wing also featured common pylons, which were able to support all types of engines that were offered to customers to power the airliner.[22] From 1985 onwards, the A310-300 introduced wingtip fences which reduced vortex drag and thus improved cruise fuel consumption by over 1.5%.[23] A limited number of alterations were also performed to the airliner's tail unit, such as the adoption of smaller horizontal tail surfaces.[22]

The A310 was furnished with a two-crew glass cockpit configuration as standard, removing the requirement for a flight engineer; Airbus referred to this concept as the Forward-Facing Crew Cockpit.[7] The company had developed the cockpit to significantly enhance the aircraft's man-machine interface, thereby improving operational safety. It was outfitted with an array of six computer-based cathode ray tube (CRT) displays to provide the flight crew with centralised navigational, warning, monitoring, and general flight information, in place of the more traditional analogue instrumentation and dials, which were used in conjunction with a range of modern electronic systems.[7] The same flight deck was incorporated into the A300-600, a move which increased commonality between the two types, and enabled a dual type rating to be achieved, this same approach was later used on many future Airbus aircraft. In addition to the two flying crew, provisions for third and fourth crew seats were present within the flight deck.[7]

The A310 was initially proposed with a choice of three engines: the General Electric CF6-80A1, the Pratt & Whitney JT9D-7R4D1, and the Rolls-Royce RB211-524.[24] The A310 was launched with the Pratt & Whitney JT9D-7R4D1 or the General Electric CF6-80A3. Subsequently available were the 53,500 lbf (238 kN) CF6-80C2A2 or the 52,000 lbf (230 kN)PW4152. From late 1991 the higher thrust 59,000 lbf (260 kN) CF6-80C2A8 or 56,000 lbf (250 kN)PW4156A became available.[25]

The A310 was equipped with a modified undercarriage, derived from the A300; the landing gear were outfitted with carbon brakes, which were fitted as standard.[22] The structure of the airliner featured a high level of composite materials throughout both primary and secondary structures, increased beyond that of the earlier A300. The A310 is outfitted with integrated drive electrical generators along with auxiliary power unit, which were improved versions of those used on the A300.[22]

Variants

 
FedEx Express A310-200F without wingtip fences
 
Air Transat A310-300 with wingtip fences

The A310 is available in two basic versions, the medium range −200 and the longer range −300. The first version of the aircraft to be developed was the −200, but this was later joined by the −300, which then became the standard production version of the aircraft. The short range −100 variant was never developed due to low demand.

A310-200
The first A310, the 162nd Airbus off the production line, made its maiden flight on 3 April 1982 powered by the earlier Pratt & Whitney JT9D-7R4D1 engines. The −200 entered service with Swissair and Lufthansa a year later. Late series −200 also featured wing fences identical to those of the −300. The first three A310s were initially fitted with outboard ailerons; they were later removed once testing showed them to be unnecessary.[26] Production of the A310-200 ended in 1988.
A310-200C
A convertible version, the seats can be removed and cargo placed on the main deck, the A310-200C entered service with Martinair on 29 November 1984.[27]
A310-200F
The freight version of the A310-200 was available as a new build, or as a conversion of existing wide-bodied aircraft. The A310-200F freighter can carry 39 t (86,000 lb) of freight for 5,950 km (3,210 nmi).[28] No production freighters of the A310-200F were produced. The converted Airbus A310-200F entered service with FedEx Express in 1994.[29]
A310-300
First flown on 8 July 1985, the −300 is dimensionally identical to the −200, although it provides an increased Maximum Take-Off Weight (MTOW) and an increase in range, provided by additional centre and horizontal stabiliser (trim-tank) fuel tanks. This model also introduced wingtip fences to improve aerodynamic efficiency, a feature that has since been retrofitted to some −200s. The aircraft entered service in 1986 with Swissair. The A310-300 incorporates a computerised fuel distribution system which allows it to be trimmed in flight, optimising the centre of gravity by shuttling up to 5,000 kg (11,000 lb) of fuel in and out of the horizontal stabiliser tank, controlled by the Centre of Gravity Control Computer.
A310-300C
A convertible passenger/cargo version, the seats can be removed and cargo placed on the main deck.
A310-300F
The freight version of the A310-300F. Operators such as FedEx Express acquired modified ex-passenger A310s, usually starting with the −300 version. No production freighters of the A310-300F were produced.
A310 MRT/MRTT
The A310 has been operated by several air forces as a pure transport, the A310-300 MRT Multi-Role Transport. However several have now been converted to the A310 MRTT Multi-Role Tanker Transport configuration by EADS, providing an air-to-air refuelling capability. At least six have been completed; four by the German Air Force (Luftwaffe), and two by the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF). Deliveries began in 2004. Three were converted at EADS EFW in Dresden, Germany; the other three at Lufthansa Technik in Hamburg, Germany.
A310 Zero G
One A310 airframe became a scientific research laboratory dedicated to weightlessness. This reduced-gravity aircraft is used to realise parabolas, allowing to perform twenty-two seconds of weightlessness. Operated by Novespace [fr], subsidiary of CNES, French Space Agency, A310 Zero G is based at Bordeaux Mérignac airport.[30] It also performs scientific flights and movie special effects, such as for The Mummy (2017).[31]

Operators

As of June 2022, there were 31 A310 family aircraft in service.[32]

Civilian operators

 
Mahan Air A310-300

As of June 2022, the following airlines are the known remaining civilian operators of A310 aircraft:[32]

Passenger
Cargo

Military operators

 

The A310 is also used by the armed forces of the following countries:[citation needed]

Deliveries

By the end of production, a total of 255 A310s had been ordered and delivered.[1]

total 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983
deliveries 255 1 2 2 2 2 22 24 19 18 23 28 21 19 26 29 17

Accidents and incidents

As of September 2015 there have been 12 hull-loss accidents involving A310s with a total of 825 fatalities; and 9 hijackings with a total of five fatalities.[37]

Accidents with fatalities

  • 31 July 1992: Thai Airways International Flight 311, an A310-304 carrying 99 passengers and 14 crew, crashed on approach to Tribhuvan International Airport, Kathmandu. All 113 on board were killed.
  • 23 March 1994: Aeroflot Flight 593, an A310-304 carrying 63 passengers and 12 crew, crashed in Siberia after the pilot let his son sit at the controls and the autopilot partially disconnected. All 75 on board were killed.
  • 31 March 1995: TAROM Flight 371, an A310-324 carrying 49 passengers and 11 crew, crashed near Otopeni International Airport, Bucharest, Romania after the throttle on the starboard engine jammed with no subsequent resolution by the pilots. All 60 on board were killed.
  • 11 December 1998: Thai Airways International Flight 261 crashed near Surat Thani Airport in Thailand. There were 101 fatalities and 45 survived with serious injuries.
  • 30 January 2000: Kenya Airways Flight 431, an A310-300 crashed in the Atlantic Ocean shortly after takeoff from Abidjan in Côte d'Ivoire. 169 passengers and crew were killed and 10 passengers survived with serious injuries. This is the deadliest aviation accident involving the Airbus A310.[38]
  • 9 July 2006: S7 Airlines Flight 778, an Airbus A310-324 from Moscow carrying 196 passengers and eight crew, overshot the runway at Irkutsk in Siberia, plowed through a concrete barrier and caught fire as it crashed into buildings. Reports said that 70 of the 204 on board survived, with 12 missing.[39] Since the accident, casualty figures have fluctuated, in part due to three people boarding the aircraft who were not on the passenger manifest, and some survivors walking home after being assumed trapped in the wreckage.[40]
  • 10 June 2008: Sudan Airways Flight 109, an A310-324 from Amman, Jordan carrying 203 passengers and 11 crew, ran off the runway while landing at Khartoum International Airport during bad weather. Soon afterward a fire started in the aircraft's right wing area. A total of 30 people were killed.[41]
  • 30 June 2009, Yemenia Flight 626, an A310-324 flying from Sana'a, Yemen, to Moroni, Comoros crashed into the Indian Ocean shortly before reaching its destination. The aircraft was carrying 153 passengers and crew; there was one survivor, a 14-year-old girl.[42][43]
  • On 24 December 2015, at 08:35, an Airbus A310-304F cargo aircraft, operated by Congolese company Services Air on a domestic flight, ran off the end of the runway and crashed in a residential area while landing at Mbuji-Mayi Airport in the city of Mbuji-Mayi, the capital of Kasai-Oriental province in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Eight people were killed and nine others were injured.

Hijackings

  • 26 March 1991: Singapore Airlines Flight 117, registration 9V-STP, carrying 123 passengers and crew, was hijacked by 4 male Pakistanis en route to Singapore. The aircraft landed at Singapore safely where the Singapore Armed Forces Commando Formation stormed it and killed the hijackers. None of the hostages were hurt.
  • 4 September 1992: Vietnam Airlines Flight 850, registration LZ-JXB, leased from Jes Air, with 127 occupants on board en route from Bangkok to Ho Chi Minh City, hijacked by Ly Tong, a former pilot in the Republic of Vietnam Air Force. He then dropped anti-communist leaflets over Ho Chi Minh City before parachuting out. Vietnamese security forces later arrested him on the ground. The aircraft landed safely, and no one on board was injured. Tong was incarcerated in a Hanoi prison, where he remained until 1998.[44]
  • On 11 February 1993, Lufthansa Flight 592, registration D-AIDM from Frankfurt to Addis Ababa via Cairo with 94 passengers and 10 crew members was hijacked during the first leg by 20-year-old Nebiu Zewolde Demeke, who forced the pilots to divert to the United States, with the intent of securing the right of asylum there. Demeke, who had been on the flight to be deported back to his native Ethiopia, surrendered to authorities upon arrival at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York City. No passengers or crew members were harmed during the 12-hour ordeal.[45]
  • 25 October 1993, a Nigeria Airways's Airbus A310-200, was hijacked en route from Lagos to Abuja. The hijackers demanded the resignation of Nigeria's government and to be flown to Frankfurt. The aircraft was denied permission to land in N'Djamena, and was diverted to the Niamey Airport for refuelling. It was stormed by Niger National Gendarmerie four days later; the co-pilot was killed during the operation.

Other incidents

  • On 24 September 1994, TAROM Flight 381, an Airbus A310 registered YR-LCA flying from Bucharest to Paris Orly, went into a sudden and uncommanded nose-up position and stalled. The crew attempted to countermand the aircraft's flight control system but were unable to get the nose down while remaining on course. Witnesses saw the aircraft climb with an extreme nose-up attitude, then bank sharply left, then right, then fall into a steep dive. Only when the dive produced additional speed was the crew able to recover steady flight. An investigation found that an overshoot of flap placard speed during the approach, incorrectly commanded by the captain, caused a mode transition to flight level change. The auto-throttles increased power and trim went full nose-up as a result. The crew's attempt at commanding the nose-down elevator could not counteract the effect of stabilizer nose-up trim, and the resulting dive brought the aircraft from a height of 4,100 feet (1,200 m) at the time of the stall to 800 feet (240 m) when the crew was able to recover command. The aircraft landed safely after a second approach. There were 186 people on board.[46]
  • 12 July 2000: Hapag-Lloyd Flight 3378, an A310-304, crashed during an emergency landing near Vienna in Austria due to fuel exhaustion. All 142 passengers and 8 crew on board survived.
  • 6 March 2005: Air Transat Flight 961, an Airbus A310-308, en route from Cuba to Quebec City with nine crew and 261 passengers on board, experienced a structural failure in which the rudder detached in flight. The aircraft returned to Varadero, Cuba, where they made a safe landing. The crew made no unusual rudder inputs during the flight nor was the rudder being manipulated when it failed; there was no obvious fault in the rudder or yaw-damper system. Subsequent investigation determined that Airbus' inspection procedure for the composite rudder was inadequate; inspection procedures for composite structures on airliners were changed following this accident.
  • 23 February 2006: A Mahan Air Airbus A310 operating a flight from Tehran, Iran, was involved in a serious incident while on approach to Birmingham International Airport. The aircraft descended to the published minimum descent altitude of 740 feet (230 m) despite still being 11 nautical miles (20 km) from the runway threshold. At a point 6 nm from the runway the aircraft had descended to an altitude of 660 feet (200 m), which was 164 feet (50 m) above ground level. Having noticed the descent profile, Birmingham air traffic control issued an immediate climb instruction to the aircraft, however, the crew had already commenced a missed approach, having received a GPWS alert. The aircraft was radar vectored for a second approach during which the flight crew again initiated an early descent. On this occasion, the radar controller instructed the crew to maintain their altitude and the crew completed the approach to a safe landing. The accident investigation determined that the primary cause was the use of the incorrect DME for the approach, combined with a substantial breakdown in the Crew Resource Management. Three safety recommendations were made.[47]
  • 12 March 2007: Biman Bangladesh Airlines Flight 006, an A310-325 carrying 236 passengers and crew, suffered a collapsed nose gear during its takeoff run. Fourteen people suffered minor injuries in the accident at Dubai International Airport. The aircraft came to rest at the end of the runway and was evacuated, but blocked the only active runway and forced the airport to close for nearly eight hours. The aircraft was written off.[48]
  • 24 December 2015: A Mahan Air Airbus A310-300 operating a flight from Tehran (Iran) to Istanbul (Turkey) failed to stop at its stand at Istanbul's Ataturk Airport, instead colliding with a concrete barrier and bus. The aircraft, registration EP-MNP, sustained substantial damage but was repaired and returned to service a year later.[49]

Preserved aircraft

 
The first Airbus delivered in China was this A310, to China Eastern Airlines in 1985, retired in 2006 and displayed at the Beijing Civil Aviation Museum.

In popular culture

An Airbus A310-300 of the fictional Belarus Airways appeared in the 2013 movie World War Z. The plane was leased from HiFly, a Portuguese airline, with registration number CS-TEX.

Specifications

A310 Airplane Characteristics[50]
Model A310-200 A310-300
Cockpit Crew Two
2-class 220 passengers (20F + 200Y)[51]
1-class 237Y 8-abreast 243Y 8-abreast / 265Y 9-abreast
Exit limit 275 passengers[52]
Lower deck 14 LD3 containers
Length 46.66 m (153 ft 1 in)
Height 15.8 m (51 ft 10 in) fuselage
Wing 43.9 m (144 ft) span, 219 m2 (2,360 sq ft) area, 28 ° sweep[53] 8.8 aspect ratio
Cross section 5.64 m (18 ft 6 in)
Maximum Payload 32,834 kg (72,387 lb) 37,293 kg (82,217 lb)
MTOW 144,000 kg (317,466 lb) 164,000 kg (361,558 lb)
OEW JT9D: 77.4 t (171,000 lb), PW4000/CF6-80: 79.2 t (175,000 lb)
Max fuel 47,940 kg / 105 689 lb
Engines JT9D-7R4 / GE CF6-80 JT9D-7R4E1 / PW4000 / CF6-80C2
Thrust (×2) 203.8–257.4 kN (45,800–57,900 lbf)[52]
speed Mach 0.8 (459 kn; 850 km/h) cruise,[54] Mach 0.84 (482 kn; 892 km/h) MMO[52]
Ceiling 41,100 ft (12,527 m)[52]
Range 3,500 nmi (6,500 km) [c] 5,150 nmi (9,540 km) [d]

Aircraft model designations

Type Certificate Data Sheet[52]
Model Certification Date Engines
A310-203 11 March 1983 GE CF6-80A3
A310-203C 27 November 1984 GE CF6-80A3
A310-204 23 April 1986 GE CF6-80C2A2
A310-221 11 March 1983 PW JT9D-7R4D1
A310-222 22 September 1983 PW JT9D-7R4E1
A310-304 11 March 1986 GE CF6-80C2A2
A310-308 5 June 1991 GE CF6-80C2A8/A2
A310-322 5 December 1985 PW JT9D-7R4E1
A310-324 27 May 1987 PW4152
A310-325 6 March 1992 PW4156A

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b c . Airbus SAS. January 2007. Archived from the original on 7 February 2007.
  2. ^ Simons 2014, p. 38.
  3. ^ Endres 2004, p. 43.
  4. ^ Pitt and Norsworthy 2012, p. 57.
  5. ^ "Airbus at thirty - family planning". Flight International. 2 January 2001.
  6. ^ Senguttuvan 2006, p. 34.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g . Airbus. Archived from the original on 25 September 2015.
  8. ^ Pitt and Norsworthy 2012, pp. 57, 60.
  9. ^ Simons 2014, p. 40.
  10. ^ . Airbus S.A.S. January 2008. Archived from the original (Microsoft Excel) on 21 December 2008.
  11. ^ Gunston 2009, p. 85.
  12. ^ a b Gunston 2009, p. 86.
  13. ^ a b Gunston 2009, p. 87.
  14. ^ a b c d e Gunston 2009, p. 89.
  15. ^ a b Norris, Guy and Mark Wagner (1999). Airbus. St. Paul, Minnesota: MBI Publishing, 1999. ISBN 0-7603-0677-X.
  16. ^ a b c Flight International 27 October 1979 edition.
  17. ^ a b Airclaims Jet Programs 1995.
  18. ^ Gunston 2009, p. 91.
  19. ^ "Mahan Air EP-MED (Airbus A310 - MSN 706) (Ex EY-704 UK31003 ) | Airfleets aviation". Retrieved 11 March 2023.
  20. ^ "Airbus aims to fill freighter void with A330 derivative". Flight International. 14 March 2006.
  21. ^ "World Census 2017". FlightGlobal. Retrieved 28 June 2018.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g "A310 Europe builds on Airbus success." Flight International, 27 February 1982.
  23. ^ Airbus The European Triumph,Bill Gunston 1988,ISBN 0 85045 820 X,p.113
  24. ^ Airbus The European Triumph,Bill Gunston 1988,ISBN 0 85045 820 X, p.97
  25. ^ Jane's All The World's Aircraft 1992-93,ISBN 0 7106 0987 6,p.93
  26. ^ Learmount, David (3 July 1982). "A310 keeps beating its targets". Flight International: 34.
  27. ^ "AIRBUS A310". janes.migavia.com.
  28. ^ "A310-200F freight version". Aerospace Technology. Verdict Media Limited. Retrieved 6 November 2011.
  29. ^ "Airbus A310-200F". Aerospace Technology.
  30. ^ "Zero-G flying means high stress for an old A310". FlightGlobal. 23 March 2015.
  31. ^ "Tom Cruise en apesanteur dans l'A310 ZERO-G de Novespace" [Tom Cruise in zero gravity in the A310 ZERO-G of Novespace]. AeroNewsTV (in French). Retrieved 10 March 2018.
  32. ^ a b c d e f g "Orders & Deliveries". Airbus. 30 June 2022. from the original on 10 February 2019. Retrieved 9 July 2022.
  33. ^ "Global Airline Guide 2019 (part one)". Airliner World: 4. October 2019.
  34. ^ "Iran Air fleet details and history". PlaneSpotters. 11 January 2020.
  35. ^ "Mahan fleet". Mahan Air. Retrieved 26 November 2019.
  36. ^ "Royal Jordanian fleet details and history". PlaneSpotters.
  37. ^ "Airbus A310." Aviation Safety Net. Retrieved: 30 September 2015.
  38. ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Airbus A310-304 5Y-BEN Abidjan-Felix Houphouet Boigny Airport (ABJ)". aviation-safety. Retrieved 20 March 2019.
  39. ^ "Russian plane's 'brakes failed'." BBC News, 9 July 2006. Retrieved: 10 April 2007.
  40. ^ "Russian plane lost control upon landing." The New York Times, 10 July 2006. Retrieved: 11 April 2007.
  41. ^ "30 people killed in Sudan Airways crash – statement." Sudan Tribune, 11 June 2008. Retrieved: 12 November 2010.
  42. ^ "Yemenia Airbus black box found." stuff.co. Retrieved: 15 April 2015.
  43. ^ Amir, Ahmed, Andrew Cawthorne and Jon Hemming. "Yemeni plane crashes in Comoros, 150 on board." Reuters, 29 June 2009. Retrieved: 30 June 2009.
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Bibliography

  • Endres, Günter (Spring 2004). "Classic Airliner: Airbus A300". Flightpath: The International Journal of Commercial Aviation. Norwalk, Connecticut, USA: AIRtime Publishing (Volume 3): 36–85. ISBN 1-880588-73-0.
  • Gunston, Bill (February 2010). Airbus: The Complete Story. Sparkford, Yeovil, Somerset, UK: Haynes Publishing, 2009. ISBN 978-1-84425-585-6.
  • Norris, Guy and Mark Wagner (1999). Airbus. St. Paul, Minnesota: MBI Publishing, 1999. ISBN 0-7603-0677-X.
  • Pitt, Ivan L. and John Randolph Norsworthy. Economics of the U.S. Commercial Airline Industry: Productivity, Technology and Deregulation. "Springer", 2012. ISBN 1-4615-5031-9.
  • Senguttuvan, P. S. Fundamentals of Air Transport Management. "Excel Books India", 2006. ISBN 81-7446-459-X.
  • Simons, Graham. The Airbus A380: A History. "Pen and Sword", 2014. ISBN 1-78303-041-0.
  • "World Airliner Census". Flight International, Volume 184, Number 5403, 13–19 August 2013, pp. 40–58.

Notes

  1. ^ Final assembly in France
  2. ^ The fuselage is 14 frames (7.42m) shorter than the A300 fuselage, but the rear bulkhead was set 2 frames farther into the tailcone, so that only 12 frames of seating capacity were lost in the shortened version.
  3. ^ ISA, LRC, JT9D, 237 passengers
  4. ^ ISA, LRC, 240 passengers

External links

airbus, a310, a310, redirects, here, other, uses, a310, disambiguation, wide, body, aircraft, designed, manufactured, airbus, industrie, then, consortium, european, aerospace, manufacturers, airbus, identified, demand, aircraft, smaller, than, a300, first, twi. A310 redirects here For other uses see A310 disambiguation The Airbus A310 is a wide body aircraft designed and manufactured by Airbus Industrie then a consortium of European aerospace manufacturers Airbus had identified a demand for an aircraft smaller than the A300 the first twin jet wide body On 7 July 1978 the A310 initially the A300B10 was launched with orders from Swissair and Lufthansa On 3 April 1982 the first prototype conducted its maiden flight and the A310 received its type certificate on 11 March 1983 A310An A310 landing gear and flaps extended from Air Transat formerly one of its largest operatorsRole Wide body aircraftNational origin Multinational a Manufacturer Airbus IndustrieDesigner Airbus IndustrieFirst flight 3 April 1982 40 years ago 1982 04 03 Introduction April 1983 with SwissairStatus In limited servicePrimary users Mahan AirULS Airlines CargoIran AirAriana Afghan AirlinesProduced 1981 1998Number built 255 1 Developed from Airbus A300Variants Airbus A310 MRTTAirbus CC 150 PolarisKeeping the same eight abreast cross section the A310 is 6 95 m 22 8 ft shorter than the initial A300 variants and has a smaller wing down from 260 to 219 m2 2 800 to 2 360 sq ft The A310 introduced a two crew glass cockpit later adopted for the A300 600 with a common type rating It was powered by the same General Electric CF6 80 or Pratt amp Whitney JT9D then PW4000 turbofan jet engines It can seat 220 passengers in two classes or 240 in all economy and has a flying range up to 5 150 nmi 9 540 km It has overwing exits between the two main front and rear door pairs In April 1983 the aircraft entered revenue service with Swissair and competed with the Boeing 767 200 introduced six months before Its longer range and ETOPS regulations allowed it to be operated on transatlantic flights Until the last delivery in June 1998 255 aircraft were produced as it was succeeded by the larger Airbus A330 200 It was available as a cargo aircraft version and was also developed into a military variant the A310 MRTT multi role transport then tanker Contents 1 Development 1 1 Background 1 2 Design effort 1 3 Programme launch 1 4 Entry into service 1 5 Sales and production end 2 Design 3 Variants 4 Operators 4 1 Civilian operators 4 2 Military operators 4 3 Deliveries 5 Accidents and incidents 5 1 Accidents with fatalities 5 2 Hijackings 5 3 Other incidents 6 Preserved aircraft 7 In popular culture 8 Specifications 8 1 Aircraft model designations 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Bibliography 10 3 Notes 11 External linksDevelopment EditBackground Edit The A310 background is a shrunken version of the Airbus A300 foreground On 26 September 1967 the British French and West German governments signed a memorandum of understanding to commence the joint development of the 300 seat Airbus A300 2 3 4 This collaborative effort resulted in the production of the consortium s first airliner known as the Airbus A300 The A300 was a wide body medium to long range passenger airliner it holds the distinction of being the first twin engine wide body aircraft in the world 5 6 7 8 The design was relatively revolutionary for its time and featured a number of industry firsts making the first use of composite materials on a commercial aircraft during 1977 the A300 became the first ETOPS compliant aircraft which was made possible due to its high performance and safety standards 9 The A300 would be produced in a range of models and sold relatively well to airlines across the world eventually reaching a total of 816 delivered aircraft during its production life 10 During the development of the earlier A300 a range of different aircraft size and capacity were studied by the consortium the resulting Airbus A300B proposal was one of the smaller options When the A300B1 prototypes emerged a number of airlines issued requests for an aircraft with greater capacity which resulted in the initial production A300B2 version As the A300 entered service it became increasingly apparent that there was also a sizeable market for a smaller aircraft some operators did not have enough traffic to justify the relatively large A300 while others wanted more frequency or lower aircraft distance costs at the expense of higher seat distance cost specifically Swissair and Lufthansa At the same time there was great pressure for Airbus to validate itself beyond the design and manufacture of a single airliner In response to these desires Airbus explored the options for producing a smaller derivative of the A300B2 11 Design effort Edit We showed the world we were not sitting on a nine day wonder and that we wanted to realise a family of planes we won over customers we wouldn t otherwise have won now we had two planes that had a great deal in common as far as systems and cockpits were concerned Jean Roeder chief engineer of Airbus speaking of the A310 7 In order to minimise the associated research and development costs for the tentative project Airbus chose to examine several early design studies performed during the A300 programme The company ultimately chose to prioritise its focus on one option which became known as the A300B10MC standing for Minimum Change As envisioned the airliner s capacity was reduced to a maximum of 220 passengers which was viewed at the time as being a desired capacity amongst many airlines However such a design would have resulted in a relatively small fuselage being mated to a comparatively large wing and oversized undercarriage such an arrangement would have amongst other things made the aircraft consume an unnecessarily larger amount of fuel as it carried heavier weight than what was otherwise required 12 Another problem for the programme was presented in the form of inflation the rate of which in the United Kingdom one of the early members of the Airbus consortium was around 35 per cent during 1979 80 This factor was responsible for significantly raising the program s development costs and as a knock on effect increase the per unit cost of the resulting airliner 12 During the development of the A300 British manufacturer Hawker Siddeley Aviation HSA had been appointed as the subcontractor to perform the manufacturing of the wing of the aircraft shortly afterwards the British government chose to withdraw from the newly formed venture during 1969 During 1977 HSA subsequently merged with three other British aircraft companies resulting in the formation of British Aerospace BAe By this point in time the British government had publicly indicated its intentions to rejoin the Airbus programme During May 1976 the French government entered into a series of discussions on cooperation during which its representatives stated that the placing of an order by British Airways BA was a condition for the re admission of the United Kingdom into Airbus Industrie as a full partner 13 However both BA and Rolls Royce had not relinquished their will to collaborate with the Americans in future aircraft endeavours and in BA s case procure American aircraft During the late 1970s BA sought to purchase two separate types of aircraft in development by American company Boeing initially known as the 7N7 and 7X7 which would develop into the 757 and 767 the latter of which being an intended rival to the upcoming A310 as well as the existing Boeing 747 Independent of the British government BAe commenced its own dialogue between itself and American aircraft manufacturers Boeing and McDonnell Douglas for the purpose of assessing if BAe could participate any of their future programmes although the company s chairman Lord Beswick publicly stated that the overall aim of the firm was to pursue collaboration in Europe 13 At the 1978 Farnborough Air Show Eric Varley the British Secretary of State for Industry announced that BAe was to rejoin Airbus Industrie and participate as a full partner from 1 January 1979 onwards Under the negotiated arrangement BAe would be allocated a 20 per cent shareholding in Airbus Industrie and would perform a full part in the development and manufacturing of the A310 14 From late 1977 prior to the Varley announcement BAe had already commenced work on the design of the new wing at its facility in Hatfield However due to negotiations with Britain on its return to the Airbus consortium being protracted alternative options were explored including potentially manufacturing the wing elsewhere 7 At the same time as the British efforts French aerospace firm Aerospatiale German aircraft manufacturer Messerschmitt Bolkow Blohm MBB and Dutch German joint venture company VFW Fokker were also conducting their individual studies into possible options for the wing of the prospective airliner citation needed Programme launch Edit The A310 200 prototype featuring the liveries of Swissair left and Lufthansa right the first customers 14 At the April 1978 Hanover Air Show Airbus exhibited a model of the proposed A310 Its wing area at 219 25 m2 2 360 0 sq ft was slightly larger than that studied at 209 m2 2 250 sq ft its passenger cabin was twelve frames shorter than the A300 b accommodating typical passenger loads of 195 in two class or 245 in economy 14 However during the next twelve months almost every aspect was further refined On 9 June 1978 Swissair and Lufthansa developed a joint specification for the aircraft and within a month announced that they would place the launch orders On 15 March Swissair became the first airline to place a firm order for the type announcing that it would acquire ten aircraft with a further ten under option to replace its McDonnell Douglas DC 9s on its major intra European routes Lufthansa was quick to place a 240 million ten aircraft order additional orders from French operator Air France and Spanish airline Iberia shortly followed 14 Increasingly strong interest in the tentative airliner coupled with the recovery of the industry during the late 1970s contributed to Airbus deciding to put the A310 into production on 7 July 1978 15 During the latter half of 1978 an order for ten A300s was placed by independent British airline Laker Airways satisfying Airbus s demand for the placing of a British order for their aircraft 7 On 1 April 1979 Lufthansa decided to raise its commitment for the type to 25 aircraft along with 25 options Two days later Dutch operator KLM signed its order for ten aircraft and ten options at 238 million 14 16 17 On 6 July 1979 Air France announced that it had raised its order from four to thirty five airliners citation needed Other airlines announcing orders for the A310 during 1979 included Martinair Sabena and Air Afrique 16 17 Initially a pair of distinct versions of the A310 had been planned by Airbus the regional A310 100 and the transcontinental A310 200 The A310 100 featured a range of 2 000 nmi 3 700 km 2 300 mi with 200 passengers whilst the A310 200 possessed a higher MTOW and centre section fuel being able to carry the same load a further 1 000 nmi 1 900 km 1 200 mi 18 Basic engines offered for the type included the General Electric CF6 45B2 and Pratt amp Whitney JT9D 7R4 At one point British engine manufacturer Rolls Royce was openly considering offering an engine for the A310 the Rolls Royce RB 207 however it ultimately chose to discard such efforts in favour of a smaller three spool design the RB 211 Entry into service Edit The range of the A310 exceeds that of the A300 series with the exception of the A300 600R which in turn surpasses that of the A310 200 The greater range of the A310 contributed to the airliner being used extensively by operators on transatlantic routes The A300 and A310 introduced the concept of commonality A300 600 and A310 pilots can cross qualify for the other aircraft with one day of training citation needed Sales of the A310 continued through the early 1980s On 3 April 1982 the prototype A310 200 airliner conducted its maiden flight by this point the type had accumulated a combined orders and options for 181 aircraft which had been placed by fifteen airlines worldwide which was a better start than the original A300 The launch customer of A310 Swissair became the launch operator in April 1983 15 Over time it had become clear that the longer range series 200 aircraft was the more popular of the two models on offer During 1979 in response to the lack of demand for the A310 100 Airbus decided to stop offering the lower gross weight model which had been originally proposed for Lufthansa as a consequence none of this variant were ultimately manufactured 16 Sales and production end Edit In 1988 an A310 was delivered to Interflug the first Airbus for an Eastern bloc airline During the early 1990s demand for the aircraft began to slacken there were no new A310 passenger orders placed during the late 1990s in part due to the introduction of the newer and more advanced Airbus A330 during this time As a result on June 15 1998 the last delivery of an A310 msn 706 reg UK 31003 was made to Uzbekistan Airways 19 The A310 along with its A300 stablemate officially ceased production during July 2007 though an order from Iraqi Airways for five A310s had remained on the books until July 2008 The remaining freighter sales were to be instead fulfilled by the new A330 200F derivative 20 The A310 has been commonly marketed as an introduction to wide body operations for airlines based in developing countries The airliner was replaced in Airbus range by the highly successful A330 200 which shares its fuselage cross section Between 1983 and the last aircraft produced in 1998 255 A310s were delivered 1 The A300 and A310 established Airbus as a competitor to Boeing and allowed it to go ahead with the more ambitious A320 and A330 A340 families citation needed As of July 2017 update thirty seven A310s remain in commercial service major operators are Air Transat and Mahan Air with nine aircraft each Fedex Express six and seven airlines operating thirteen aircraft between them 21 The Royal Canadian Air Force RCAF currently operates a fleet of five Airbus CC 150 Polaris civilian Airbus A310 300s originally owned by Wardair and subsequently Canadian Airlines International after the airlines merged The aircraft were then sold to the Canadian government and have been converted for use as the primary long distance transport aircraft as part of the Royal Canadian Air Force s fleet of Royal Canadian Air Force VIP aircraft Design Edit The A310 has front and rear main doors and a smaller emergency exit wing door over the wing 2 4 2 economy cabin Two crew cockpit The Airbus A310 was a medium to long range twin engined wide body jet airliner Initially a derivative of the A300 the aircraft had originally been designated the A300B10 It was essentially a shortened variant of the earlier aircraft however there were considerable differences between the two aircraft 22 Specifically the fuselage possessed the same cross section but being shorter than the A300 it provided capacity for a typical maximum of 200 passengers The rear fuselage was heavily re designed featuring altered tapering while involved a move aft of the rear bulkhead to create additional capacity this same design change was later transferred back to later variants of the A300 such as the A300 600 and A330 A340 fuselages 22 The A310 also had a different emergency exit configuration consisting of four main doors two at the front and two at the rear of the aircraft and two smaller doors over the wings citation needed The wing of the A310 was redesigned possessing a reduced span and wing area and incorporating simpler single slotted Fowler flaps designed by British Aerospace shortly following its decision to join the Airbus consortium 22 Other changes to the wing included the elimination of the outer ailerons which were occasionally referred to by the manufacturer as being low speed ailerons and the addition of electrically actuated spoilers The wing also featured common pylons which were able to support all types of engines that were offered to customers to power the airliner 22 From 1985 onwards the A310 300 introduced wingtip fences which reduced vortex drag and thus improved cruise fuel consumption by over 1 5 23 A limited number of alterations were also performed to the airliner s tail unit such as the adoption of smaller horizontal tail surfaces 22 The A310 was furnished with a two crew glass cockpit configuration as standard removing the requirement for a flight engineer Airbus referred to this concept as the Forward Facing Crew Cockpit 7 The company had developed the cockpit to significantly enhance the aircraft s man machine interface thereby improving operational safety It was outfitted with an array of six computer based cathode ray tube CRT displays to provide the flight crew with centralised navigational warning monitoring and general flight information in place of the more traditional analogue instrumentation and dials which were used in conjunction with a range of modern electronic systems 7 The same flight deck was incorporated into the A300 600 a move which increased commonality between the two types and enabled a dual type rating to be achieved this same approach was later used on many future Airbus aircraft In addition to the two flying crew provisions for third and fourth crew seats were present within the flight deck 7 The A310 was initially proposed with a choice of three engines the General Electric CF6 80A1 the Pratt amp Whitney JT9D 7R4D1 and the Rolls Royce RB211 524 24 The A310 was launched with the Pratt amp Whitney JT9D 7R4D1 or the General Electric CF6 80A3 Subsequently available were the 53 500 lbf 238 kN CF6 80C2A2 or the 52 000 lbf 230 kN PW4152 From late 1991 the higher thrust 59 000 lbf 260 kN CF6 80C2A8 or 56 000 lbf 250 kN PW4156A became available 25 The A310 was equipped with a modified undercarriage derived from the A300 the landing gear were outfitted with carbon brakes which were fitted as standard 22 The structure of the airliner featured a high level of composite materials throughout both primary and secondary structures increased beyond that of the earlier A300 The A310 is outfitted with integrated drive electrical generators along with auxiliary power unit which were improved versions of those used on the A300 22 Variants Edit FedEx Express A310 200F without wingtip fences Air Transat A310 300 with wingtip fences The A310 is available in two basic versions the medium range 200 and the longer range 300 The first version of the aircraft to be developed was the 200 but this was later joined by the 300 which then became the standard production version of the aircraft The short range 100 variant was never developed due to low demand A310 200 The first A310 the 162nd Airbus off the production line made its maiden flight on 3 April 1982 powered by the earlier Pratt amp Whitney JT9D 7R4D1 engines The 200 entered service with Swissair and Lufthansa a year later Late series 200 also featured wing fences identical to those of the 300 The first three A310s were initially fitted with outboard ailerons they were later removed once testing showed them to be unnecessary 26 Production of the A310 200 ended in 1988 A310 200C A convertible version the seats can be removed and cargo placed on the main deck the A310 200C entered service with Martinair on 29 November 1984 27 A310 200F The freight version of the A310 200 was available as a new build or as a conversion of existing wide bodied aircraft The A310 200F freighter can carry 39 t 86 000 lb of freight for 5 950 km 3 210 nmi 28 No production freighters of the A310 200F were produced The converted Airbus A310 200F entered service with FedEx Express in 1994 29 A310 300 First flown on 8 July 1985 the 300 is dimensionally identical to the 200 although it provides an increased Maximum Take Off Weight MTOW and an increase in range provided by additional centre and horizontal stabiliser trim tank fuel tanks This model also introduced wingtip fences to improve aerodynamic efficiency a feature that has since been retrofitted to some 200s The aircraft entered service in 1986 with Swissair The A310 300 incorporates a computerised fuel distribution system which allows it to be trimmed in flight optimising the centre of gravity by shuttling up to 5 000 kg 11 000 lb of fuel in and out of the horizontal stabiliser tank controlled by the Centre of Gravity Control Computer A310 300C A convertible passenger cargo version the seats can be removed and cargo placed on the main deck A310 300F The freight version of the A310 300F Operators such as FedEx Express acquired modified ex passenger A310s usually starting with the 300 version No production freighters of the A310 300F were produced Airbus A310 MRTT of the German Air Force A310 MRT MRTTMain article Airbus A310 MRTT The A310 has been operated by several air forces as a pure transport the A310 300 MRT Multi Role Transport However several have now been converted to the A310 MRTT Multi Role Tanker Transport configuration by EADS providing an air to air refuelling capability At least six have been completed four by the German Air Force Luftwaffe and two by the Royal Canadian Air Force RCAF Deliveries began in 2004 Three were converted at EADS EFW in Dresden Germany the other three at Lufthansa Technik in Hamburg Germany A310 Zero G One A310 airframe became a scientific research laboratory dedicated to weightlessness This reduced gravity aircraft is used to realise parabolas allowing to perform twenty two seconds of weightlessness Operated by Novespace fr subsidiary of CNES French Space Agency A310 Zero G is based at Bordeaux Merignac airport 30 It also performs scientific flights and movie special effects such as for The Mummy 2017 31 Operators EditMain article List of Airbus A310 operators As of June 2022 update there were 31 A310 family aircraft in service 32 Civilian operators Edit Mahan Air A310 300 As of June 2022 update the following airlines are the known remaining civilian operators of A310 aircraft 32 PassengerAriana Afghan Airlines 1 33 32 Iran Air 2 34 32 Mahan Air 11 35 32 largest operator worldwideCargoULS Airlines Cargo 3 32 two operated for Turkish Cargo Royal Jordanian Cargo 1 36 32 Military operators Edit Royal Canadian Air Force CC 150 Polaris The A310 is also used by the armed forces of the following countries citation needed Royal Canadian Air Force designated CC 150 Polaris originally ordered by Wardair and delivered to Canadian Airlines French Air and Space Force German Air Force Mongolian Air Force Pakistan Air Force Spanish Air and Space Force Royal Thai Air ForceDeliveries Edit By the end of production a total of 255 A310s had been ordered and delivered 1 total 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983deliveries 255 1 2 2 2 2 22 24 19 18 23 28 21 19 26 29 17Accidents and incidents EditAs of September 2015 there have been 12 hull loss accidents involving A310s with a total of 825 fatalities and 9 hijackings with a total of five fatalities 37 Accidents with fatalities Edit 31 July 1992 Thai Airways International Flight 311 an A310 304 carrying 99 passengers and 14 crew crashed on approach to Tribhuvan International Airport Kathmandu All 113 on board were killed 23 March 1994 Aeroflot Flight 593 an A310 304 carrying 63 passengers and 12 crew crashed in Siberia after the pilot let his son sit at the controls and the autopilot partially disconnected All 75 on board were killed 31 March 1995 TAROM Flight 371 an A310 324 carrying 49 passengers and 11 crew crashed near Otopeni International Airport Bucharest Romania after the throttle on the starboard engine jammed with no subsequent resolution by the pilots All 60 on board were killed 11 December 1998 Thai Airways International Flight 261 crashed near Surat Thani Airport in Thailand There were 101 fatalities and 45 survived with serious injuries 30 January 2000 Kenya Airways Flight 431 an A310 300 crashed in the Atlantic Ocean shortly after takeoff from Abidjan in Cote d Ivoire 169 passengers and crew were killed and 10 passengers survived with serious injuries This is the deadliest aviation accident involving the Airbus A310 38 9 July 2006 S7 Airlines Flight 778 an Airbus A310 324 from Moscow carrying 196 passengers and eight crew overshot the runway at Irkutsk in Siberia plowed through a concrete barrier and caught fire as it crashed into buildings Reports said that 70 of the 204 on board survived with 12 missing 39 Since the accident casualty figures have fluctuated in part due to three people boarding the aircraft who were not on the passenger manifest and some survivors walking home after being assumed trapped in the wreckage 40 10 June 2008 Sudan Airways Flight 109 an A310 324 from Amman Jordan carrying 203 passengers and 11 crew ran off the runway while landing at Khartoum International Airport during bad weather Soon afterward a fire started in the aircraft s right wing area A total of 30 people were killed 41 30 June 2009 Yemenia Flight 626 an A310 324 flying from Sana a Yemen to Moroni Comoros crashed into the Indian Ocean shortly before reaching its destination The aircraft was carrying 153 passengers and crew there was one survivor a 14 year old girl 42 43 On 24 December 2015 at 08 35 an Airbus A310 304F cargo aircraft operated by Congolese company Services Air on a domestic flight ran off the end of the runway and crashed in a residential area while landing at Mbuji Mayi Airport in the city of Mbuji Mayi the capital of Kasai Oriental province in the Democratic Republic of Congo Eight people were killed and nine others were injured Hijackings Edit 26 March 1991 Singapore Airlines Flight 117 registration 9V STP carrying 123 passengers and crew was hijacked by 4 male Pakistanis en route to Singapore The aircraft landed at Singapore safely where the Singapore Armed Forces Commando Formation stormed it and killed the hijackers None of the hostages were hurt 4 September 1992 Vietnam Airlines Flight 850 registration LZ JXB leased from Jes Air with 127 occupants on board en route from Bangkok to Ho Chi Minh City hijacked by Ly Tong a former pilot in the Republic of Vietnam Air Force He then dropped anti communist leaflets over Ho Chi Minh City before parachuting out Vietnamese security forces later arrested him on the ground The aircraft landed safely and no one on board was injured Tong was incarcerated in a Hanoi prison where he remained until 1998 44 On 11 February 1993 Lufthansa Flight 592 registration D AIDM from Frankfurt to Addis Ababa via Cairo with 94 passengers and 10 crew members was hijacked during the first leg by 20 year old Nebiu Zewolde Demeke who forced the pilots to divert to the United States with the intent of securing the right of asylum there Demeke who had been on the flight to be deported back to his native Ethiopia surrendered to authorities upon arrival at John F Kennedy International Airport in New York City No passengers or crew members were harmed during the 12 hour ordeal 45 25 October 1993 a Nigeria Airways s Airbus A310 200 was hijacked en route from Lagos to Abuja The hijackers demanded the resignation of Nigeria s government and to be flown to Frankfurt The aircraft was denied permission to land in N Djamena and was diverted to the Niamey Airport for refuelling It was stormed by Niger National Gendarmerie four days later the co pilot was killed during the operation Other incidents Edit On 24 September 1994 TAROM Flight 381 an Airbus A310 registered YR LCA flying from Bucharest to Paris Orly went into a sudden and uncommanded nose up position and stalled The crew attempted to countermand the aircraft s flight control system but were unable to get the nose down while remaining on course Witnesses saw the aircraft climb with an extreme nose up attitude then bank sharply left then right then fall into a steep dive Only when the dive produced additional speed was the crew able to recover steady flight An investigation found that an overshoot of flap placard speed during the approach incorrectly commanded by the captain caused a mode transition to flight level change The auto throttles increased power and trim went full nose up as a result The crew s attempt at commanding the nose down elevator could not counteract the effect of stabilizer nose up trim and the resulting dive brought the aircraft from a height of 4 100 feet 1 200 m at the time of the stall to 800 feet 240 m when the crew was able to recover command The aircraft landed safely after a second approach There were 186 people on board 46 12 July 2000 Hapag Lloyd Flight 3378 an A310 304 crashed during an emergency landing near Vienna in Austria due to fuel exhaustion All 142 passengers and 8 crew on board survived 6 March 2005 Air Transat Flight 961 an Airbus A310 308 en route from Cuba to Quebec City with nine crew and 261 passengers on board experienced a structural failure in which the rudder detached in flight The aircraft returned to Varadero Cuba where they made a safe landing The crew made no unusual rudder inputs during the flight nor was the rudder being manipulated when it failed there was no obvious fault in the rudder or yaw damper system Subsequent investigation determined that Airbus inspection procedure for the composite rudder was inadequate inspection procedures for composite structures on airliners were changed following this accident 23 February 2006 A Mahan Air Airbus A310 operating a flight from Tehran Iran was involved in a serious incident while on approach to Birmingham International Airport The aircraft descended to the published minimum descent altitude of 740 feet 230 m despite still being 11 nautical miles 20 km from the runway threshold At a point 6 nm from the runway the aircraft had descended to an altitude of 660 feet 200 m which was 164 feet 50 m above ground level Having noticed the descent profile Birmingham air traffic control issued an immediate climb instruction to the aircraft however the crew had already commenced a missed approach having received a GPWS alert The aircraft was radar vectored for a second approach during which the flight crew again initiated an early descent On this occasion the radar controller instructed the crew to maintain their altitude and the crew completed the approach to a safe landing The accident investigation determined that the primary cause was the use of the incorrect DME for the approach combined with a substantial breakdown in the Crew Resource Management Three safety recommendations were made 47 12 March 2007 Biman Bangladesh Airlines Flight 006 an A310 325 carrying 236 passengers and crew suffered a collapsed nose gear during its takeoff run Fourteen people suffered minor injuries in the accident at Dubai International Airport The aircraft came to rest at the end of the runway and was evacuated but blocked the only active runway and forced the airport to close for nearly eight hours The aircraft was written off 48 24 December 2015 A Mahan Air Airbus A310 300 operating a flight from Tehran Iran to Istanbul Turkey failed to stop at its stand at Istanbul s Ataturk Airport instead colliding with a concrete barrier and bus The aircraft registration EP MNP sustained substantial damage but was repaired and returned to service a year later 49 Preserved aircraft Edit The first Airbus delivered in China was this A310 to China Eastern Airlines in 1985 retired in 2006 and displayed at the Beijing Civil Aviation Museum ex China Eastern Airlines A310 222 B 2301 preserved at the China Civil Aviation Museum near Beijing Capital International Airport ex Nigeria Airways A310 222 5N AUG was the Italian restaurant All Italia in Gilly about 5 km south of Brussels Charleroi Airport It was destroyed in a fire on 17 November 2020 In popular culture EditAn Airbus A310 300 of the fictional Belarus Airways appeared in the 2013 movie World War Z The plane was leased from HiFly a Portuguese airline with registration number CS TEX Specifications EditA310 Airplane Characteristics 50 Model A310 200 A310 300Cockpit Crew Two2 class 220 passengers 20F 200Y 51 1 class 237Y 8 abreast 243Y 8 abreast 265Y 9 abreastExit limit 275 passengers 52 Lower deck 14 LD3 containersLength 46 66 m 153 ft 1 in Height 15 8 m 51 ft 10 in fuselageWing 43 9 m 144 ft span 219 m2 2 360 sq ft area 28 sweep 53 8 8 aspect ratioCross section 5 64 m 18 ft 6 in Maximum Payload 32 834 kg 72 387 lb 37 293 kg 82 217 lb MTOW 144 000 kg 317 466 lb 164 000 kg 361 558 lb OEW JT9D 77 4 t 171 000 lb PW4000 CF6 80 79 2 t 175 000 lb Max fuel 47 940 kg 105 689 lbEngines JT9D 7R4 GE CF6 80 JT9D 7R4E1 PW4000 CF6 80C2Thrust 2 203 8 257 4 kN 45 800 57 900 lbf 52 speed Mach 0 8 459 kn 850 km h cruise 54 Mach 0 84 482 kn 892 km h MMO 52 Ceiling 41 100 ft 12 527 m 52 Range 3 500 nmi 6 500 km c 5 150 nmi 9 540 km d Aircraft model designations Edit Type Certificate Data Sheet 52 Model Certification Date EnginesA310 203 11 March 1983 GE CF6 80A3A310 203C 27 November 1984 GE CF6 80A3A310 204 23 April 1986 GE CF6 80C2A2A310 221 11 March 1983 PW JT9D 7R4D1A310 222 22 September 1983 PW JT9D 7R4E1A310 304 11 March 1986 GE CF6 80C2A2A310 308 5 June 1991 GE CF6 80C2A8 A2A310 322 5 December 1985 PW JT9D 7R4E1A310 324 27 May 1987 PW4152A310 325 6 March 1992 PW4156ASee also Edit Aviation portalCompetition between Airbus and BoeingRelated development Airbus A300 Airbus A310 MRTT Airbus A330 Airbus A340 CC 150 PolarisAircraft of comparable role configuration and era Boeing 767Related lists List of jet airlinersReferences EditCitations Edit a b c Airbus Historical Orders and Deliveries Airbus SAS January 2007 Archived from the original on 7 February 2007 Simons 2014 p 38 Endres 2004 p 43 Pitt and Norsworthy 2012 p 57 Airbus at thirty family planning Flight International 2 January 2001 Senguttuvan 2006 p 34 a b c d e f g Technology leaders 1977 1979 Airbus Archived from the original on 25 September 2015 Pitt and Norsworthy 2012 pp 57 60 Simons 2014 p 40 Airbus Historical Orders and Deliveries Airbus S A S January 2008 Archived from the original Microsoft Excel on 21 December 2008 Gunston 2009 p 85 a b Gunston 2009 p 86 a b Gunston 2009 p 87 a b c d e Gunston 2009 p 89 a b Norris Guy and Mark Wagner 1999 Airbus St Paul Minnesota MBI Publishing 1999 ISBN 0 7603 0677 X a b c Flight International 27 October 1979 edition a b Airclaims Jet Programs 1995 Gunston 2009 p 91 Mahan Air EP MED Airbus A310 MSN 706 Ex EY 704 UK31003 Airfleets aviation Retrieved 11 March 2023 Airbus aims to fill freighter void with A330 derivative Flight International 14 March 2006 World Census 2017 FlightGlobal Retrieved 28 June 2018 a b c d e f g A310 Europe builds on Airbus success Flight International 27 February 1982 Airbus The European Triumph Bill Gunston 1988 ISBN 0 85045 820 X p 113 Airbus The European Triumph Bill Gunston 1988 ISBN 0 85045 820 X p 97 Jane s All The World s Aircraft 1992 93 ISBN 0 7106 0987 6 p 93 Learmount David 3 July 1982 A310 keeps beating its targets Flight International 34 AIRBUS A310 janes migavia com A310 200F freight version Aerospace Technology Verdict Media Limited Retrieved 6 November 2011 Airbus A310 200F Aerospace Technology Zero G flying means high stress for an old A310 FlightGlobal 23 March 2015 Tom Cruise en apesanteur dans l A310 ZERO G de Novespace Tom Cruise in zero gravity in the A310 ZERO G of Novespace AeroNewsTV in French Retrieved 10 March 2018 a b c d e f g Orders amp Deliveries Airbus 30 June 2022 Archived from the original on 10 February 2019 Retrieved 9 July 2022 Global Airline Guide 2019 part one Airliner World 4 October 2019 Iran Air fleet details and history PlaneSpotters 11 January 2020 Mahan fleet Mahan Air Retrieved 26 November 2019 Royal Jordanian fleet details and history PlaneSpotters Airbus A310 Aviation Safety Net Retrieved 30 September 2015 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Airbus A310 304 5Y BEN Abidjan Felix Houphouet Boigny Airport ABJ aviation safety Retrieved 20 March 2019 Russian plane s brakes failed BBC News 9 July 2006 Retrieved 10 April 2007 Russian plane lost control upon landing The New York Times 10 July 2006 Retrieved 11 April 2007 30 people killed in Sudan Airways crash statement Sudan Tribune 11 June 2008 Retrieved 12 November 2010 Yemenia Airbus black box found stuff co Retrieved 15 April 2015 Amir Ahmed Andrew Cawthorne and Jon Hemming Yemeni plane crashes in Comoros 150 on board Reuters 29 June 2009 Retrieved 30 June 2009 Accident description for VN850 at the Aviation Safety Network Flight 595 at the Aviation Safety Network Aviation safety net Retrieved on 8 July 2011 INCIDENT TAROM UFCNA com Archived from the original on 17 July 2011 Retrieved 5 July 2010 Report on the serious incident to Airbus A310 304 registration F OJHI on approach to Birmingham International Airport on 23 February 2006 UK AAIB Archived from the original on 26 April 2012 Retrieved 28 December 2007 ASN Aircraft accident Airbus A 310 325 S2 ADE Dubai Airport DXB Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 6 November 2011 Accident Mahan A313 at Istanbul on Dec 24th 2015 failed to stop at stand Aviation Herald Retrieved 1 September 2022 A310 Airplane Characteristics for Airport Planning PDF Airbus December 2009 Out of production A310 Airbus a b c d e Type Certificate Data Sheet PDF EASA 21 September 2017 Archived from the original PDF on 29 November 2018 Airbus Aircraft Data File Civil Jet Aircraft Design Elsevier July 1999 A310 Aircraft Technical Data amp Specifications Airliners net Bibliography Edit Endres Gunter Spring 2004 Classic Airliner Airbus A300 Flightpath The International Journal of Commercial Aviation Norwalk Connecticut USA AIRtime Publishing Volume 3 36 85 ISBN 1 880588 73 0 Gunston Bill February 2010 Airbus The Complete Story Sparkford Yeovil Somerset UK Haynes Publishing 2009 ISBN 978 1 84425 585 6 Norris Guy and Mark Wagner 1999 Airbus St Paul Minnesota MBI Publishing 1999 ISBN 0 7603 0677 X Pitt Ivan L and John Randolph Norsworthy Economics of the U S Commercial Airline Industry Productivity Technology and Deregulation Springer 2012 ISBN 1 4615 5031 9 Senguttuvan P S Fundamentals of Air Transport Management Excel Books India 2006 ISBN 81 7446 459 X Simons Graham The Airbus A380 A History Pen and Sword 2014 ISBN 1 78303 041 0 World Airliner Census Flight International Volume 184 Number 5403 13 19 August 2013 pp 40 58 Notes Edit Final assembly in France The fuselage is 14 frames 7 42m shorter than the A300 fuselage but the rear bulkhead was set 2 frames farther into the tailcone so that only 12 frames of seating capacity were lost in the shortened version ISA LRC JT9D 237 passengers ISA LRC 240 passengersExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Airbus A310 category Production list Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Airbus A310 amp oldid 1144262916, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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