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Airbus A330

The Airbus A330 is a wide-body aircraft developed and produced by Airbus. Airbus conceived several derivatives of the A300, its first airliner from the mid-1970s. Then the company began development on the A330 twinjet in parallel with the A340 quadjet and launched both designs with their first orders in June 1987. The A330-300, the first variant, took its maiden flight in November 1992 and entered service with Air Inter in January 1994. The slightly shorter A330-200 variant followed in 1998.

A330
An Airbus A330-300, the first and most common variant, of Turkish Airlines
Role Wide-body airliner
National origin Multi-national[a]
Manufacturer Airbus
First flight 2 November 1992
Introduction 17 January 1994 with Air Inter
Status In service
Primary users Delta Air Lines
Turkish Airlines
China Eastern Airlines
Air China
Produced 1992–present
Number built 1,562 as of 28 February 2023[1]
Developed from Airbus A300
Variants Airbus A330 MRTT
EADS/Northrop Grumman KC-45
Developed into Airbus A330neo
Airbus Beluga XL

The A330 shares its airframe with the early A340 variants, but having two main landing gear legs instead of three, lower weights, and slightly different lengths. Both airliners have fly-by-wire controls as well as a similar glass cockpit to increase the commonality. The A330 was Airbus's first airliner to offer a choice of three engines: the General Electric CF6, Pratt & Whitney PW4000, or the Rolls-Royce Trent 700. The A330-300 has a range of 11,750 km or 6,350 nmi with 277 passengers, while the shorter A330-200 can cover 13,450 km or 7,250 nmi with 247 passengers. Other variants include the A330-200F dedicated freighter, the A330 MRTT military tanker, and the ACJ330 corporate jet. The A330 MRTT was proposed as the EADS/Northrop Grumman KC-45 for the US Air Force's KC-X competition, but lost to the Boeing KC-46 in appeal after an initial win.

In July 2014, Airbus announced the re-engined A330neo (new engine option) comprising A330-800/900, which entered service with TAP Air Portugal in December 2018. With the exclusive, more efficient Trent 7000 turbofan and improvements including sharklets, it offers up to 14% better fuel economy per seat. Earlier A330s (-200/200F/300) are now called A330ceo (current engine option).

Delta Air Lines is currently the largest operator with 62 airplanes in its fleet. As of December 2022, A330 orders stood at 1,774 of which 1,559 had been delivered and 1,467 were in service with 142 operators. The global A330 fleet had accumulated more than 60 million flight hours since its entry into service. The A330 is the third most delivered wide-body airliner after the Boeing 777 and Boeing 747. It competes with the Boeing 767, smaller variants of the Boeing 777, and the 787. It is complemented by the larger Airbus A350, which succeeded the four-engined A340.

Development

Background

Airbus jetliners, 1972–1994
Model A300 A310 A320 A330 A340
Prior
code(s)
B10 SA2 B9
(TA9)
B11
(TA11)
Introduced 1972 1983 1988 1994 1993
Body Wide Wide Narrow Wide Wide
Engines 2 2 2 2 4
Range 4,050 nmi
7,500 km
4,350 nmi
8,060 km
3,000 nmi
5,600 km
6,350 nmi
11,760 km
7,300 nmi
13,500 km
 
A330 and A340 seating and range comparison

Airbus's first airliner, the A300, was envisioned as part of a diverse family of commercial aircraft. Pursuing this goal, studies began in the early 1970s into derivatives of the A300.[2][3] Before introducing the A300, Airbus identified nine possible variations designated B1 through B9.[4] A tenth variant, the A300B10, was conceived in 1973 and developed into the longer-range Airbus A310.[5] Airbus then focused its efforts on single-aisle (SA) studies, conceiving a family of airliners later known as the Airbus A320 family, the first commercial aircraft with digital fly-by-wire controls. During these studies Airbus turned its focus back to the wide-body aircraft market, simultaneously working on both projects.[5]

In the mid-1970s, Airbus began development of the A300B9, a larger derivative of the A300, which would eventually become the A330. The B9 was essentially a lengthened A300 with the same wing, coupled with the most powerful turbofan engines available. It was targeted at the growing demand for high-capacity, medium-range, transcontinental trunk routes.[6] Offering the same range and payload as the McDonnell Douglas DC-10 but with 25 per cent better fuel efficiency,[6] the B9 was seen as a viable replacement for the DC-10 and the Lockheed L-1011 TriStar trijets.[7] It was also considered as a medium-ranged successor to the A300.[8]

At the same time, a 200-seat four-engine version, the B11 (which would eventually become the A340) was also under development.[9] The B11 was originally planned to take the place of narrow-body Boeing 707s and Douglas DC-8s then in commercial use, but would later evolve to target the long-range, wide-body trijet replacement market.[8] To differentiate from the SA series, the B9 and B11 were re-designated as the TA9 and TA11, with TA standing for "twin aisle".[9] Development costs were reduced by the two aircraft using the same fuselage and wing, with projected savings of US$500 million. Another factor was the split preference of those within Airbus and, more importantly, those of prospective customers; twinjets were favoured in North America, quad-jets desired in Asia, and operators had mixed views in Europe.[6] Airbus ultimately found that most potential customers favoured four engines for their exemption from existing twinjet range restrictions and their ability to be ferried with one inactive engine.[10] As a result, development plans prioritised the four-engined TA11 ahead of the TA9.[10]

Design effort

 
Compared to the A330 twinjet (on ground), the heavier A340 (inflight) has four engines and a centre-line wheel bogie

The first specifications for the TA9 and TA11, aircraft that could accommodate 410 passengers in a one-class layout, emerged in 1982.[11] They showed a large underfloor cargo area that could hold five cargo pallets or sixteen LD3 cargo containers in the forward, and four pallets or fourteen LD3s in the aft hold—double the capacity of the Lockheed L-1011 TriStar or DC-10, and 8.46 metres (27.8 ft) longer than the Airbus A300.[12] By June 1985, the TA9 and TA11 had received more improvements, including the adoption of the A320 flight deck, digital fly-by-wire (FBW) control system, and side-stick control.[13] Airbus had developed a common cockpit for their aircraft models to allow quick transition by pilots. The flight crews could transition from one type to another after only one week's training, which reduces operator costs.[14] The two TAs would use the vertical stabiliser, rudder, and circular fuselage sections of the A300-600, extended by two barrel sections.[14]

Airbus briefly considered the variable camber wing, a concept that requires changing the wing profile for a given phase of flight. Studies were carried out by British Aerospace (BAe), now part of BAE Systems, at Hatfield and Bristol. Airbus estimated this would yield a two per cent improvement in aerodynamic efficiency,[15] but the feature was rejected because of cost and difficulty of development.[9] A true laminar flow wing (a low-drag shape that improves fuel efficiency) was also considered but rejected.[16]

With necessary funding available, the Airbus Supervisory Board approved the development of the A330 and A340 with potential customers on 27 January 1986.[17] Its chairman Franz Josef Strauss stated afterwards that "Airbus Industrie is now in a position to finalise the detailed technical definition of the TA9, now officially designated as the A330, and the TA11, now called the A340, with potential launch customer airlines, and to discuss with them the terms and conditions for launch commitments". The designations were originally reversed and were switched so the quad-jet airliner would have a "4" in its name. Airbus hoped for five airlines to sign for both the A330 and A340, and on 12 May sent sale proposals to the most likely candidates, including Lufthansa and Swissair.[13]

Engines

From the beginning of the TA9's development, a choice of engines from the three major engine manufacturers, Rolls-Royce, Pratt & Whitney, and GE Aviation, was planned.[18] GE Aviation first offered the CF6-80C2. However, later studies indicated that more thrust was needed to increase the initial power capability from 267 to 289 kN (60,000 to 65,000 lbf).[19] GE enlarged the CF6-80C2 fan from 236 to 244 centimetres (92.9 to 96.1 in) and reduced the number of fan blades from 38 to 34 to create the CF6-80E1 with a thrust of 300–320 kN (67,000–72,000 lbf).[20]

Rolls-Royce initially wanted to use the 267 kN (60,000 lbf) Trent 600 to power Airbus's newest twinjet and the upcoming McDonnell Douglas MD-11. However, the company later agreed to develop an engine solely for the A330, the Trent 700, with a larger diameter and 311 kN (69,900 lbf) of thrust.[21] The A330 became the first Airbus aircraft for which Rolls-Royce supplied engines.[22]

Similarly, Pratt & Whitney signed an agreement that covered the development of the A330-exclusive PW4168. The company increased the fan size from 94 in (2.39 m) to 100 in (2.54 m),[23] enabling the engine to deliver 311 kN (69,900 lbf) of thrust. Like the CF6-80E1, 34 blades were used instead of the 38 found on the smaller PW4000 engines.[24]

Production and testing

 
A330 final assembly line in Toulouse, 2007

In preparation for the production of the A330 and the A340, Airbus's partners invested heavily in new facilities. In south-western England, BAe made a £7 million investment in a three-storey technical centre with 15,000 m2 (161,000 sq ft) of floor area at Filton.[25] In north Wales, BAe also spent £5 million on a new production line at its Broughton wing production plant.[25] In Germany, Messerschmitt-Bölkow-Blohm (MBB) invested DM400 million ($225 million) on manufacturing facilities in the Weser estuary, including at Bremen, Einswarden, Varel, and Hamburg.[26] France saw the biggest investments, with Aérospatiale constructing a new Fr.2.5 billion ($411 million) final-assembly plant adjacent to Toulouse-Blagnac Airport in Colomiers; by November 1988, the pillars for the new Clément Ader assembly hall had been erected.[27] The assembly process featured increased automation, such as robots drilling holes and installing fasteners during the wing-to-fuselage mating process.[28]

On 12 March 1987, Airbus received the first orders for the twinjet. Domestic French airline Air Inter placed five firm orders and fifteen options, while Thai Airways International requested eight aircraft, split evenly between firm orders and options.[10][29] Airbus announced the next day that it would formally launch the A330 and A340 programmes by April 1987, with deliveries of the A340 to begin in May 1992 and A330 deliveries to start in 1993. Northwest Airlines signed a letter of intent for twenty A340s and ten A330s on 31 March.[29] The program cost was $3.5 billion with the A340, in 2001 dollars.[30]

BAe eventually received £450 million of funding from the UK government, well short of the £750 million it had originally requested for the design and construction of the wings.[31] The German and French governments also provided funding. Airbus issued subcontracts to companies in Australia, Austria, Canada, China, Greece, Italy, India, Japan, South Korea, Portugal, the United States, and the former Yugoslavia.[32] With funding in place, Airbus launched the A330 and A340 programmes on 5 June 1987, just prior to the Paris Air Show.[31][33] At that time, the order book stood at 130 aircraft from ten customers, including lessor International Lease Finance Corporation (ILFC). Of the order total, forty-one were for A330s.[31] In 1989, Asian carrier Cathay Pacific joined the list of purchasers, ordering nine A330s and later increasing this number to eleven.[34]

The wing-to-fuselage mating of the first A330, the tenth airframe of the A330 and A340 line, began in mid-February 1992. This aircraft, coated with anti-corrosion paint, was rolled out on 31 March without its General Electric CF6-80E1 engines, which were installed by August. During a static test, the wing failed just below requirement; BAe engineers later resolved the problem.[35] At the 1992 Farnborough Airshow, Northwest deferred delivery of sixteen A330s to 1994, following the cancellation of its A340 orders.[36]

 
The A330 first prototype. It was rolled out on 14 October 1992, and first flew on 2 November.

The first completed A330 was rolled out on 14 October 1992, with the maiden flight following on 2 November. Weighing 181,840 kg (401,000 lb), including 20,980 kg (46,300 lb) of test equipment,[35] the A330 became the largest twinjet to have flown until the first flight of the Boeing 777. The flight lasted five hours and fifteen minutes during which speed, height, and other flight configurations were tested. Airbus intended the test flight programme to comprise six aircraft flying a total of 1,800 hours.[35] On 21 October 1993, the Airbus A330 received the European Joint Aviation Authorities (JAA) and the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) certifications simultaneously after 1,114 cumulative airborne test hours and 426 test flights. At the same time, weight tests came in favourable, showing the plane was 500 kg (1,100 lb) under weight.[37]

On 30 June 1994, a fatal crash occurred during certification of the Pratt & Whitney engine when an A330 crashed near Toulouse.[38] Both pilots and the five passengers died.[39] The flight was designed to test autopilot response during a one-engine-off worst-case scenario with the centre of gravity near its aft limit. Shortly after takeoff, the pilots had difficulty setting the autopilot, and the aircraft lost speed and crashed.[40] An investigation by an internal branch of Direction Générale d'Aviation concluded that the accident resulted from slow response and incorrect actions by the crew during the recovery.[41] This led to a revision of A330 operating procedures.[42]

Entry into service

 
Launch operator Air Inter introduced the A330-300 on 17 January 1994

Air Inter became the first operator of the A330, having put the aircraft into service on 17 January 1994 between Orly Airport, Paris, and Marseille.[43] Deliveries to Malaysia Airlines (MAS) and Thai Airways International were postponed to address delamination of the composite materials in the PW4168 engine's thrust reverser assembly. Thai Airways received its first A330 during the second half of the year, operating it on routes from Bangkok to Taipei and Seoul.[44][45] Cathay Pacific received its Trent 700 A330s following the certification of that engine on 22 December 1994.[41] MAS received its A330 on 1 February 1995 and then rescheduled its other ten orders.[45]

Shrinking the -300: the -200

 
The A330-200 first flew on 13 August 1997
 
Canada 3000 was the A330-200's first operator in April 1998

In response to a decline in A330-300 sales, increased market penetration by the Boeing 767-300ER, and airline requests for increased range and smaller aircraft, Airbus developed the Airbus A330-200.[46] Known as the A329 and A330M10 during development, the A330-200 would offer nine per cent lower operating costs than the Boeing 767-300ER.[47] The plane was aimed at the 11,900 km (6,430 nmi; 7,390 mi) sector, where Airbus predicted demand for 800 aircraft between 1995 and 2015.[47] The project, with US$450 million in expected development costs, was approved by the Airbus Industrie Supervisory Board on 24 November 1995.[47]

The A330-200 first flew on 13 August 1997.[48] The sixteen-month certification process involved logging 630 hours of test flights.[48] The A330-200's first customer was ILFC; these aircraft were leased by Canada 3000, who became the type's first operator.[49]

As Airbus worked on its A330-200, hydraulic pump problems were reported by both A330 and A340 operators. This issue was the suspected cause of a fire that destroyed an Air France A340-200 in January 1994.[50] On 4 January of that year, a Malaysia Airlines A330-300, while undergoing regular maintenance at Singapore Changi Airport, was consumed by a fire that started in the right-hand main undercarriage well. The incident caused US$30 million in damage, and the aircraft took six months to repair.[50][51] Consequently, operators were advised to disable electrical pumps in January 1997.[50]

Proposed variants

A330-400/600

In 1996 Airbus evaluated a 12-frame stretch which would be able to carry 380 passengers over almost 7,000 km (3,800 nmi), the -400, and a "super-stretch" using the A340-600's 22-frame stretch and powered by 400 kN (90,000 lbf) engines, the -600.[52]

A330-100/-500

In February 2000 it was reported that a 250-seat A330-100 replacement for the A300/A310 could be launched by year end for 2003 deliveries.[53] Shortened and keeping its fly-by-wire cockpit and systems, with a cleaner A300-600 wing with sealed control surfaces and winglets and at least two new engine types among the GE CF6-80, the PW4000 and the A340-500/600's Trent 500 aimed for 5% better SFC than the A300-600.[53] Its 44.8 m (147 ft) wing allowed a 173 t (381,000 lb) MTOW and 4,200 nmi (7,770 km) range. In May, the 210-260 seat design had evolved towards keeping the A330 60.3 m (198 ft) span wing and engines for a 195 t MTOW and 4,500 nmi (8,300 km) range. Interested customers included Singapore Airlines, Lufthansa and Hapag-Lloyd.[54]

Announced in July at Farnborough Air Show, the -500 first flight was targeted for early 2003 and introduction in early 2004. ILFC would take 10 if it was launched and CIT was interested too. The eight-frame shrink would carry 222 in three classes or 266 in two classes. Its initial 13,000 km (7,000 nmi) range would be followed by derated versions for 8,000 km (4,300 nmi).[55] The market was lukewarm as airlines like Lufthansa, Hapag-Lloyd and Singapore Airlines were unimpressed by the long-range A330-500, favouring a more refined short-range design. Lack of airline demand made lessors interest wane and as ILFC would order as 30 -500s, it would be with converting rights to larger A330-200/300.[56]

A330-200Lite

To compete with Boeing's 7E7 (later 787), Airbus offered a minimum-change derivative called the A330-200Lite in 2004. As the name indicated, this proposed variant would have had a lower maximum takeoff weight of 202 tonnes (445,000 lb), coupled with de-rated engines, giving a range of 7,400 km (4,000 nmi; 4,600 mi).[57][58] It was aimed at Singapore Airlines, who had looked to replace its Airbus A310-300s.[59][60] The variant was also to be a replacement for Airbus A300-600Rs and early Boeing 767s.[58] Airlines, however, were not satisfied with the compromised aircraft; the company instead proceeded with an entirely new aircraft, the A350 XWB.[61]

Further developments

 
The A330-200F freighter was first delivered to Etihad Cargo in July 2010

Initially, the GE90 was only one of three B777 options, and GE Aviation then-CEO Brian H. Rowe would have paid for the development of putting it on an A330; however, Airbus' strategy for long-haul was the four-engine A340, missing the market favouring twins.[62]

Responding to lagging A300-600F and A310F sales, Airbus began marketing the Airbus A330-200F, a freighter derivative of the A330-200, around 2001.[63] The freighter has a range of 7,400 km (4,000 nmi; 4,600 mi) with a 65 tonnes (140,000 lb) payload, or 5,900 km (3,200 nmi; 3,700 mi) with 70 tonnes (150,000 lb).[64] The plane utilises the same nosegear as the passenger version; however, it is attached lower in the fuselage and housed in a distinctive bulbous "blister fairing". This raises the aircraft's nose so that the cargo deck is level during loading, as the standard A330's landing gear results the plane having a nose-down attitude while on the ground.[65]

The A330-200F made its maiden flight on 5 November 2009.[66][67] This marked the start of a four-month, 180-hour certification programme. JAA and FAA certifications were expected by March the following year although approval by the JAA was delayed until April.[66][68] The first delivery was subsequently made to the Etihad Airways cargo division, Etihad Cargo, in July 2010.[69][70]

On 25 September 2013 at the Aviation Expo China (Beijing Airshow), Airbus announced a new lower weight A330-300 variant, optimised for use on domestic and regional routes in high growth markets with large populations and concentrated traffic flows; China and India were recognised as prime targets.[71] This variant could carry up to 400 passengers.[72] The increased efficiency, however, comes more from the installation of more seats than any weight reduction. On relatively short, yet congested routes, the A330 competes against single-aisle jetliners. While the A330's operating costs in these conditions are not far above those of the Boeing 737 or Airbus A321, the A320neo and 737 MAX promise more efficiency. Where the frequency of flights cannot be increased, using larger aircraft, such as the A330, is the only available option to increase capacity.[73] The first customer for the A330 Regional was announced as Saudia at the 2015 Paris Air Show.[74] In 2018, the unit cost of an A330-200 was US$238.5M, US$264.2M for an A330-300 and US$241.7M for an A330-200F.[75]

New Engine Option

 
First flight of A330-900 on 19 October 2017

The A330neo ("neo" for "New Engine Option") is a development from the initial A330 (now A330ceo — "Current Engine Option"). A new version with modern engines developed for the Boeing 787 was called for by owners of the current A330. It was launched in July 2014 at the Farnborough Airshow, promising 14% better fuel economy per seat. It will use the larger Rolls-Royce Trent 7000 exclusively. Its two versions are based on the A330-200 and -300: the -800 should cover 8,150 nmi (15,090 km) with 257 passengers while the -900 should cover 7,200 nmi (13,330 km) with 287 passengers. The -900 made its first flight on 19 October 2017, received its EASA type certificate on 26 September 2018, and was first delivered to TAP Air Portugal on 26 November. The -800 made its first flight on 6 November 2018, aiming for a mid-2019 type certification and delivery in the first half of 2020.

Production

 
The 1,000th A330 was delivered on 19 July 2013

Airbus announced in February 2011 that it intended to raise production rates from seven-and-a-half/eight per month to nine per month in 2012, and ten in 2013.[76] Production increased to 10 aircraft per month in April 2013, the highest for any Airbus wide-body aircraft.[77] In 2012, Airbus expected the A330 to continue selling until at least 2020,[78] with the A350-900 expected to replace the A330-300.[79]

On 19 July 2013, Airbus delivered its 1000th A330 to Cathay Pacific.[80] The A330 became the first Airbus wide-body airliner to reach 1,000 deliveries, and the fourth wide-body to achieve the milestone after the Boeing 747, 767, and 777.[81] As of January 2019, a total of 1,496 A330ceos had been ordered, with 1,437 delivered.[1]

In December 2014, Airbus announced that it would reduce A330 production to nine aircraft per month from ten, because of falling orders. Airbus did not rule out any further production cuts. The announcement led to an immediate drop in Airbus Group's stock price because the company derived a significant percentage of its cash flow and net profit from the A330 program; the A330's financial impact was magnified amid problems in the A350 and A380 programs.[82] In February 2015, Airbus announced another production rate cut to six aircraft per month in the first quarter of 2016.[83] This would extend A330ceo production to July 2017, allowing for a smooth transition to A330neo production, which was set to start in spring 2017.[83][84] In February 2016, Airbus announced it would re-increase the production rate from 6 to 7 per month, in response to new A330 orders.[85]

In April 2018, as a result of weakening demand, Airbus announced further rate cuts to 4-5 aircraft a month (50 per year) in 2019.[86] In 2019, Airbus delivered 53 A330s (including 41 A330neos), including some delayed from 2018, and was set to reach a rate of 40 per year, to reflect softer demand for wide-bodies, as the backlog reached 331 (including 293 A330neos) − or 8.3 years' worth of production.[87]

The last A330-200 was delivered to OpenSkies (operating for LEVEL) on October 1, 2019. The last A330-300 built was flown to Brussels Airport on February 28, 2020; Aer Lingus took delivery on 4 March 2020. At the time, four completed A330-300s for troubled Hong Kong Airlines were still undelivered. A330 MRTT/KC-30B and BelugaXL production both continue alongside that of the A330neo.[88]

The COVID-19 pandemic reduced demand for new jets in 2020, and Airbus cut its monthly production from 4.5 to 2 A330s.[89] In September 2020, the A330 reached a milestone of 1500 deliveries, Airbus's first twin-aisle aircraft to do so, and the third overall after the Boeing 747 and 777.[90][91]

Design

 
A330-200 planform view, showing its 10.06 wing aspect ratio and 30° wing sweep
 
Eight-abreast, 2-4-2 economy class
 
The fly-by-wire A330/A340 retains the A320's six-screen glass cockpit.

The A330 is a medium-size, wide-body aircraft, with two engines suspended on pylons under the wings. A two-wheel nose undercarriage and two four-wheel bogie main legs built by Messier-Dowty support the aeroplane on the ground. Its MTOW grew from 212 tonnes (467,000 lb) at introduction to 242 tonnes (534,000 lb) in 2015, enhancing its payload-range performance.[92] John Leahy states that it was intentionally being held down in takeoff weight and performance because Airbus avoided overlapping with the A340.[93]

The airframe of the A330 features a low-wing lever monoplane with a wing virtually identical to that of the A340-200/300. On the A330-300, one engine is installed at the inboard pylon while the outboard pylon position is not used; for the A340-300, both engine pylons are used, which allows the A340-300 wing to sustain a higher (wing-limited) MTOW. This is as the A340's two engines at each wing provide a more equal force distribution (engine weight) over the wing, while also the total engine weight counteracting moment is located more outboard with more engine weight located further outboard on the wing, hence the wing root bending moment with equal TOW is less on the A340-300 than on the A330-300. The wings were designed and manufactured by BAe, which developed a long slender wing with a very high aspect ratio to provide high aerodynamic efficiency.[94][Nb 1]

The wing is swept back at 30 degrees and, along with other design features, allows a maximum operating Mach number of 0.86.[96][97] To reach a long span and high aspect ratio without a large weight penalty, the wing has relatively high thickness-to-chord ratio of 11.8%[98] or 12.8%.[99][b] Jet airliners have Thickness-to-chord ratios ranging from 9.4% (MD-11 or Boeing 747) to 13% (Avro RJ or 737 Classic).[100] Each wing also has a 2.74 m (9 ft 0 in) tall winglet instead of the wingtip fences found on earlier Airbus aircraft.[101]

The shared wing design with the A340 allowed the A330 to incorporate aerodynamic features developed for the former aircraft.[102] The failure of International Aero Engines' radical ultra-high-bypass V2500 "SuperFan", which had promised around 15 per cent fuel burn reduction for the A340, led to multiple enhancements including wing upgrades to compensate.[29][103] Originally designed with a 56 m (180 ft) span, the wing was later extended to 58.6 m (190 ft) and finally to 60.3 m (200 ft).[29] At 60.3 m (200 ft), the wingspan is similar to that of the larger Boeing 747-200, but with 35 percent less wing area.[96][97]

The A330 and A340 fuselage is based on that of the Airbus A300-600, with many common parts, and has the same external and cabin width: 5.64 m (19 ft) and 5.26 m (17 ft).[104][105] Typical seating arrangements are 2–2–2 six-abreast in business class and 2–4–2 eight-abreast in economy class.[106] The fin, rudder, elevators, horizontal tail plane are used as fuel tank, flaps, ailerons and spoilers; they are made of composite materials, making 10% of the structure weight.[107] When necessary, the A330 uses the Honeywell 331–350C auxiliary power unit (APU) to provide pneumatics and electrical power.[108]

The A330 shares the same glass cockpit flight deck layout as the A320 and the A340, featuring electronic instrument displays rather than mechanical gauges.[109] Instead of a conventional control yoke, the flight deck features side-stick controls, six main displays, and the Electronic Flight Instrument System (EFIS), which covers navigation and flight displays, as well as the Electronic Centralised Aircraft Monitor (ECAM).[110][unreliable source?][111] Apart from the flight deck, the A330 also has the fly-by-wire system common to the A320 family, the A340, the A350, and the A380. It also features three primary and two secondary flight control systems, as well as a flight envelope limit protection system which prevents maneuvers from exceeding the aircraft's aerodynamic and structural limits.[110]

Operational history

Airbus intended the A330 to compete in the Extended-range Twin-engine Operation Performance Standards (ETOPS) market, specifically with the Boeing 767.[112] (ETOPS is a standard that allows longer range flights away from a diversion airport for aircraft that have met special design and testing standards.) Instead of the "ETOPS out of the box" or "Early ETOPS" approach taken by Boeing with its 777,[Nb 2] Airbus gradually increased ETOPS approval on the A330 using in-service experience. Airbus suggested that the A340 and the A330 were essentially identical except for their engine number, and that the A340's experience could be applied to the A330's ETOPS approval.[113] The plans were for all three engine types to enter service with 90-minute approval, before increasing to 120 minutes after the total A330 fleet accumulated 25,000 flight hours, and then to 180 minutes after 50,000 flight hours, in 1995.[114][Nb 3] Aer Lingus and Cathay Pacific were two important airlines assisting Airbus in this endeavour by building up in-service flight hours on over-ocean flights.[115] In November 2009, the A330 became the first aircraft to receive ETOPS–240 approval, which has since been offered by Airbus as an option.[116]

As of November 2022, the global A330 fleet had 11.5 years average aircraft age (≈2 years for A330neo) and accumulated more than 60 million flight hours since its entry into service with 99.5% operational reliability.[117]

Variants

With the launch of Airbus A330neo, the existing members of the Airbus A330 family (A330-200, 200F, 300, and MRTT) received the Airbus A330ceo ("current engine option") name.[citation needed]

A330ceo

A330-300

 
The initial variant, a 63.7 m (209 ft) long A330-300 of Cathay Pacific, its largest operator. The aircraft pictured was the aircraft in Cathay Pacific Flight 780.

Powered by two General Electric CF6-80E1, Pratt & Whitney PW4000, or Rolls-Royce Trent 700 engines, the 63.69 m (208 ft 11 in) long −300 has a range of 11,750 km / 6,350 nmi, typically carries 277 passengers with a 440 exit limit and 32 LD3 containers.[97] It received European and American certification on 21 October 1993 after 420 test flights over 1,100 hours.[118] The −300 entered service on 16 January 1994.[37] The A330-300 is based on a stretched A300 fuselage but with new wings, stabilisers and fly-by-wire systems.

In 2010, Airbus offered a new version of the −300 with the maximum gross weight increased by two tonnes to 235 t. This enabled 120 nmi (220 km; 140 mi) extension of the range as well as 1.2 t increase in payload.[119] In mid-2012, Airbus proposed another increase of the maximum gross weight to 240 t. It is planned to be implemented by mid-2015. This −300 version will have the range extended by 400 nmi (740 km; 460 mi) and will carry 5 t more payload. It will include engine and aerodynamic improvements reducing its fuel burn by about 2%.[120] In November 2012, it was further announced that the gross weight will increase from 235 t to 242 t, and the range will increase by 500 nmi (926 km; 575 mi) to 6,100 nmi (11,300 km; 7,020 mi). Airbus is also planning to activate the central fuel tank for the first time for the −300 model.[121]

As of December 2020, a total of 779 of the -300 had been ordered, 771 of which had been delivered, with 742 in operation.[1] The 2015 list price is $264 million.[75] The closest competitors have been the Boeing 777-200/200ER, and the now out-of-production McDonnell Douglas MD-11.[122]

A330-300HGW

 
The first 242 t (534,000 lb) A330-300 was delivered to Delta Air Lines in May 2015

In 2000, it was reported that Airbus was studying an A330-300 version with a higher gross weight. It was named A330-300HGW and had a takeoff weight of 240 tonnes (530,000 lb), 7 tonnes (15,000 lb) greater than the -300's weight at the time. The version would have a strengthened wing and additional fuel capacity from a 41,600-litre (11,000 US gal) centre section fuel tank. The A330-300HGW's range was increased to over 11,000 km (5,940 nmi; 6,840 mi). Among those that showed interest was leasing company ILFC, which sought airliners that could fly from the US West Coast to Europe.[123]

Power was to be supplied by all three engines offered to A330-200 and A330-300 with lower gross weight. Airbus also considered using the new Engine Alliance GP7000 engine for the A330-300HGW, which would have been the engine's first twinjet application. The −300HGW was to enter airline service in 2004.[123] However, the -300HGW programme was not launched and quietly disappeared.

The 240-tonne A330 reappeared years later when Airbus announced at the 2012 Farnborough Airshow that it would be an available option for both the A330-300 and the A330-200.[120][124] In November 2012, the maximum take off weight was further increased to 242 tonnes.[125] The first of these aircraft was delivered to Delta Air Lines on 28 May 2015.[126]

A330 Regional

In September 2013, Airbus announced a version of the A330-300, named A330 Regional or A330-300 Regional. The A330 Regional has seating for up to around 400 passengers, with reduced engine thrust, reduced maximum takeoff weight of 199 t (439,000 lb), and reduced range of 2,700 nautical miles (5,000 km; 3,110 mi). It is said that the maximum takeoff weight of these aircraft is an "easy upgrade to 242 t (534,000 lb)", which is the extended range version with range of 6,350 nmi (11,800 km; 7,310 mi).[71][127][128][129] It is said to provide up to 26% lower operating costs than the longer range version A330-300.[130]

On 18 August 2016, Airbus delivered the first A330 Regional to Saudia.[131]

A330-200

 
The -200 is 4.85 m (15.9 ft) shorter than the -300, China Eastern is the type's largest operator

The A330-200 is a shortened, longer-range variant, which entered service in 1998 with Korean Air. Typical range with 253 passengers in a three-class configuration is 13,400 km (7,240 nmi; 8,330 mi).[104] The A330-200 is ten fuselage frames shorter than the original −300, with a length of 58.82 m (193 ft 0 in).[104][132] To compensate for the smaller moment arm of the shorter fuselage, the vertical stabiliser height of the -200 was increased by 104 cm (40.9 in).[133] The −200's wing was also modified; structural strengthening of the wing allowed the maximum takeoff weight of the −200 to be increased to 229.8 tonnes (507,000 lb).[133] The −200 is offered with three engine types similar to those found on the −300, namely the General Electric CF6-80E, Pratt & Whitney PW4000, or Rolls-Royce Trent 700.[104] Airbus also boosted fuel capacity to 139,100 L (36,700 US gal) by adding the centre section fuel tank, standard in the A340.[48]

A new vertical stabiliser was introduced in 2004 beginning with MSN 555. This newer fin is shorter in height by 50 cm (20 in)[106] and was derived from the design of the vertical stabiliser of the A340-500 and -600, later becoming standard on all new A330-200s.[134]

In 2008, Airbus released plans for a higher gross weight version of the A330-200 to more effectively compete against the Boeing 787 Dreamliner.[135] The new-build A330-200HGW had a 5 tonne increase in Maximum Takeoff Weight, allowing a 560 kilometres (302 nmi; 348 mi) range increase and a 3.4 tonnes (7,500 lb) payload increase.[135][136] Korean Air became the first customer on 27 February 2009 with an order for six −200HGWs. Deliveries of the first aircraft started in 2010.[137]

In mid-2012, Airbus proposed another version of the −200 with the maximum gross weight increased by 2 t to 240 t. This version had its range extended by 270 nmi and carried 2.5 t more payload. It saw engine and aerodynamic improvements reducing its fuel burn by about 2%. In November 2012, it was announced that the gross weight was to be further increased to 242 t with the range extended by 350 nmi (650 km; 400 mi) over the 238 t version.[121] It was certified by the EASA on 8 September 2015.[138]

As of December 2020, 661 of the −200 had been ordered, 645 of which had been delivered, with 600 aircraft in operation.[1] The 2018 list price is $238.5 million.[75] The −200 competes with the Boeing 767-300ER and to a lesser extent the 767-400ER[139] as well as with the new 787 Dreamliner.[140] In 1998, a newly delivered A330-200 was valued $94 million, rose over $100 million in 2005 but lowered at almost $75 million in 2019 as the market favours the -300 and the A330neo.[141]

A330-200F

 
The bulge under the A330-200F nose corrects the inherent nose-down attitude of passenger versions.[65]

The A330-200F is an all-cargo derivative of the A330-200 capable of carrying 65 t (140,000 lb) over 7,400 km (4,000 nmi; 4,600 mi) or 70 t (150,000 lb) up to 5,900 km (3,200 nmi; 3,700 mi).[64] To overcome the standard A330's nose-down body angle on the ground, the A330F uses a revised nose undercarriage layout to provide a level deck during cargo loading. The normal A330-200 undercarriage is used, but its attachment points are lower in the fuselage, thus requiring a distinctive blister fairing on the nose to accommodate the retracted nose gear.[65] Power is provided by two Pratt & Whitney PW4000 or Rolls-Royce Trent 700 engines. General Electric does not offer an engine for the A330-200F.[142]

As of December 2020, Airbus had delivered 38 aircraft with no outstanding orders.[1] The list price is $241.7 million.[75] As well as new-build freighters, Airbus has proposed passenger-to-freighter conversions of existing −200 airliners.[143] The A330-200F is sized between the 767-300F and 777F,[144][145] but trails both Boeing models in orders and deliveries.[146][147]

A330P2F

 
The first A330-200P2F was delivered to EgyptAir Cargo on 3 August 2018, with no bulge

The A330P2F freighter conversion programme was launched at the 2012 Singapore Airshow with the support of Airbus, their Dresden-based Elbe Flugzeugwerke (EFW) joint venture and Singapore-based engineering firm ST Aerospace. Targeting a 2016 introduction, Airbus then estimated a market requirement for 2,700 freighters over 20 years, half of these mid-sized, including 900 conversions.[148]

The A330-300P2F, adapted for express delivery and e-commerce lower densities, can carry up to 62 t (137,000 lb) over 3,650 nmi (6,760 km). Following flight tests in October 2017 and EASA Supplemental Type Certificate awarded in November, the first was delivered to DHL on 1 December.[149]

The A330-200P2F can carry 61 t (134,000 lb) over 4,250 nmi (7,870 km).[150] Following June Flight tests and the STC in July, the first was delivered to EgyptAir Cargo on 3 August 2018.[151]

The P2F version of the A330 retains the passenger aircraft's geometry and incorporates a powered cargo loading system to enable pallets to be moved "uphill" on the main cargo deck, and therefore does not have the distinctive nose blister, or "bulge", of the factory delivered A330-200F.[152]

On 3 March 2022, Air Transport Services Group (ATSG), an air freighter lessor, committed to acquiring 29 Airbus A330-300 Passenger-to-Freighter (P2F) conversion slots from EFW with deliveries in the 2023 to 2027 timeframe. The aircraft will be converted mainly at EFW's facility in Dresden, Germany, and at a new conversion site in Shanghai, China.[153]

A330neo

A330-800

The Airbus A330-800 is based on the A330-200, with, cabin modifications, larger Trent 7000 engines and aerodynamic improvements.[154] The A330-800s maiden flight took place on 6 November 2018.[155] The first two A330-800's were delivered to their launch customer Kuwait Airways in October 2020.[citation needed]

A330-900

The Airbus A330-900 maintains the A330-300's fuselage dimensions with 10 more seats thanks to cabin optimisation.[154] With modern Trent 7000 engines and redesigned winglets, it should burn 14% less fuel per seat than the A330-300 over a distance of 4,000 nmi.[156] It should travel 6,550 nmi (12,130 km) with 287 passengers in a standard configuration.[157]

BelugaXL (large cargo freighter)

 
BelugaXL A330-743L during its maiden flight

Airbus started design of a replacement aircraft for the Beluga in November 2014. The BelugaXL A330-743L is based on the Airbus A330, and has 30% more space than its predecessor.[158][159] Like the Beluga, the BelugaXL features an extension on its fuselage top, but can accommodate two A350 wings instead of one. The new aircraft rolled out of the assembly line on 4 January 2018, making its maiden flight on 19 July 2018. It began ferrying cargo between different Airbus factories in January 2020.[160]

Corporate jet variants

ACJ330

The A330-200 is available as an ultra-long-range Airbus Corporate Jet known as the A330-200 Prestige,[161] with a range of 15,400 km (8,300 nmi) and a capacity of 50 passengers.[162]

ACJ330neo

A corporate jet version of the new A330neo capable of flying 25 passengers 19,260km (10,400nm) or 21 hours, enough to fly non-stop from Europe to Australia.[117]

Military variants

Airbus A330 MRTT

 
Airbus A330 MRTT/KC-30 of the RAAF with refuelling drogues deployed

The Airbus A330 MRTT is the Multi-Role Transport and Tanker (MRTT) version of the A330-200, designed for aerial refuelling and strategic transport.[163] As of November 2020, approximately 60 orders had been placed for the A330 MRTT by air forces of thirteen countries.[164][165][166]

EADS/Northrop Grumman KC-45

The EADS/Northrop Grumman KC-45 was a proposed version of the A330 MRTT for the United States Air Force (USAF)'s KC-X aerial refuelling programme. In February 2008, the USAF selected the aircraft to replace the Boeing KC-135 Stratotanker.[167] The replacement process was mired in controversy, instances of corruption, and allegations of favouritism.[168][169] In July 2010, EADS submitted a tanker bid to the USAF without Northrop Grumman as a partner.[170][171] However, on 24 February 2011, the USAF picked the Boeing KC-767 proposal, later named KC-46, as the winner because of its lower cost.[172][173]

Operators

By 2012, the 830 A330s in service with over 90 operators had accumulated five million revenue flights and 20 million flight hours, with a dispatch reliability above 99%.[148] In November 2017, 1,190 were transporting passengers with 106 airlines (the top 29 operated two-thirds of the fleet), consisting of 530 -200s and 660 A330-300s, mainly high-gross-weight, with 36 original shorter-range A330-300s, half of them built since January 2010. Its average sector is 2,000 nmi (3,700 km); the longest flight for the -200 was 6,000 nmi (11,000 km), from Buenos Aires to Rome, by Aerolíneas Argentinas, and 5,000 nmi (9,300 km), from Paris to Reunion, by Corsair and French Blue for the -300. Of operators of at least five A330s, 17 have ordered A350-900s, 11 have ordered B787-8/9s, 13 both, 3 have ordered A330neos and 2 both A330neos and A350s; 14 haven't yet decided on a replacement.[174] By August 2019, the A330 was operated between over 400 airports in the world, by more than 120 operators, while its average dispatch reliability was over 99% and annual utilization up to 6,000 flight hours.[175] The 1,500th airplane, an A330-900 (A330neo), was delivered to Delta Air Lines on 21 September 2020.[90]

As of December 2022, A330 family aircraft orders stood at 1,774, of which 1,559 had been delivered and 1,467, comprising 596 A330-200s, 38 -200Fs, 741 -300s, 7 -800s and 85 -900s, were in airline service with 142 operators. The five largest operators were Delta Air Lines (62), Turkish Airlines (61), China Eastern Airlines (55), Air China (53), China Southern Airlines (40).[1]

Orders and deliveries

Orders Deliveries
Type Total Backlog Total 2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010
A330-200 664 10 654 1 5 3 5 7 14 16 21 30 28 43 37 40 32
A330-200F 38 0 38 - - - - - - 2 3 3 5 8 8 4 5
A330-300 784 8 776 - 4 1 1 5 32 49 42 70 75 57 56 43 50
-- A330ceo -- 1,486 18 1,468 1 9 4 6 12 46 67 66 103 108 108 101 87 87
A330-800 11 4 7 - 3 1 3 - - - - - - - - - -
A330-900 277 190 87[c] 2 20 11 10 41 3 - - - - - - - -
-- A330neo -- 288 194 94 2 23 12 13 41 3 - - - - - - - -
(A330 family) (1,774) (212) (1,562) (3) (32) (16) (19) (53) (49) (67) (66) (103) (108) (108) (101) (87) (87)
Deliveries
2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993
A330-200 38 49 42 39 29 25 19 36 16 27 40 12 - - - - -
A330-200F - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
A330-300 38 23 26 23 27 22 12 6 19 16 4 11 14 10 30 9 1
-- A330ceo -- 76 72 68 62 56 47 31 42 35 43 44 23 14 10 30 9 1
-- A330neo -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
(A330 family) (76) (72) (68) (62) (56) (47) (31) (42) (35) (43) (44) (23) (14) (10) (30) (9) (1)

Data as of 28 February 2023[1][176]

Accidents and incidents

As of December 2022, the Airbus A330 has been involved in 45 Aviation accidents and incidents, including 14 hull-losses (10 due to flight related accidents and 4 due to criminal related accidents), for a total of 339 fatalities.[177][178]

Accidents

The A330's first fatal accident occurred on 30 June 1994 near Toulouse on a test flight when an Airbus-owned A330-300 crashed while simulating an engine failure on climbout, killing all seven on board.[39] Airbus subsequently advised A330 operators to disconnect the autopilot and limit pitch attitude in the event of an engine failure at low speed.[179]

The second fatal and deadliest accident, and first while in commercial service, occurred on 1 June 2009 when Air France Flight 447, an A330-200 en route from Rio de Janeiro to Paris with 228 people on board, crashed in the Atlantic Ocean 640–800 km (350–430 nmi) northeast of the islands of Fernando de Noronha,[180] with no survivors. Malfunctioning pitot tubes provided an early focus for the investigation,[181] as the aircraft involved had Thales-built "–AA" models known to indicate faulty airspeed data during icing conditions.[182] In July 2009, Airbus advised A330 and A340 operators to replace Thales pitots with equivalents manufactured by Goodrich.[182] Investigators later determined that the inadequate response of the pilots to both a loss of airspeed data from malfunctioning pitot tubes and subsequent autopilot disengagement followed by incorrect reaction by pilot flying resulted in Flight 447 entering into an aerodynamic stall.[183]

On 12 May 2010, Afriqiyah Airways Flight 771, an A330-200, crashed on approach to Tripoli International Airport, Libya, on a flight from O. R. Tambo International Airport, Johannesburg, South Africa. Of the 104 people on board, all but one nine-year-old Dutch child died.[184] The cause of the crash was determined to be pilot error.[185]

On 23 October 2022, Korean Air Flight 631, an Airbus A330-300 registration HL7525, operating from Seoul to Cebu, crash landed and overshot the runway while landing in poor weather at night.[186]

Incidents

Flight data related

In 2008, Air Caraïbes reported two incidents of pitot tube icing malfunctions on its A330s.[187]

On 7 October 2008, Qantas Flight 72, an A330-300, suffered a rapid loss of altitude in two sudden uncommanded pitch-down manoeuvres while 150 km (81 nmi) from the RAAF Learmonth air base in northwestern Australia. After declaring an emergency, the crew landed the aircraft safely at Learmonth.[188] It was later determined that the incident, which caused 106 injuries, 14 of them serious, was the result of a design flaw of the plane's Air Data Inertial Reference Unit and a limitation of the aircraft's flight computer software.[189]

Fuel system related

On 24 August 2001, Air Transat Flight 236, an A330-200, developed a fuel leak over the Atlantic Ocean due to an incorrectly installed hydraulic part and was forced to glide for over 15 minutes to an emergency landing in the Azores.[190]

On 13 April 2010, Cathay Pacific Flight 780 from Surabaya Juanda International Airport to Hong Kong landed safely after contaminated fuel caused both engines to fail. Fifty-seven passengers were injured. Its two pilots received the Polaris Award from the International Federation of Air Line Pilots' Associations for their heroism and airmanship.[191]

Chemical and fire related

On 15 March 2000, a Malaysia Airlines A330-300 suffered structural damage due to leaking oxalyl chloride, a corrosive chemical substance that had been improperly labeled before shipping. The aircraft was written off.[192]

On 27 August 2019, an Air China A330-300 at Beijing Capital International Airport caught fire while at the gate. The passengers and crew were safely evacuated. The airplane was likely damaged beyond repair.[193]

Hijackings and war related

The two hijackings involving the A330 have resulted in one fatality,[177] namely the hijacker of Philippine Airlines Flight 812 on 25 May 2000, who jumped out of the aircraft to his death.[194] The hijacking of Sabena Flight 689 on 13 October 2000 ended with no casualties when Spanish police took control of the aircraft.[195] On 24 July 2001, two unoccupied SriLankan Airlines A330s were destroyed amid an attack on Bandaranaike International Airport, in Colombo, Sri Lanka, by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.[196][197] On 25 December 2009, passengers and crew subdued a man who attempted to detonate explosives in his underwear on an A330-300 operating Northwest Airlines Flight 253.[198][199]

On 15 July 2014, a Libyan Airlines A330 was severely damaged in the fighting in Libya and sustained bullet holes in the fuselage. On 20 July 2014, two Afriqiyah Airways Airbus A330s were hit by an RPG at Tripoli International Airport. One was completely destroyed in the ensuing fire.[200][201]

Engine related

Several in-flight shutdowns of Trent 700–powered A330-300s have occurred. On 11 November 1996, engine failure on a Cathay Pacific flight forced it back to Ho Chi Minh City.[202] On 17 April 1997, Cathay Pacific's Dragonair subsidiary experienced an engine shutdown on an A330, caused by carbon clogging the oil filter. As a result, Cathay Pacific self-suspended its 120-minute ETOPS clearance. Another engine failure occurred on 6 May during climbout with a Cathay Pacific A330, due to a bearing failure in a Hispano-Suiza-built gearbox. Three days later, a Cathay Pacific A330 on climbout during a Bangkok–Hong Kong flight experienced an oil pressure drop and a resultant engine spool down, forcing a return to Bangkok. The cause was traced to metal contamination in the engine's master chip.[203] Following a fifth engine failure on 23 May, Cathay Pacific and Dragonair voluntarily grounded their A330 fleets for two weeks, causing major disruption as Cathay's eleven A330s made up fifteen per cent of its passenger capacity.[204] Rolls-Royce and Hispano-Suiza developed a redesigned lubrication system to fix the problem.[203]

Other engines have issues too: on 14 July 2015, an Asiana PW4000 was shut down in flight,[205] on 15 January 2017, an Air Europa CF6 was shut down in flight,[206] on 28 December 2017, an Aer Lingus CF6 was shut down in flight,[207] on 18 January 2018, a Malaysia Airlines PW4000 was shut down in flight,[208] on 13 February 2018, a Delta Air Lines PW4000 caught fire,[209] on 29 May 2018, a Delta Air Lines PW4000 had engine vibrations,[210] on 1 June 2018, a Qantas CF6 was shut down in flight,[211] on 1 October 2018, a China Airlines CF6 had an engine problem,[212] and on 5 November 2018, a Brussels Airlines PW4000 was shut down in flight.[213]

Aircraft on display

A former Turkish Airlines A330-300 is preserved at Aircraft Museum Kathmandu in Kathmandu, Nepal. This aircraft was only eight months old when it was written off in a runway excursion at Tribhuvan International Airport. The museum is inside the aircraft, with more than 200 miniature planes inside and aviation artifacts.[214][215]

Specifications

Airbus A330 specifications[216] unless noted
A330-200 A330-200F A330-300
Cockpit crew Two
Capacity 246 (36J @ 60 in + 210Y @ 32 in) 70,000 kg (150,000 lb) 300 (36J @ 60 in + 264Y @ 32 in)
Max seating[217] 406 440
Length[175] 58.82 m (192.98 ft) 63.66 m (208.86 ft)
Span Wing: 60.3 m (197.83 ft), Main gear: 12.61 m (41.37 ft)
Wing 361.6 m2 (3,892 sq ft), 25% chord wingsweep: 30°,[218] 10.06 Aspect ratio
Height[217] 17.39 m (57.1 ft) 16.90 m (55.4 ft) 16.79 m (55.1 ft)
Fuselage 5.64 m (222 in) diameter, 5.26 m (207 in) cabin width
Seat width 0.46 m (18 in) in 8 abreast economy, 0.53 m (21 in) in 6 abreast business
Cargo volume 132.4 m3 (4,680 cu ft) 469.2 m3 (16,570 cu ft) 158.4 m3 (5,590 cu ft)
MTOW 242,000 kg (534,000 lb) 233,000 kg (514,000 lb) 242,000 kg (534,000 lb)
OEW 120,600 kg (265,900 lb) 109,400 kg (241,200 lb) 129,400 kg (285,300 lb)
Max Payload 49,400 kg (108,900 lb) 68,600 kg (151,200 lb) 45,600 kg (100,500 lb)
Fuel capacity 139,090 L (36,740 US gal) – 109,185 kg (240,712 lb)
Engines (×2)[175] GE CF6 (except -200F) / PW4000 / Trent 700
Thrust (×2)[175] 64,500–71,100 lbf (287–316 kN)
Cruise Mach 0.82 (470 kn; 871 km/h),[d] 12,500 m (41,100 ft) Service ceiling[219]
Range[217] 13,450 km (7,260 nmi)[e] 7,400 km (4,000 nmi) 11,750 km (6,340 nmi)[f]
Runway[g] Takeoff: 2,770 m (9,090 ft), Landing: 1,730 m (5,680 ft)[220]

Aircraft model designations

 
A330 family schematic
EASA Type Certificate Data Sheet[175]
Model Certification Date Engines
A330-201 31 October 2002 General Electric CF6-80E1A2
A330-202 31 March 1998 General Electric CF6-80E1A4
A330-203 20 November 2001 General Electric CF6-80E1A3
A330-223 13 July 1998 Pratt & Whitney PW4168A/4170
A330-223F 9 April 2010 Pratt & Whitney PW4170 (Freighter)
A330-243 11 January 1999 Rolls-Royce Trent 772B/C-60
A330-243F 9 April 2010 Rolls-Royce Trent 772B-60 (Freighter)
A330-301 21 October 1993 General Electric CF6-80E1A2
A330-302 17 May 2004 General Electric CF6-80E1A4
A330-303 17 May 2004 General Electric CF6-80E1A3
A330-321 2 June 1994 Pratt & Whitney PW4164
A330-322 2 June 1994 Pratt & Whitney PW4168
A330-323 22 April 1999 Pratt & Whitney PW4168A/4170
A330-341 22 December 1994 Rolls-Royce Trent 768-60
A330-342 22 December 1994 Rolls-Royce Trent 772-60
A330-343 13 September 1999 Rolls-Royce Trent 772B/C-60

ICAO Aircraft Type Designators

Designation[221] Type
A332 Airbus A330-200, Airbus A330-200F
A333 Airbus A330-300
A337 Airbus A330-700 Beluga XL

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References

Notes
  1. ^ Final assembly in France
  2. ^ This is the thickness to chord ratio of the early Airbus A340 variants, which share the same wing with the A330
  3. ^ Excluding 2 A330-900 delivered to Air Belgium via Airbus Financial Services which had been aircraft built for cancelled orders
  4. ^ Mach 0.86 (493 kn; 914 km/h) MMO
  5. ^ 247 passengers
  6. ^ 277 passengers
  7. ^ SL, ISA, MTOW/MLW
  1. ^ The higher the aspect ratio, the greater the aerodynamic efficiency.[95]
  2. ^ This meant that the Boeing 777 was certified for 180-minutes ETOPS from the first day of service. As a result, the aircraft could be 180 minutes (3 hours) of flying time from a diversionary airport during transoceanic services.
  3. ^ After a total of 25,000 airborne hours, the A330 would be allowed a maximum of 120 minutes (2 hours) of flight time from a diversionary airport. After 50,000 hours, the limit would be raised to 180 minutes (3 hours).
Citations
  1. ^ a b c d e f g "Airbus orders and deliveries" (XLS). Airbus S.A.S. 28 February 2023. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  2. ^ Norris & Wagner 2001, pp. 9–18
  3. ^ Wensveen 2007, p. 63
  4. ^ Gunston 2009, p. 183
  5. ^ a b Norris & Wagner 2001, pp. 18–19
  6. ^ a b c Norris & Wagner 2001, pp. 22–23
  7. ^ Flight International 1981, p. 1155.
  8. ^ a b Norris & Wagner 2001, p. 23
  9. ^ a b c Eden 2008, p. 30
  10. ^ a b c Kingsley-Jones 1997, p. 29.
  11. ^ Norris & Wagner 2001, p. 24.
  12. ^ Norris & Wagner 2001, pp. 24–25.
  13. ^ a b Norris & Wagner 2001, p. 27.
  14. ^ a b Lawrence & Thornton 2005, p. 73.
  15. ^ Norris & Wagner 2001, pp. 26, 31.
  16. ^ Gunston 2009, p. 196.
  17. ^ (Press release). Airbus. 27 January 1986. Archived from the original on 24 February 2017.
  18. ^ Norris & Wagner 2001
  19. ^ Norris & Wagner 2001, pp. 44–45.
  20. ^ . GE Aviation. Archived from the original on 25 September 2010. Retrieved 25 January 2011.
  21. ^ Norris & Wagner 2001, p. 47.
  22. ^ Norris & Wagner 2001, p. 44.
  23. ^ Norris & Wagner 2001, pp. 45–46.
  24. ^ "PW4000-100". Pratt & Whitney. Retrieved 4 July 2015.
  25. ^ a b Norris & Wagner 2001, p. 51.
  26. ^ Norris & Wagner 2001, pp. 53–54.
  27. ^ Norris & Wagner 2001, p. 52.
  28. ^ Norris & Wagner 2001, p. 53.
  29. ^ a b c d Norris & Wagner 2001, p. 31.
  30. ^ "Long time coming". Flight International. 12 June 2001.
  31. ^ a b c Norris & Wagner 2001, p. 32.
  32. ^ Norris & Wagner 2001, pp. 32, 55.
  33. ^ (Press release). Airbus. 5 June 1987. Archived from the original on 24 February 2017.
  34. ^ Eden 2008, p. 32.
  35. ^ a b c Norris & Wagner 2001, pp. 78–79.
  36. ^ Norris & Wagner 2001, pp. 71, 78.
  37. ^ a b Norris & Wagner 2001, p. 85.
  38. ^ "Accident description". Aviation-Safety.net. 24 January 2011. Retrieved 25 January 2011.
  39. ^ a b Norris & Wagner 2001, pp. 86–87.
  40. ^ Learmount 1994, p. 6.
  41. ^ a b Norris & Wagner 2001, p. 89.
  42. ^ Eden 2008, p. 31.
  43. ^ Norris & Wagner 2001, pp. 84–85.
  44. ^ Norris & Wagner 2001, pp. 86, 89.
  45. ^ a b Eden 2008, p. 32.
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  • Jackson, Paul, ed. (2008). Jane's All the World's Aircraft 2008–2009. Coulsdon, Surrey, UK: Jane's Information Group, 2008. ISBN 978-0-7106-2837-4.
  • Recent developments with Airbus: ninth report of session 2006–07, Vol. 2: Oral and written evidence. London, UK: The Stationery Office (Parliament: House of Commons: Trade and Industry Committee), 2007. 25 July 2007. ISBN 978-0-215-03551-6.
  • Reed, Arthur (1991). Airbus: Europe's High Flyer. Zürich, Switzerland: Norden Publishing House, 1992. ISBN 978-3-907150-10-8.

External links

  • Official website
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airbus, a330, a330, a333, redirect, here, road, england, a333, road, other, uses, a330, disambiguation, variant, known, a330neo, wide, body, aircraft, developed, produced, airbus, airbus, conceived, several, derivatives, a300, first, airliner, from, 1970s, the. A330 and A333 redirect here For the road in England see A333 road For other uses see A330 disambiguation For the new variant known as the A330neo see Airbus A330neo The Airbus A330 is a wide body aircraft developed and produced by Airbus Airbus conceived several derivatives of the A300 its first airliner from the mid 1970s Then the company began development on the A330 twinjet in parallel with the A340 quadjet and launched both designs with their first orders in June 1987 The A330 300 the first variant took its maiden flight in November 1992 and entered service with Air Inter in January 1994 The slightly shorter A330 200 variant followed in 1998 A330An Airbus A330 300 the first and most common variant of Turkish AirlinesRole Wide body airlinerNational origin Multi national a Manufacturer AirbusFirst flight 2 November 1992Introduction 17 January 1994 with Air InterStatus In servicePrimary users Delta Air LinesTurkish Airlines China Eastern Airlines Air ChinaProduced 1992 presentNumber built 1 562 as of 28 February 2023 update 1 Developed from Airbus A300Variants Airbus A330 MRTT EADS Northrop Grumman KC 45Developed into Airbus A330neo Airbus Beluga XLThe A330 shares its airframe with the early A340 variants but having two main landing gear legs instead of three lower weights and slightly different lengths Both airliners have fly by wire controls as well as a similar glass cockpit to increase the commonality The A330 was Airbus s first airliner to offer a choice of three engines the General Electric CF6 Pratt amp Whitney PW4000 or the Rolls Royce Trent 700 The A330 300 has a range of 11 750 km or 6 350 nmi with 277 passengers while the shorter A330 200 can cover 13 450 km or 7 250 nmi with 247 passengers Other variants include the A330 200F dedicated freighter the A330 MRTT military tanker and the ACJ330 corporate jet The A330 MRTT was proposed as the EADS Northrop Grumman KC 45 for the US Air Force s KC X competition but lost to the Boeing KC 46 in appeal after an initial win In July 2014 Airbus announced the re engined A330neo new engine option comprising A330 800 900 which entered service with TAP Air Portugal in December 2018 With the exclusive more efficient Trent 7000 turbofan and improvements including sharklets it offers up to 14 better fuel economy per seat Earlier A330s 200 200F 300 are now called A330ceo current engine option Delta Air Lines is currently the largest operator with 62 airplanes in its fleet As of December 2022 update A330 orders stood at 1 774 of which 1 559 had been delivered and 1 467 were in service with 142 operators The global A330 fleet had accumulated more than 60 million flight hours since its entry into service The A330 is the third most delivered wide body airliner after the Boeing 777 and Boeing 747 It competes with the Boeing 767 smaller variants of the Boeing 777 and the 787 It is complemented by the larger Airbus A350 which succeeded the four engined A340 Contents 1 Development 1 1 Background 1 2 Design effort 1 2 1 Engines 1 3 Production and testing 1 4 Entry into service 1 5 Shrinking the 300 the 200 1 6 Proposed variants 1 7 Further developments 1 8 New Engine Option 1 9 Production 2 Design 3 Operational history 4 Variants 4 1 A330ceo 4 1 1 A330 300 4 1 2 A330 300HGW 4 1 3 A330 Regional 4 1 4 A330 200 4 1 5 A330 200F 4 1 6 A330P2F 4 2 A330neo 4 2 1 A330 800 4 2 2 A330 900 4 3 BelugaXL large cargo freighter 4 4 Corporate jet variants 4 4 1 ACJ330 4 4 2 ACJ330neo 4 5 Military variants 4 5 1 Airbus A330 MRTT 4 5 2 EADS Northrop Grumman KC 45 5 Operators 5 1 Orders and deliveries 6 Accidents and incidents 6 1 Accidents 6 2 Incidents 7 Aircraft on display 8 Specifications 8 1 Aircraft model designations 8 2 ICAO Aircraft Type Designators 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksDevelopment EditBackground Edit Airbus jetliners 1972 1994 Model A300 A310 A320 A330 A340Priorcode s B10 SA2 B9 TA9 B11 TA11 Introduced 1972 1983 1988 1994 1993Body Wide Wide Narrow Wide WideEngines 2 2 2 2 4Range 4 050 nmi7 500 km 4 350 nmi8 060 km 3 000 nmi5 600 km 6 350 nmi11 760 km 7 300 nmi13 500 km A330 and A340 seating and range comparison Airbus s first airliner the A300 was envisioned as part of a diverse family of commercial aircraft Pursuing this goal studies began in the early 1970s into derivatives of the A300 2 3 Before introducing the A300 Airbus identified nine possible variations designated B1 through B9 4 A tenth variant the A300B10 was conceived in 1973 and developed into the longer range Airbus A310 5 Airbus then focused its efforts on single aisle SA studies conceiving a family of airliners later known as the Airbus A320 family the first commercial aircraft with digital fly by wire controls During these studies Airbus turned its focus back to the wide body aircraft market simultaneously working on both projects 5 In the mid 1970s Airbus began development of the A300B9 a larger derivative of the A300 which would eventually become the A330 The B9 was essentially a lengthened A300 with the same wing coupled with the most powerful turbofan engines available It was targeted at the growing demand for high capacity medium range transcontinental trunk routes 6 Offering the same range and payload as the McDonnell Douglas DC 10 but with 25 per cent better fuel efficiency 6 the B9 was seen as a viable replacement for the DC 10 and the Lockheed L 1011 TriStar trijets 7 It was also considered as a medium ranged successor to the A300 8 At the same time a 200 seat four engine version the B11 which would eventually become the A340 was also under development 9 The B11 was originally planned to take the place of narrow body Boeing 707s and Douglas DC 8s then in commercial use but would later evolve to target the long range wide body trijet replacement market 8 To differentiate from the SA series the B9 and B11 were re designated as the TA9 and TA11 with TA standing for twin aisle 9 Development costs were reduced by the two aircraft using the same fuselage and wing with projected savings of US 500 million Another factor was the split preference of those within Airbus and more importantly those of prospective customers twinjets were favoured in North America quad jets desired in Asia and operators had mixed views in Europe 6 Airbus ultimately found that most potential customers favoured four engines for their exemption from existing twinjet range restrictions and their ability to be ferried with one inactive engine 10 As a result development plans prioritised the four engined TA11 ahead of the TA9 10 Design effort Edit Compared to the A330 twinjet on ground the heavier A340 inflight has four engines and a centre line wheel bogie The first specifications for the TA9 and TA11 aircraft that could accommodate 410 passengers in a one class layout emerged in 1982 11 They showed a large underfloor cargo area that could hold five cargo pallets or sixteen LD3 cargo containers in the forward and four pallets or fourteen LD3s in the aft hold double the capacity of the Lockheed L 1011 TriStar or DC 10 and 8 46 metres 27 8 ft longer than the Airbus A300 12 By June 1985 the TA9 and TA11 had received more improvements including the adoption of the A320 flight deck digital fly by wire FBW control system and side stick control 13 Airbus had developed a common cockpit for their aircraft models to allow quick transition by pilots The flight crews could transition from one type to another after only one week s training which reduces operator costs 14 The two TAs would use the vertical stabiliser rudder and circular fuselage sections of the A300 600 extended by two barrel sections 14 Airbus briefly considered the variable camber wing a concept that requires changing the wing profile for a given phase of flight Studies were carried out by British Aerospace BAe now part of BAE Systems at Hatfield and Bristol Airbus estimated this would yield a two per cent improvement in aerodynamic efficiency 15 but the feature was rejected because of cost and difficulty of development 9 A true laminar flow wing a low drag shape that improves fuel efficiency was also considered but rejected 16 With necessary funding available the Airbus Supervisory Board approved the development of the A330 and A340 with potential customers on 27 January 1986 17 Its chairman Franz Josef Strauss stated afterwards that Airbus Industrie is now in a position to finalise the detailed technical definition of the TA9 now officially designated as the A330 and the TA11 now called the A340 with potential launch customer airlines and to discuss with them the terms and conditions for launch commitments The designations were originally reversed and were switched so the quad jet airliner would have a 4 in its name Airbus hoped for five airlines to sign for both the A330 and A340 and on 12 May sent sale proposals to the most likely candidates including Lufthansa and Swissair 13 Engines Edit From the beginning of the TA9 s development a choice of engines from the three major engine manufacturers Rolls Royce Pratt amp Whitney and GE Aviation was planned 18 GE Aviation first offered the CF6 80C2 However later studies indicated that more thrust was needed to increase the initial power capability from 267 to 289 kN 60 000 to 65 000 lbf 19 GE enlarged the CF6 80C2 fan from 236 to 244 centimetres 92 9 to 96 1 in and reduced the number of fan blades from 38 to 34 to create the CF6 80E1 with a thrust of 300 320 kN 67 000 72 000 lbf 20 Rolls Royce s Trent 700 features a mixed exhaust Pratt amp Whitney s PW4000 has a more conventional unmixed exhaust The GE CF6 also has an unmixed exhaust but adds a pointed exhaust coneRolls Royce initially wanted to use the 267 kN 60 000 lbf Trent 600 to power Airbus s newest twinjet and the upcoming McDonnell Douglas MD 11 However the company later agreed to develop an engine solely for the A330 the Trent 700 with a larger diameter and 311 kN 69 900 lbf of thrust 21 The A330 became the first Airbus aircraft for which Rolls Royce supplied engines 22 Similarly Pratt amp Whitney signed an agreement that covered the development of the A330 exclusive PW4168 The company increased the fan size from 94 in 2 39 m to 100 in 2 54 m 23 enabling the engine to deliver 311 kN 69 900 lbf of thrust Like the CF6 80E1 34 blades were used instead of the 38 found on the smaller PW4000 engines 24 Production and testing Edit A330 final assembly line in Toulouse 2007 In preparation for the production of the A330 and the A340 Airbus s partners invested heavily in new facilities In south western England BAe made a 7 million investment in a three storey technical centre with 15 000 m2 161 000 sq ft of floor area at Filton 25 In north Wales BAe also spent 5 million on a new production line at its Broughton wing production plant 25 In Germany Messerschmitt Bolkow Blohm MBB invested DM400 million 225 million on manufacturing facilities in the Weser estuary including at Bremen Einswarden Varel and Hamburg 26 France saw the biggest investments with Aerospatiale constructing a new Fr 2 5 billion 411 million final assembly plant adjacent to Toulouse Blagnac Airport in Colomiers by November 1988 the pillars for the new Clement Ader assembly hall had been erected 27 The assembly process featured increased automation such as robots drilling holes and installing fasteners during the wing to fuselage mating process 28 On 12 March 1987 Airbus received the first orders for the twinjet Domestic French airline Air Inter placed five firm orders and fifteen options while Thai Airways International requested eight aircraft split evenly between firm orders and options 10 29 Airbus announced the next day that it would formally launch the A330 and A340 programmes by April 1987 with deliveries of the A340 to begin in May 1992 and A330 deliveries to start in 1993 Northwest Airlines signed a letter of intent for twenty A340s and ten A330s on 31 March 29 The program cost was 3 5 billion with the A340 in 2001 dollars 30 BAe eventually received 450 million of funding from the UK government well short of the 750 million it had originally requested for the design and construction of the wings 31 The German and French governments also provided funding Airbus issued subcontracts to companies in Australia Austria Canada China Greece Italy India Japan South Korea Portugal the United States and the former Yugoslavia 32 With funding in place Airbus launched the A330 and A340 programmes on 5 June 1987 just prior to the Paris Air Show 31 33 At that time the order book stood at 130 aircraft from ten customers including lessor International Lease Finance Corporation ILFC Of the order total forty one were for A330s 31 In 1989 Asian carrier Cathay Pacific joined the list of purchasers ordering nine A330s and later increasing this number to eleven 34 The wing to fuselage mating of the first A330 the tenth airframe of the A330 and A340 line began in mid February 1992 This aircraft coated with anti corrosion paint was rolled out on 31 March without its General Electric CF6 80E1 engines which were installed by August During a static test the wing failed just below requirement BAe engineers later resolved the problem 35 At the 1992 Farnborough Airshow Northwest deferred delivery of sixteen A330s to 1994 following the cancellation of its A340 orders 36 The A330 first prototype It was rolled out on 14 October 1992 and first flew on 2 November The first completed A330 was rolled out on 14 October 1992 with the maiden flight following on 2 November Weighing 181 840 kg 401 000 lb including 20 980 kg 46 300 lb of test equipment 35 the A330 became the largest twinjet to have flown until the first flight of the Boeing 777 The flight lasted five hours and fifteen minutes during which speed height and other flight configurations were tested Airbus intended the test flight programme to comprise six aircraft flying a total of 1 800 hours 35 On 21 October 1993 the Airbus A330 received the European Joint Aviation Authorities JAA and the US Federal Aviation Administration FAA certifications simultaneously after 1 114 cumulative airborne test hours and 426 test flights At the same time weight tests came in favourable showing the plane was 500 kg 1 100 lb under weight 37 On 30 June 1994 a fatal crash occurred during certification of the Pratt amp Whitney engine when an A330 crashed near Toulouse 38 Both pilots and the five passengers died 39 The flight was designed to test autopilot response during a one engine off worst case scenario with the centre of gravity near its aft limit Shortly after takeoff the pilots had difficulty setting the autopilot and the aircraft lost speed and crashed 40 An investigation by an internal branch of Direction Generale d Aviation concluded that the accident resulted from slow response and incorrect actions by the crew during the recovery 41 This led to a revision of A330 operating procedures 42 Entry into service Edit Launch operator Air Inter introduced the A330 300 on 17 January 1994 Air Inter became the first operator of the A330 having put the aircraft into service on 17 January 1994 between Orly Airport Paris and Marseille 43 Deliveries to Malaysia Airlines MAS and Thai Airways International were postponed to address delamination of the composite materials in the PW4168 engine s thrust reverser assembly Thai Airways received its first A330 during the second half of the year operating it on routes from Bangkok to Taipei and Seoul 44 45 Cathay Pacific received its Trent 700 A330s following the certification of that engine on 22 December 1994 41 MAS received its A330 on 1 February 1995 and then rescheduled its other ten orders 45 Shrinking the 300 the 200 Edit The A330 200 first flew on 13 August 1997 Canada 3000 was the A330 200 s first operator in April 1998 In response to a decline in A330 300 sales increased market penetration by the Boeing 767 300ER and airline requests for increased range and smaller aircraft Airbus developed the Airbus A330 200 46 Known as the A329 and A330M10 during development the A330 200 would offer nine per cent lower operating costs than the Boeing 767 300ER 47 The plane was aimed at the 11 900 km 6 430 nmi 7 390 mi sector where Airbus predicted demand for 800 aircraft between 1995 and 2015 47 The project with US 450 million in expected development costs was approved by the Airbus Industrie Supervisory Board on 24 November 1995 47 The A330 200 first flew on 13 August 1997 48 The sixteen month certification process involved logging 630 hours of test flights 48 The A330 200 s first customer was ILFC these aircraft were leased by Canada 3000 who became the type s first operator 49 As Airbus worked on its A330 200 hydraulic pump problems were reported by both A330 and A340 operators This issue was the suspected cause of a fire that destroyed an Air France A340 200 in January 1994 50 On 4 January of that year a Malaysia Airlines A330 300 while undergoing regular maintenance at Singapore Changi Airport was consumed by a fire that started in the right hand main undercarriage well The incident caused US 30 million in damage and the aircraft took six months to repair 50 51 Consequently operators were advised to disable electrical pumps in January 1997 50 Proposed variants Edit A330 400 600In 1996 Airbus evaluated a 12 frame stretch which would be able to carry 380 passengers over almost 7 000 km 3 800 nmi the 400 and a super stretch using the A340 600 s 22 frame stretch and powered by 400 kN 90 000 lbf engines the 600 52 A330 100 500In February 2000 it was reported that a 250 seat A330 100 replacement for the A300 A310 could be launched by year end for 2003 deliveries 53 Shortened and keeping its fly by wire cockpit and systems with a cleaner A300 600 wing with sealed control surfaces and winglets and at least two new engine types among the GE CF6 80 the PW4000 and the A340 500 600 s Trent 500 aimed for 5 better SFC than the A300 600 53 Its 44 8 m 147 ft wing allowed a 173 t 381 000 lb MTOW and 4 200 nmi 7 770 km range In May the 210 260 seat design had evolved towards keeping the A330 60 3 m 198 ft span wing and engines for a 195 t MTOW and 4 500 nmi 8 300 km range Interested customers included Singapore Airlines Lufthansa and Hapag Lloyd 54 Announced in July at Farnborough Air Show the 500 first flight was targeted for early 2003 and introduction in early 2004 ILFC would take 10 if it was launched and CIT was interested too The eight frame shrink would carry 222 in three classes or 266 in two classes Its initial 13 000 km 7 000 nmi range would be followed by derated versions for 8 000 km 4 300 nmi 55 The market was lukewarm as airlines like Lufthansa Hapag Lloyd and Singapore Airlines were unimpressed by the long range A330 500 favouring a more refined short range design Lack of airline demand made lessors interest wane and as ILFC would order as 30 500s it would be with converting rights to larger A330 200 300 56 A330 200LiteTo compete with Boeing s 7E7 later 787 Airbus offered a minimum change derivative called the A330 200Lite in 2004 As the name indicated this proposed variant would have had a lower maximum takeoff weight of 202 tonnes 445 000 lb coupled with de rated engines giving a range of 7 400 km 4 000 nmi 4 600 mi 57 58 It was aimed at Singapore Airlines who had looked to replace its Airbus A310 300s 59 60 The variant was also to be a replacement for Airbus A300 600Rs and early Boeing 767s 58 Airlines however were not satisfied with the compromised aircraft the company instead proceeded with an entirely new aircraft the A350 XWB 61 Further developments Edit The A330 200F freighter was first delivered to Etihad Cargo in July 2010 Initially the GE90 was only one of three B777 options and GE Aviation then CEO Brian H Rowe would have paid for the development of putting it on an A330 however Airbus strategy for long haul was the four engine A340 missing the market favouring twins 62 Responding to lagging A300 600F and A310F sales Airbus began marketing the Airbus A330 200F a freighter derivative of the A330 200 around 2001 63 The freighter has a range of 7 400 km 4 000 nmi 4 600 mi with a 65 tonnes 140 000 lb payload or 5 900 km 3 200 nmi 3 700 mi with 70 tonnes 150 000 lb 64 The plane utilises the same nosegear as the passenger version however it is attached lower in the fuselage and housed in a distinctive bulbous blister fairing This raises the aircraft s nose so that the cargo deck is level during loading as the standard A330 s landing gear results the plane having a nose down attitude while on the ground 65 The A330 200F made its maiden flight on 5 November 2009 66 67 This marked the start of a four month 180 hour certification programme JAA and FAA certifications were expected by March the following year although approval by the JAA was delayed until April 66 68 The first delivery was subsequently made to the Etihad Airways cargo division Etihad Cargo in July 2010 69 70 On 25 September 2013 at the Aviation Expo China Beijing Airshow Airbus announced a new lower weight A330 300 variant optimised for use on domestic and regional routes in high growth markets with large populations and concentrated traffic flows China and India were recognised as prime targets 71 This variant could carry up to 400 passengers 72 The increased efficiency however comes more from the installation of more seats than any weight reduction On relatively short yet congested routes the A330 competes against single aisle jetliners While the A330 s operating costs in these conditions are not far above those of the Boeing 737 or Airbus A321 the A320neo and 737 MAX promise more efficiency Where the frequency of flights cannot be increased using larger aircraft such as the A330 is the only available option to increase capacity 73 The first customer for the A330 Regional was announced as Saudia at the 2015 Paris Air Show 74 In 2018 the unit cost of an A330 200 was US 238 5M US 264 2M for an A330 300 and US 241 7M for an A330 200F 75 New Engine Option Edit Main article Airbus A330neo First flight of A330 900 on 19 October 2017 The A330neo neo for New Engine Option is a development from the initial A330 now A330ceo Current Engine Option A new version with modern engines developed for the Boeing 787 was called for by owners of the current A330 It was launched in July 2014 at the Farnborough Airshow promising 14 better fuel economy per seat It will use the larger Rolls Royce Trent 7000 exclusively Its two versions are based on the A330 200 and 300 the 800 should cover 8 150 nmi 15 090 km with 257 passengers while the 900 should cover 7 200 nmi 13 330 km with 287 passengers The 900 made its first flight on 19 October 2017 received its EASA type certificate on 26 September 2018 and was first delivered to TAP Air Portugal on 26 November The 800 made its first flight on 6 November 2018 aiming for a mid 2019 type certification and delivery in the first half of 2020 Production Edit The 1 000th A330 was delivered on 19 July 2013 Airbus announced in February 2011 that it intended to raise production rates from seven and a half eight per month to nine per month in 2012 and ten in 2013 76 Production increased to 10 aircraft per month in April 2013 the highest for any Airbus wide body aircraft 77 In 2012 Airbus expected the A330 to continue selling until at least 2020 78 with the A350 900 expected to replace the A330 300 79 On 19 July 2013 Airbus delivered its 1000th A330 to Cathay Pacific 80 The A330 became the first Airbus wide body airliner to reach 1 000 deliveries and the fourth wide body to achieve the milestone after the Boeing 747 767 and 777 81 As of January 2019 a total of 1 496 A330ceos had been ordered with 1 437 delivered 1 In December 2014 Airbus announced that it would reduce A330 production to nine aircraft per month from ten because of falling orders Airbus did not rule out any further production cuts The announcement led to an immediate drop in Airbus Group s stock price because the company derived a significant percentage of its cash flow and net profit from the A330 program the A330 s financial impact was magnified amid problems in the A350 and A380 programs 82 In February 2015 Airbus announced another production rate cut to six aircraft per month in the first quarter of 2016 83 This would extend A330ceo production to July 2017 allowing for a smooth transition to A330neo production which was set to start in spring 2017 83 84 In February 2016 Airbus announced it would re increase the production rate from 6 to 7 per month in response to new A330 orders 85 In April 2018 as a result of weakening demand Airbus announced further rate cuts to 4 5 aircraft a month 50 per year in 2019 86 In 2019 Airbus delivered 53 A330s including 41 A330neos including some delayed from 2018 and was set to reach a rate of 40 per year to reflect softer demand for wide bodies as the backlog reached 331 including 293 A330neos or 8 3 years worth of production 87 The last A330 200 was delivered to OpenSkies operating for LEVEL on October 1 2019 The last A330 300 built was flown to Brussels Airport on February 28 2020 Aer Lingus took delivery on 4 March 2020 At the time four completed A330 300s for troubled Hong Kong Airlines were still undelivered A330 MRTT KC 30B and BelugaXL production both continue alongside that of the A330neo 88 The COVID 19 pandemic reduced demand for new jets in 2020 and Airbus cut its monthly production from 4 5 to 2 A330s 89 In September 2020 the A330 reached a milestone of 1500 deliveries Airbus s first twin aisle aircraft to do so and the third overall after the Boeing 747 and 777 90 91 Design Edit A330 200 planform view showing its 10 06 wing aspect ratio and 30 wing sweep Eight abreast 2 4 2 economy class The fly by wire A330 A340 retains the A320 s six screen glass cockpit The A330 is a medium size wide body aircraft with two engines suspended on pylons under the wings A two wheel nose undercarriage and two four wheel bogie main legs built by Messier Dowty support the aeroplane on the ground Its MTOW grew from 212 tonnes 467 000 lb at introduction to 242 tonnes 534 000 lb in 2015 enhancing its payload range performance 92 John Leahy states that it was intentionally being held down in takeoff weight and performance because Airbus avoided overlapping with the A340 93 The airframe of the A330 features a low wing lever monoplane with a wing virtually identical to that of the A340 200 300 On the A330 300 one engine is installed at the inboard pylon while the outboard pylon position is not used for the A340 300 both engine pylons are used which allows the A340 300 wing to sustain a higher wing limited MTOW This is as the A340 s two engines at each wing provide a more equal force distribution engine weight over the wing while also the total engine weight counteracting moment is located more outboard with more engine weight located further outboard on the wing hence the wing root bending moment with equal TOW is less on the A340 300 than on the A330 300 The wings were designed and manufactured by BAe which developed a long slender wing with a very high aspect ratio to provide high aerodynamic efficiency 94 Nb 1 The wing is swept back at 30 degrees and along with other design features allows a maximum operating Mach number of 0 86 96 97 To reach a long span and high aspect ratio without a large weight penalty the wing has relatively high thickness to chord ratio of 11 8 98 or 12 8 99 b Jet airliners have Thickness to chord ratios ranging from 9 4 MD 11 or Boeing 747 to 13 Avro RJ or 737 Classic 100 Each wing also has a 2 74 m 9 ft 0 in tall winglet instead of the wingtip fences found on earlier Airbus aircraft 101 The shared wing design with the A340 allowed the A330 to incorporate aerodynamic features developed for the former aircraft 102 The failure of International Aero Engines radical ultra high bypass V2500 SuperFan which had promised around 15 per cent fuel burn reduction for the A340 led to multiple enhancements including wing upgrades to compensate 29 103 Originally designed with a 56 m 180 ft span the wing was later extended to 58 6 m 190 ft and finally to 60 3 m 200 ft 29 At 60 3 m 200 ft the wingspan is similar to that of the larger Boeing 747 200 but with 35 percent less wing area 96 97 The A330 and A340 fuselage is based on that of the Airbus A300 600 with many common parts and has the same external and cabin width 5 64 m 19 ft and 5 26 m 17 ft 104 105 Typical seating arrangements are 2 2 2 six abreast in business class and 2 4 2 eight abreast in economy class 106 The fin rudder elevators horizontal tail plane are used as fuel tank flaps ailerons and spoilers they are made of composite materials making 10 of the structure weight 107 When necessary the A330 uses the Honeywell 331 350C auxiliary power unit APU to provide pneumatics and electrical power 108 The A330 shares the same glass cockpit flight deck layout as the A320 and the A340 featuring electronic instrument displays rather than mechanical gauges 109 Instead of a conventional control yoke the flight deck features side stick controls six main displays and the Electronic Flight Instrument System EFIS which covers navigation and flight displays as well as the Electronic Centralised Aircraft Monitor ECAM 110 unreliable source 111 Apart from the flight deck the A330 also has the fly by wire system common to the A320 family the A340 the A350 and the A380 It also features three primary and two secondary flight control systems as well as a flight envelope limit protection system which prevents maneuvers from exceeding the aircraft s aerodynamic and structural limits 110 Operational history EditAirbus intended the A330 to compete in the Extended range Twin engine Operation Performance Standards ETOPS market specifically with the Boeing 767 112 ETOPS is a standard that allows longer range flights away from a diversion airport for aircraft that have met special design and testing standards Instead of the ETOPS out of the box or Early ETOPS approach taken by Boeing with its 777 Nb 2 Airbus gradually increased ETOPS approval on the A330 using in service experience Airbus suggested that the A340 and the A330 were essentially identical except for their engine number and that the A340 s experience could be applied to the A330 s ETOPS approval 113 The plans were for all three engine types to enter service with 90 minute approval before increasing to 120 minutes after the total A330 fleet accumulated 25 000 flight hours and then to 180 minutes after 50 000 flight hours in 1995 114 Nb 3 Aer Lingus and Cathay Pacific were two important airlines assisting Airbus in this endeavour by building up in service flight hours on over ocean flights 115 In November 2009 the A330 became the first aircraft to receive ETOPS 240 approval which has since been offered by Airbus as an option 116 As of November 2022 update the global A330 fleet had 11 5 years average aircraft age 2 years for A330neo and accumulated more than 60 million flight hours since its entry into service with 99 5 operational reliability 117 Variants EditWith the launch of Airbus A330neo the existing members of the Airbus A330 family A330 200 200F 300 and MRTT received the Airbus A330ceo current engine option name citation needed A330ceo Edit A330 300 Edit The initial variant a 63 7 m 209 ft long A330 300 of Cathay Pacific its largest operator The aircraft pictured was the aircraft in Cathay Pacific Flight 780 Powered by two General Electric CF6 80E1 Pratt amp Whitney PW4000 or Rolls Royce Trent 700 engines the 63 69 m 208 ft 11 in long 300 has a range of 11 750 km 6 350 nmi typically carries 277 passengers with a 440 exit limit and 32 LD3 containers 97 It received European and American certification on 21 October 1993 after 420 test flights over 1 100 hours 118 The 300 entered service on 16 January 1994 37 The A330 300 is based on a stretched A300 fuselage but with new wings stabilisers and fly by wire systems In 2010 Airbus offered a new version of the 300 with the maximum gross weight increased by two tonnes to 235 t This enabled 120 nmi 220 km 140 mi extension of the range as well as 1 2 t increase in payload 119 In mid 2012 Airbus proposed another increase of the maximum gross weight to 240 t It is planned to be implemented by mid 2015 This 300 version will have the range extended by 400 nmi 740 km 460 mi and will carry 5 t more payload It will include engine and aerodynamic improvements reducing its fuel burn by about 2 120 In November 2012 it was further announced that the gross weight will increase from 235 t to 242 t and the range will increase by 500 nmi 926 km 575 mi to 6 100 nmi 11 300 km 7 020 mi Airbus is also planning to activate the central fuel tank for the first time for the 300 model 121 As of December 2020 a total of 779 of the 300 had been ordered 771 of which had been delivered with 742 in operation 1 The 2015 list price is 264 million 75 The closest competitors have been the Boeing 777 200 200ER and the now out of production McDonnell Douglas MD 11 122 A330 300HGW Edit The first 242 t 534 000 lb A330 300 was delivered to Delta Air Lines in May 2015 In 2000 it was reported that Airbus was studying an A330 300 version with a higher gross weight It was named A330 300HGW and had a takeoff weight of 240 tonnes 530 000 lb 7 tonnes 15 000 lb greater than the 300 s weight at the time The version would have a strengthened wing and additional fuel capacity from a 41 600 litre 11 000 US gal centre section fuel tank The A330 300HGW s range was increased to over 11 000 km 5 940 nmi 6 840 mi Among those that showed interest was leasing company ILFC which sought airliners that could fly from the US West Coast to Europe 123 Power was to be supplied by all three engines offered to A330 200 and A330 300 with lower gross weight Airbus also considered using the new Engine Alliance GP7000 engine for the A330 300HGW which would have been the engine s first twinjet application The 300HGW was to enter airline service in 2004 123 However the 300HGW programme was not launched and quietly disappeared The 240 tonne A330 reappeared years later when Airbus announced at the 2012 Farnborough Airshow that it would be an available option for both the A330 300 and the A330 200 120 124 In November 2012 the maximum take off weight was further increased to 242 tonnes 125 The first of these aircraft was delivered to Delta Air Lines on 28 May 2015 126 A330 Regional Edit In September 2013 Airbus announced a version of the A330 300 named A330 Regional or A330 300 Regional The A330 Regional has seating for up to around 400 passengers with reduced engine thrust reduced maximum takeoff weight of 199 t 439 000 lb and reduced range of 2 700 nautical miles 5 000 km 3 110 mi It is said that the maximum takeoff weight of these aircraft is an easy upgrade to 242 t 534 000 lb which is the extended range version with range of 6 350 nmi 11 800 km 7 310 mi 71 127 128 129 It is said to provide up to 26 lower operating costs than the longer range version A330 300 130 On 18 August 2016 Airbus delivered the first A330 Regional to Saudia 131 A330 200 Edit The 200 is 4 85 m 15 9 ft shorter than the 300 China Eastern is the type s largest operator The A330 200 is a shortened longer range variant which entered service in 1998 with Korean Air Typical range with 253 passengers in a three class configuration is 13 400 km 7 240 nmi 8 330 mi 104 The A330 200 is ten fuselage frames shorter than the original 300 with a length of 58 82 m 193 ft 0 in 104 132 To compensate for the smaller moment arm of the shorter fuselage the vertical stabiliser height of the 200 was increased by 104 cm 40 9 in 133 The 200 s wing was also modified structural strengthening of the wing allowed the maximum takeoff weight of the 200 to be increased to 229 8 tonnes 507 000 lb 133 The 200 is offered with three engine types similar to those found on the 300 namely the General Electric CF6 80E Pratt amp Whitney PW4000 or Rolls Royce Trent 700 104 Airbus also boosted fuel capacity to 139 100 L 36 700 US gal by adding the centre section fuel tank standard in the A340 48 A new vertical stabiliser was introduced in 2004 beginning with MSN 555 This newer fin is shorter in height by 50 cm 20 in 106 and was derived from the design of the vertical stabiliser of the A340 500 and 600 later becoming standard on all new A330 200s 134 In 2008 Airbus released plans for a higher gross weight version of the A330 200 to more effectively compete against the Boeing 787 Dreamliner 135 The new build A330 200HGW had a 5 tonne increase in Maximum Takeoff Weight allowing a 560 kilometres 302 nmi 348 mi range increase and a 3 4 tonnes 7 500 lb payload increase 135 136 Korean Air became the first customer on 27 February 2009 with an order for six 200HGWs Deliveries of the first aircraft started in 2010 137 In mid 2012 Airbus proposed another version of the 200 with the maximum gross weight increased by 2 t to 240 t This version had its range extended by 270 nmi and carried 2 5 t more payload It saw engine and aerodynamic improvements reducing its fuel burn by about 2 In November 2012 it was announced that the gross weight was to be further increased to 242 t with the range extended by 350 nmi 650 km 400 mi over the 238 t version 121 It was certified by the EASA on 8 September 2015 138 As of December 2020 661 of the 200 had been ordered 645 of which had been delivered with 600 aircraft in operation 1 The 2018 list price is 238 5 million 75 The 200 competes with the Boeing 767 300ER and to a lesser extent the 767 400ER 139 as well as with the new 787 Dreamliner 140 In 1998 a newly delivered A330 200 was valued 94 million rose over 100 million in 2005 but lowered at almost 75 million in 2019 as the market favours the 300 and the A330neo 141 A330 200F Edit The bulge under the A330 200F nose corrects the inherent nose down attitude of passenger versions 65 The A330 200F is an all cargo derivative of the A330 200 capable of carrying 65 t 140 000 lb over 7 400 km 4 000 nmi 4 600 mi or 70 t 150 000 lb up to 5 900 km 3 200 nmi 3 700 mi 64 To overcome the standard A330 s nose down body angle on the ground the A330F uses a revised nose undercarriage layout to provide a level deck during cargo loading The normal A330 200 undercarriage is used but its attachment points are lower in the fuselage thus requiring a distinctive blister fairing on the nose to accommodate the retracted nose gear 65 Power is provided by two Pratt amp Whitney PW4000 or Rolls Royce Trent 700 engines General Electric does not offer an engine for the A330 200F 142 As of December 2020 update Airbus had delivered 38 aircraft with no outstanding orders 1 The list price is 241 7 million 75 As well as new build freighters Airbus has proposed passenger to freighter conversions of existing 200 airliners 143 The A330 200F is sized between the 767 300F and 777F 144 145 but trails both Boeing models in orders and deliveries 146 147 A330P2F Edit The first A330 200P2F was delivered to EgyptAir Cargo on 3 August 2018 with no bulge The A330P2F freighter conversion programme was launched at the 2012 Singapore Airshow with the support of Airbus their Dresden based Elbe Flugzeugwerke EFW joint venture and Singapore based engineering firm ST Aerospace Targeting a 2016 introduction Airbus then estimated a market requirement for 2 700 freighters over 20 years half of these mid sized including 900 conversions 148 The A330 300P2F adapted for express delivery and e commerce lower densities can carry up to 62 t 137 000 lb over 3 650 nmi 6 760 km Following flight tests in October 2017 and EASA Supplemental Type Certificate awarded in November the first was delivered to DHL on 1 December 149 The A330 200P2F can carry 61 t 134 000 lb over 4 250 nmi 7 870 km 150 Following June Flight tests and the STC in July the first was delivered to EgyptAir Cargo on 3 August 2018 151 The P2F version of the A330 retains the passenger aircraft s geometry and incorporates a powered cargo loading system to enable pallets to be moved uphill on the main cargo deck and therefore does not have the distinctive nose blister or bulge of the factory delivered A330 200F 152 On 3 March 2022 Air Transport Services Group ATSG an air freighter lessor committed to acquiring 29 Airbus A330 300 Passenger to Freighter P2F conversion slots from EFW with deliveries in the 2023 to 2027 timeframe The aircraft will be converted mainly at EFW s facility in Dresden Germany and at a new conversion site in Shanghai China 153 A330neo Edit A330 800 Edit The Airbus A330 800 is based on the A330 200 with cabin modifications larger Trent 7000 engines and aerodynamic improvements 154 The A330 800s maiden flight took place on 6 November 2018 155 The first two A330 800 s were delivered to their launch customer Kuwait Airways in October 2020 citation needed A330 900 Edit The Airbus A330 900 maintains the A330 300 s fuselage dimensions with 10 more seats thanks to cabin optimisation 154 With modern Trent 7000 engines and redesigned winglets it should burn 14 less fuel per seat than the A330 300 over a distance of 4 000 nmi 156 It should travel 6 550 nmi 12 130 km with 287 passengers in a standard configuration 157 BelugaXL large cargo freighter Edit BelugaXL A330 743L during its maiden flight Airbus started design of a replacement aircraft for the Beluga in November 2014 The BelugaXL A330 743L is based on the Airbus A330 and has 30 more space than its predecessor 158 159 Like the Beluga the BelugaXL features an extension on its fuselage top but can accommodate two A350 wings instead of one The new aircraft rolled out of the assembly line on 4 January 2018 making its maiden flight on 19 July 2018 It began ferrying cargo between different Airbus factories in January 2020 160 Corporate jet variants Edit ACJ330 Edit The A330 200 is available as an ultra long range Airbus Corporate Jet known as the A330 200 Prestige 161 with a range of 15 400 km 8 300 nmi and a capacity of 50 passengers 162 ACJ330neo Edit A corporate jet version of the new A330neo capable of flying 25 passengers 19 260km 10 400nm or 21 hours enough to fly non stop from Europe to Australia 117 Military variants Edit Airbus A330 MRTT Edit Airbus A330 MRTT KC 30 of the RAAF with refuelling drogues deployed The Airbus A330 MRTT is the Multi Role Transport and Tanker MRTT version of the A330 200 designed for aerial refuelling and strategic transport 163 As of November 2020 update approximately 60 orders had been placed for the A330 MRTT by air forces of thirteen countries 164 165 166 EADS Northrop Grumman KC 45 Edit The EADS Northrop Grumman KC 45 was a proposed version of the A330 MRTT for the United States Air Force USAF s KC X aerial refuelling programme In February 2008 the USAF selected the aircraft to replace the Boeing KC 135 Stratotanker 167 The replacement process was mired in controversy instances of corruption and allegations of favouritism 168 169 In July 2010 EADS submitted a tanker bid to the USAF without Northrop Grumman as a partner 170 171 However on 24 February 2011 the USAF picked the Boeing KC 767 proposal later named KC 46 as the winner because of its lower cost 172 173 Operators EditMain article List of Airbus A330 operators By 2012 the 830 A330s in service with over 90 operators had accumulated five million revenue flights and 20 million flight hours with a dispatch reliability above 99 148 In November 2017 1 190 were transporting passengers with 106 airlines the top 29 operated two thirds of the fleet consisting of 530 200s and 660 A330 300s mainly high gross weight with 36 original shorter range A330 300s half of them built since January 2010 Its average sector is 2 000 nmi 3 700 km the longest flight for the 200 was 6 000 nmi 11 000 km from Buenos Aires to Rome by Aerolineas Argentinas and 5 000 nmi 9 300 km from Paris to Reunion by Corsair and French Blue for the 300 Of operators of at least five A330s 17 have ordered A350 900s 11 have ordered B787 8 9s 13 both 3 have ordered A330neos and 2 both A330neos and A350s 14 haven t yet decided on a replacement 174 By August 2019 the A330 was operated between over 400 airports in the world by more than 120 operators while its average dispatch reliability was over 99 and annual utilization up to 6 000 flight hours 175 The 1 500th airplane an A330 900 A330neo was delivered to Delta Air Lines on 21 September 2020 90 As of December 2022 update A330 family aircraft orders stood at 1 774 of which 1 559 had been delivered and 1 467 comprising 596 A330 200s 38 200Fs 741 300s 7 800s and 85 900s were in airline service with 142 operators The five largest operators were Delta Air Lines 62 Turkish Airlines 61 China Eastern Airlines 55 Air China 53 China Southern Airlines 40 1 Orders and deliveries Edit Main article List of Airbus A330 orders and deliveries Orders DeliveriesType Total Backlog Total 2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010A330 200 664 10 654 1 5 3 5 7 14 16 21 30 28 43 37 40 32A330 200F 38 0 38 2 3 3 5 8 8 4 5A330 300 784 8 776 4 1 1 5 32 49 42 70 75 57 56 43 50 A330ceo 1 486 18 1 468 1 9 4 6 12 46 67 66 103 108 108 101 87 87A330 800 11 4 7 3 1 3 A330 900 277 190 87 c 2 20 11 10 41 3 A330neo 288 194 94 2 23 12 13 41 3 A330 family 1 774 212 1 562 3 32 16 19 53 49 67 66 103 108 108 101 87 87 Deliveries2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993A330 200 38 49 42 39 29 25 19 36 16 27 40 12 A330 200F A330 300 38 23 26 23 27 22 12 6 19 16 4 11 14 10 30 9 1 A330ceo 76 72 68 62 56 47 31 42 35 43 44 23 14 10 30 9 1 A330neo A330 family 76 72 68 62 56 47 31 42 35 43 44 23 14 10 30 9 1 Data as of 28 February 2023 update 1 176 Accidents and incidents EditFor a more comprehensive list see List of accidents and incidents involving the Airbus A330 As of December 2022 update the Airbus A330 has been involved in 45 Aviation accidents and incidents including 14 hull losses 10 due to flight related accidents and 4 due to criminal related accidents for a total of 339 fatalities 177 178 Accidents Edit The A330 s first fatal accident occurred on 30 June 1994 near Toulouse on a test flight when an Airbus owned A330 300 crashed while simulating an engine failure on climbout killing all seven on board 39 Airbus subsequently advised A330 operators to disconnect the autopilot and limit pitch attitude in the event of an engine failure at low speed 179 The vertical stabilizer recovered from Air France Flight 447 The second fatal and deadliest accident and first while in commercial service occurred on 1 June 2009 when Air France Flight 447 an A330 200 en route from Rio de Janeiro to Paris with 228 people on board crashed in the Atlantic Ocean 640 800 km 350 430 nmi northeast of the islands of Fernando de Noronha 180 with no survivors Malfunctioning pitot tubes provided an early focus for the investigation 181 as the aircraft involved had Thales built AA models known to indicate faulty airspeed data during icing conditions 182 In July 2009 Airbus advised A330 and A340 operators to replace Thales pitots with equivalents manufactured by Goodrich 182 Investigators later determined that the inadequate response of the pilots to both a loss of airspeed data from malfunctioning pitot tubes and subsequent autopilot disengagement followed by incorrect reaction by pilot flying resulted in Flight 447 entering into an aerodynamic stall 183 On 12 May 2010 Afriqiyah Airways Flight 771 an A330 200 crashed on approach to Tripoli International Airport Libya on a flight from O R Tambo International Airport Johannesburg South Africa Of the 104 people on board all but one nine year old Dutch child died 184 The cause of the crash was determined to be pilot error 185 On 23 October 2022 Korean Air Flight 631 an Airbus A330 300 registration HL7525 operating from Seoul to Cebu crash landed and overshot the runway while landing in poor weather at night 186 Incidents Edit Flight data relatedIn 2008 Air Caraibes reported two incidents of pitot tube icing malfunctions on its A330s 187 On 7 October 2008 Qantas Flight 72 an A330 300 suffered a rapid loss of altitude in two sudden uncommanded pitch down manoeuvres while 150 km 81 nmi from the RAAF Learmonth air base in northwestern Australia After declaring an emergency the crew landed the aircraft safely at Learmonth 188 It was later determined that the incident which caused 106 injuries 14 of them serious was the result of a design flaw of the plane s Air Data Inertial Reference Unit and a limitation of the aircraft s flight computer software 189 Fuel system relatedOn 24 August 2001 Air Transat Flight 236 an A330 200 developed a fuel leak over the Atlantic Ocean due to an incorrectly installed hydraulic part and was forced to glide for over 15 minutes to an emergency landing in the Azores 190 On 13 April 2010 Cathay Pacific Flight 780 from Surabaya Juanda International Airport to Hong Kong landed safely after contaminated fuel caused both engines to fail Fifty seven passengers were injured Its two pilots received the Polaris Award from the International Federation of Air Line Pilots Associations for their heroism and airmanship 191 Chemical and fire relatedOn 15 March 2000 a Malaysia Airlines A330 300 suffered structural damage due to leaking oxalyl chloride a corrosive chemical substance that had been improperly labeled before shipping The aircraft was written off 192 On 27 August 2019 an Air China A330 300 at Beijing Capital International Airport caught fire while at the gate The passengers and crew were safely evacuated The airplane was likely damaged beyond repair 193 Hijackings and war relatedThe two hijackings involving the A330 have resulted in one fatality 177 namely the hijacker of Philippine Airlines Flight 812 on 25 May 2000 who jumped out of the aircraft to his death 194 The hijacking of Sabena Flight 689 on 13 October 2000 ended with no casualties when Spanish police took control of the aircraft 195 On 24 July 2001 two unoccupied SriLankan Airlines A330s were destroyed amid an attack on Bandaranaike International Airport in Colombo Sri Lanka by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam 196 197 On 25 December 2009 passengers and crew subdued a man who attempted to detonate explosives in his underwear on an A330 300 operating Northwest Airlines Flight 253 198 199 On 15 July 2014 a Libyan Airlines A330 was severely damaged in the fighting in Libya and sustained bullet holes in the fuselage On 20 July 2014 two Afriqiyah Airways Airbus A330s were hit by an RPG at Tripoli International Airport One was completely destroyed in the ensuing fire 200 201 Engine relatedSeveral in flight shutdowns of Trent 700 powered A330 300s have occurred On 11 November 1996 engine failure on a Cathay Pacific flight forced it back to Ho Chi Minh City 202 On 17 April 1997 Cathay Pacific s Dragonair subsidiary experienced an engine shutdown on an A330 caused by carbon clogging the oil filter As a result Cathay Pacific self suspended its 120 minute ETOPS clearance Another engine failure occurred on 6 May during climbout with a Cathay Pacific A330 due to a bearing failure in a Hispano Suiza built gearbox Three days later a Cathay Pacific A330 on climbout during a Bangkok Hong Kong flight experienced an oil pressure drop and a resultant engine spool down forcing a return to Bangkok The cause was traced to metal contamination in the engine s master chip 203 Following a fifth engine failure on 23 May Cathay Pacific and Dragonair voluntarily grounded their A330 fleets for two weeks causing major disruption as Cathay s eleven A330s made up fifteen per cent of its passenger capacity 204 Rolls Royce and Hispano Suiza developed a redesigned lubrication system to fix the problem 203 Other engines have issues too on 14 July 2015 an Asiana PW4000 was shut down in flight 205 on 15 January 2017 an Air Europa CF6 was shut down in flight 206 on 28 December 2017 an Aer Lingus CF6 was shut down in flight 207 on 18 January 2018 a Malaysia Airlines PW4000 was shut down in flight 208 on 13 February 2018 a Delta Air Lines PW4000 caught fire 209 on 29 May 2018 a Delta Air Lines PW4000 had engine vibrations 210 on 1 June 2018 a Qantas CF6 was shut down in flight 211 on 1 October 2018 a China Airlines CF6 had an engine problem 212 and on 5 November 2018 a Brussels Airlines PW4000 was shut down in flight 213 Aircraft on display EditA former Turkish Airlines A330 300 is preserved at Aircraft Museum Kathmandu in Kathmandu Nepal This aircraft was only eight months old when it was written off in a runway excursion at Tribhuvan International Airport The museum is inside the aircraft with more than 200 miniature planes inside and aviation artifacts 214 215 Specifications EditAirbus A330 specifications 216 unless noted A330 200 A330 200F A330 300Cockpit crew TwoCapacity 246 36J 60 in 210Y 32 in 70 000 kg 150 000 lb 300 36J 60 in 264Y 32 in Max seating 217 406 440Length 175 58 82 m 192 98 ft 63 66 m 208 86 ft Span Wing 60 3 m 197 83 ft Main gear 12 61 m 41 37 ft Wing 361 6 m2 3 892 sq ft 25 chord wingsweep 30 218 10 06 Aspect ratioHeight 217 17 39 m 57 1 ft 16 90 m 55 4 ft 16 79 m 55 1 ft Fuselage 5 64 m 222 in diameter 5 26 m 207 in cabin widthSeat width 0 46 m 18 in in 8 abreast economy 0 53 m 21 in in 6 abreast businessCargo volume 132 4 m3 4 680 cu ft 469 2 m3 16 570 cu ft 158 4 m3 5 590 cu ft MTOW 242 000 kg 534 000 lb 233 000 kg 514 000 lb 242 000 kg 534 000 lb OEW 120 600 kg 265 900 lb 109 400 kg 241 200 lb 129 400 kg 285 300 lb Max Payload 49 400 kg 108 900 lb 68 600 kg 151 200 lb 45 600 kg 100 500 lb Fuel capacity 139 090 L 36 740 US gal 109 185 kg 240 712 lb Engines 2 175 GE CF6 except 200F PW4000 Trent 700Thrust 2 175 64 500 71 100 lbf 287 316 kN Cruise Mach 0 82 470 kn 871 km h d 12 500 m 41 100 ft Service ceiling 219 Range 217 13 450 km 7 260 nmi e 7 400 km 4 000 nmi 11 750 km 6 340 nmi f Runway g Takeoff 2 770 m 9 090 ft Landing 1 730 m 5 680 ft 220 Aircraft model designations Edit A330 family schematic EASA Type Certificate Data Sheet 175 Model Certification Date EnginesA330 201 31 October 2002 General Electric CF6 80E1A2A330 202 31 March 1998 General Electric CF6 80E1A4A330 203 20 November 2001 General Electric CF6 80E1A3A330 223 13 July 1998 Pratt amp Whitney PW4168A 4170A330 223F 9 April 2010 Pratt amp Whitney PW4170 Freighter A330 243 11 January 1999 Rolls Royce Trent 772B C 60A330 243F 9 April 2010 Rolls Royce Trent 772B 60 Freighter A330 301 21 October 1993 General Electric CF6 80E1A2A330 302 17 May 2004 General Electric CF6 80E1A4A330 303 17 May 2004 General Electric CF6 80E1A3A330 321 2 June 1994 Pratt amp Whitney PW4164A330 322 2 June 1994 Pratt amp Whitney PW4168A330 323 22 April 1999 Pratt amp Whitney PW4168A 4170A330 341 22 December 1994 Rolls Royce Trent 768 60A330 342 22 December 1994 Rolls Royce Trent 772 60A330 343 13 September 1999 Rolls Royce Trent 772B C 60ICAO Aircraft Type Designators Edit Designation 221 TypeA332 Airbus A330 200 Airbus A330 200FA333 Airbus A330 300A337 Airbus A330 700 Beluga XLSee also Edit Aviation portal European Union portalCompetition between Airbus and BoeingRelated development Airbus A300 Airbus A330 MRTT Airbus A330neo Airbus A340 Airbus Beluga XLAircraft of comparable role configuration and era Airbus A350 Boeing 767 Boeing 777 200 Boeing 787 Dreamliner Ilyushin Il 96 McDonnell Douglas MD 11Related lists List of civil aircraft List of jet airlinersReferences EditNotes Final assembly in France This is the thickness to chord ratio of the early Airbus A340 variants which share the same wing with the A330 Excluding 2 A330 900 delivered to Air Belgium via Airbus Financial Services which had been aircraft built for cancelled orders Mach 0 86 493 kn 914 km h MMO 247 passengers 277 passengers SL ISA MTOW MLW The higher the aspect ratio the greater the aerodynamic efficiency 95 This meant that the Boeing 777 was certified for 180 minutes ETOPS from the first day of service As a result the aircraft could be 180 minutes 3 hours of flying time from a diversionary airport during transoceanic services After a total of 25 000 airborne hours the A330 would be allowed a maximum of 120 minutes 2 hours of flight time from a diversionary airport After 50 000 hours the limit would be raised to 180 minutes 3 hours Citations a b c d e f g Airbus orders and deliveries XLS Airbus S A S 28 February 2023 Retrieved 7 March 2023 Norris amp Wagner 2001 pp 9 18 Wensveen 2007 p 63 Gunston 2009 p 183 a b Norris amp Wagner 2001 pp 18 19 a b c Norris amp Wagner 2001 pp 22 23 Flight International 1981 p 1155 a b Norris amp Wagner 2001 p 23 a b c Eden 2008 p 30 a b c Kingsley Jones 1997 p 29 Norris amp Wagner 2001 p 24 Norris amp Wagner 2001 pp 24 25 a b Norris amp Wagner 2001 p 27 a b Lawrence amp Thornton 2005 p 73 Norris amp Wagner 2001 pp 26 31 Gunston 2009 p 196 Supervisory Board approves strategy for future product 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engine shut down in flight The Aviation Herald Simon Hradecky 1 October 2018 Incident China Airlines A333 near Tokyo on Oct 1st 2018 engine problem The Aviation Herald Simon Hradecky 5 November 2018 Incident Brussels A332 near Geneva on Nov 5th 2018 engine shut down in flight The Aviation Herald Kaza yapan THY ucagi muzeye donusturuldu Seyahat Haberleri Archived from the original on 23 February 2018 Retrieved 5 March 2021 Aircraft Museum www nepalaviationmuseum com A330 Airplane Characteristics Airport and Maintenance Planning PDF Airbus January 2017 Archived from the original PDF on 25 May 2018 Retrieved 24 May 2018 a b c A330 Family facts amp figures PDF Airbus September 2017 Archived from the original PDF on 16 September 2017 A330 200 Prestige specifications PDF Airbus Archived from the original PDF on 3 October 2012 Airbus A330 200 Emirates ACJ330 Airbus Corporate Jets DOC 8643 Aircraft Type Designators icao int Bibliography Commercial Aircraft of the World part 2 Flight International 120 3780 1 152 1199 11 17 October 1981 ISSN 0161 7370 Retrieved 23 January 2011 Airbus issues hydraulic pump warning after A330 340 fires Flight International 151 4557 5 15 January 1997 ISSN 0161 7370 Retrieved 6 October 2013 Longer range A330 300 studied Flight International 159 4740 11 1 7 August 2000 ISSN 0161 7370 Retrieved 31 January 2011 Cole Lance 2000 Giant Airliners London Zenith Imprint 2000 ISBN 978 0 7603 0945 2 Eden Paul E ed 2008 Civil Aircraft Today London Amber Books 2008 ISBN 978 1 905704 86 6 Fullbrook David 31 July 6 August 2001 SriLankan turns to Emirates for help after raid Flight International 160 4791 10 ISSN 0161 7370 Retrieved 7 October 2013 Gunston Bill 1 February 2010 Airbus The Complete Story Sparkford Yeovil Somerset UK Haynes Publishing 2009 ISBN 978 1 84425 585 6 Henley Peter 25 February 3 March 1998 One of the family Flight International 153 4614 36 40 ISSN 0161 7370 Retrieved 25 January 2011 Ionides Nicholas Kingsley Jones Max 15 21 June 2004 SIA widebody decision expected soon Flight International 165 4938 10 ISSN 0161 7370 Retrieved 7 October 2013 Kingsley Jones Max 4 November 1997 Airbus A330 A340 Flight International 28 30 ISSN 0161 7370 Retrieved 26 January 2011 Kingsley Jones Max Lewis Peter 17 23 April 2001 Airline rejections threaten A330 500 launch Flight International 158 4759 6 ISSN 0161 7370 Retrieved 31 January 2011 Kingsley Jones Max 4 10 September 2001 Size or speed Flight International 160 4796 51 ISSN 0161 7370 Retrieved 7 October 2013 Lawrence Phillip K and David Weldon Thornton 2005 Deep Stall The Turbulent Story of Boeing Commercial Airplanes London Ashgate Publishing ISBN 978 0 7546 4626 6 Learmount David 5 11 September 1990 Mass Market Flight International pp 111 116 ISSN 0161 7370 Retrieved 1 September 2015 Learmount David 13 19 July 1994 Airbus defends A330 but warns on autopilot Flight International 146 4429 4 ISSN 0161 7370 Retrieved 19 February 2012 Learmount David 10 16 August 1994 A330 crash caused by series of small errors Flight International 146 4433 6 ISSN 0161 7370 Retrieved 19 February 2012 Lewis Paul 20 26 November 1996 In flight Trent 700 failure forces Cathay A330 back to Saigon Flight International 150 4550 9 ISSN 0161 7370 Retrieved 7 October 2013 Miravete Antonio 1 January 1999 3 D Textile Reinforcements in Composite Materials Sawston Cambridge UK Woodland Publishing 1999 ISBN 978 0 8493 1795 8 Norris Guy and Mark Wagner 2001 Airbus A340 and A330 St Paul Minnesota MBI Publishing 2001 ISBN 978 0 7603 0889 9 Wensveen J G 1 January 2007 Air Transportation A Management Perspective Burlington Vermont Ashgate Publishing 2007 ISBN 978 0 7546 7171 8 Further reading EditJackson Paul ed 2008 Jane s All the World s Aircraft 2008 2009 Coulsdon Surrey UK Jane s Information Group 2008 ISBN 978 0 7106 2837 4 Recent developments with Airbus ninth report of session 2006 07 Vol 2 Oral and written evidence London UK The Stationery Office Parliament House of Commons Trade and Industry Committee 2007 25 July 2007 ISBN 978 0 215 03551 6 Reed Arthur 1991 Airbus Europe s High Flyer Zurich Switzerland Norden Publishing House 1992 ISBN 978 3 907150 10 8 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Airbus A330 category Official website A330 Family overview Aircraft design Systems Cabin Freighter Maintenance Upgrades amp retrofits FAST Flight Airworthiness Support Technology technical magazine Airbus October 2015 Archived from the original on 23 October 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Airbus A330 amp oldid 1145701565, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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