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Airbus A340

The Airbus A340 is a long-range, wide-body passenger airliner that was developed and produced by Airbus. In the mid-1970s, Airbus conceived several derivatives of the A300, its first airliner, and developed the A340 quadjet in parallel with the A330 twinjet. In June 1987, Airbus launched both designs with their first orders and the A340-300 took its maiden flight on 25 October 1991. It was certified along with the A340-200 on 22 December 1992 and both versions entered service in March 1993 with launch customers Lufthansa and Air France. The larger A340-500/600 were launched on 8 December 1997; the A340-600 flew for the first time on 23 April 2001 and entered service on 1 August 2002.

A340
An A340-300, the most widespread variant, of Lufthansa, the largest operator
Role Wide-body jet airliner
National origin Multi-national
Manufacturer Airbus
First flight 25 October 1991; 31 years ago (1991-10-25)
Introduction 15 March 1993; 30 years ago (1993-03-15) with Lufthansa & Air France
Status In service
Primary users Lufthansa
Mahan Air
Swiss International Air Lines
Edelweiss Air
Produced 1991–2012[1]
Number built 380 (377 delivered to airlines)[2]
Developed from Airbus A300

Keeping the eight-abreast economy cross-section of the A300, the early A340-200/300 has a similar airframe to the A330. Differences include four 151 kN (34,000 lbf) CFM56s instead of two high-thrust turbofans to bypass ETOPS restrictions on trans-oceanic routes, and a three-leg main landing gear instead of two for a heavier 276 t (608,000 lb) MTOW. Both airliners have fly-by-wire controls, which was first introduced on the A320, as well as a similar glass cockpit. The later A340-500/600 have a larger wing and are powered by 275 kN (62,000 lbf) Rolls-Royce Trent 500 for a heavier 380 t (840,000 lb) MTOW.

The shortest A340-200 measured 59.4 m (195 ft), and could cover 12,400 km / 6,700 nmi with 210–250 seats in 3-class. The most common A340-300 reached 63.7 m (209 ft) to accommodate 250–290 passengers and had a 13,500 km / 7,300 nmi range. The A340-500 was 67.9 m (223 ft) long to seat 270–310 over 16,670 km / 9,000 nmi, the longest-range airliner at the time. The longest A340-600 was stretched to 75.4 m (247 ft), then the longest airliner, to accommodate 320–370 passengers over 14,450 km / 7,800 nmi.

As improving engine reliability allowed ETOPS operations for almost all routes, more economical twinjets have replaced quadjets on many routes. On 10 November 2011, Airbus announced that the production reached its end, after 380 orders had been placed and 377 delivered from Toulouse, France. The A350 is its successor; the McDonnell Douglas MD-11 and the Boeing 777 were its main competitors. By the end of 2021, the global A340 fleet had completed more than 2.5 million flights over 20 million block hours and carried over 600 million passengers with no fatalities. As of December 2022, there were 203 A340 aircraft in service with 45 operators worldwide. Lufthansa is the largest A340 operator with 27 aircraft in its fleet.

Development

Background

 
Compared to the A340 quadjet (flying), the lighter A330 (on ground) has two engines and no centre-line wheel bogie

When Airbus designed the Airbus A300 during the 1970s it envisioned a broad family of airliners to compete against Boeing and McDonnell Douglas, two established US aerospace manufacturers. From the moment of formation, Airbus had begun studies into derivatives of the Airbus A300B in support of this long-term goal.[3] Prior to the service introduction of the first Airbus airliners, Airbus had identified nine possible variations of the A300 known as A300B1 to B9.[4] A tenth variation, conceived in 1973, later the first to be constructed, was designated the A300B10.[5] It was a smaller aircraft that would be developed into the long-range Airbus A310. Airbus then focused its efforts on the single-aisle market, which resulted in the Airbus A320 family, which was the first digital fly-by-wire commercial aircraft. The decision to work on the A320, instead of a four-engine aircraft proposed by the Germans, created divisions within Airbus.[5] As the SA or "single aisle" studies (which later became the successful Airbus A320) underwent development to challenge the successful Boeing 737 and Douglas DC-9 in the single-aisle, narrow-body airliner market, Airbus turned its focus back to the wide-body aircraft market.

The A300B11,[6] a derivative of the A310, was designed upon the availability of "ten ton" thrust engines.[7] Using four engines, it would seat between 180 and 200 passengers, and have a range of 11,000 kilometres (6,000 nmi).[8] It was deemed a replacement for the less-efficient Boeing 707s and Douglas DC-8s still in service.[7] The A300B11 was joined by another design, the A300B9, which was a larger derivative of the A300. The B9 was developed by Airbus from the early 1970s at a slow pace until the early 1980s. It was essentially a stretched A300 with the same wing, coupled with the most powerful turbofan engine available at the time.[7] It was targeted at the growing demand for high-capacity, medium-range, transcontinental trunk routes.[7] The B9 offered the same range and payload as the McDonnell Douglas DC-10, but it used between 25%[7] to 38%[9] less fuel. The B9 was therefore considered a replacement for the DC-10 and the Lockheed L-1011 Tristar.[10]

To differentiate the programme from the SA studies, the B9 and B11 were redesignated the TA9 and TA11 (SA standing for “single aisle” and TA standing for "twin aisle").[6] In an effort to save development costs, it was decided that the two would share the same wing and airframe; the projected savings were estimated at US$500 million (about £490 million or €495 million).[11] The adoption of a common wing structure also had one technical advantage: the TA11's outboard engines could counteract the weight of the longer-range model by providing bending relief.[7] Another factor was the split preference of those within Airbus and, more importantly, prospective airliner customers. Airbus vice president for strategic planning, Adam Brown, recalled,

North American operators were clearly in favour of a twin[jet], while Asians wanted a quad[jet]. In Europe, opinion was split between the two. The majority of potential customers were in favour of a quad despite the fact, in certain conditions, it is more costly to operate than a twin. They liked that it could be ferried with one engine out, and could fly 'anywhere'— ETOPS (extend-range twin-engine operations) hadn't begun then.[12][13]

Design effort

The first specifications of the TA9 and TA11 were released in 1982.[14] While the TA9 had a range of 6,100 kilometres (3,300 nmi), the TA11 range was up to 12,650 kilometres (6,830 nmi).[14] At the same time, Airbus also sketched the TA12, a twin-engine derivative of the TA11, which was optimised for flights of a 3,700 kilometres (2,000 nmi) lesser range.[14] By the time of the Paris Air Show in June 1985, more refinements had been made to the TA9 and TA11, including the adoption of the A320 flight deck, fly-by-wire (FBW) flight control system and side-stick control.[15] Adopting a common cockpit across the new Airbus series allowed operators to make significant cost savings; flight crews would be able to transition from one to another after one week of training.[16] The TA11 and TA12 would use the front and rear fuselage sections of the A310.[17] Components were modular and also interchangeable with other Airbus aircraft where possible[16] to reduce production, maintenance and operating costs.

 
The A330/A340 shares a common flight deck with the A320.

Airbus briefly considered a variable camber wing; the concept was that the wing could change its profile to produce the optimum shape for a given phase of flight. Studies were carried out by British Aerospace (BAe) at Hatfield and Bristol. Airbus estimated this would yield a 2% improvement in aerodynamic efficiency.[18] However, the plan was later abandoned on grounds of cost and difficulty of development.[6]

Airbus had held discussions with McDonnell Douglas to jointly produce the aircraft, which would have been designated as the AM 300.[19] This aeroplane would have combined the wing of the A330 with the fuselage of the McDonnell Douglas MD-11.[19] However, talks were terminated as McDonnell Douglas insisted on the continuation of its trijet heritage.[20] Although from the start it was intended that the A340 would be powered by four CFM56-5 turbofans, each capable of 25,000 pounds-force (110 kN),[21] Airbus had also considered developing the aircraft as a trijet due to the limited power of engines available at the time, namely the Rolls-Royce RB211-535 and Pratt & Whitney JT10D-232[22] (redesignated PW2000 in December 1980).

As refinements in the A340's design proceeded, a radical new engine option, the IAE SuperFan, was offered by International Aero Engines, a group comprising Rolls-Royce, Pratt & Whitney, Japanese Aero Engines Corporation, Fiat and MTU Aero Engines (MTU). The engine nacelles of the superfan engine consisted of provisions to allow a large fan near the rear of the engine. As a result of the superfan cancellation by IAE, the CFM56-5C4 was used as the sole engine choice instead of there being an alternate option as originally envisioned. The later, longer-range versions, namely the A340-500 and −600, are powered by Rolls-Royce Trent 500 engines.

On 27 January 1986, the Airbus Industrie Supervisory Board held a meeting in Munich, West Germany, after which board-chairman Franz Josef Strauß released a statement, "Airbus Industrie is now in a position to finalise the detailed technical definition of the TA9, which is now officially designated 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".[15] The designations were originally reversed and were switched so the quad-jet airliner would have a "4" in its name. On 12 May 1986, Airbus dispatched fresh sale proposals to five prospective airlines including Lufthansa and Swissair.[15]

Production and testing

In preparations for production of the A330/A340, Airbus's partners invested heavily in new facilities. Filton was the site of BAe's £7 million investment in a three-storey technical centre with an extra 15,000 square metres (160,000 sq ft) of floor area.[23] BAe also spent £5 million expanding the Broughton wing production plant by 14,000 m2 (150,000 sq ft)[23] to accommodate a new production line. However, France saw the biggest changes with Aérospatiale starting construction of a new Fr.2.5 billion ($411 million) assembly plant, adjacent to Toulouse-Blagnac Airport, in Colomiers.[24] By November 1988, the first 21 m (69 ft) pillars were erected for the new Clément Ader assembly hall.[24] The assembly process, meanwhile, would feature increased automation with holes for the wing-fuselage mating process drilled by eight robots.[25] The use of automation for this particular process saved Airbus 20% on labour costs and 5% on time.[25]

 
An A340-200 demonstrator at the 1992 Farnborough Air Show

British Aerospace accepted £450 million funding from the UK government, short of the £750 million originally requested.[26] Funds from the French and West German governments followed thereafter. Airbus also issued subcontracts to companies in Austria, Australia, Canada, China, Greece, Italy, India, Japan, South Korea, Portugal, the United States, and Yugoslavia.[27] The A330 and A340 programmes were jointly launched on 5 June 1987,[28] just prior to the Paris Air Show. The program cost was $3.5 billion with the A330, in 2001 dollars.[29] The order book then stood at 130 aircraft from 10 customers, apart from the above-mentioned Lufthansa and International Lease Finance Corporation (ILFC). Eighty-nine of the total orders were A340 models.[26] At McDonnell Douglas, ongoing tests of the MD-11 revealed a significant shortfall in the aircraft's performance. An important carrier, Singapore Airlines (SIA), required a fully laden aircraft that could fly from Singapore to Paris, against strong headwinds during mid-winter in the northern hemisphere.[30] The MD-11, according to test results, would experience fuel starvation over the Balkans.[30] Due to the less-than-expected performance figures, SIA cancelled its 20-aircraft MD-11 order on 2 August 1991, and ordered 20 A340-300s instead.[31] A total of 200 MD-11s were sold, versus 380 A340s.[20]

The first flight of the A340 occurred on 21 October 1991,[20] marking the start of a 2,000-hour test flight programme involving six aircraft.[32] From the start, engineers noticed that the wings were not stiff enough to carry the outboard engines at cruising speed without warping and fluttering. To alleviate this, an underwing bulge called a plastron was developed to correct airflow problems around the engine pylons[33] and to add stiffness. European JAA certification was obtained on 22 December 1992; the FAA followed on 27 May 1993.[34] In 1992, unit cost of an A340-200 was US$105M and US$110M for an A340-300.[35] (equivalent to $185 million in 2021 dollars).

Entry into service and demonstration

The first A340, a −200, was delivered to Lufthansa on 2 February 1993 and entered service on 15 March.[34] The 228-seat airliner was named Nürnberg.[36] The first A340-300, the 1000th Airbus, was delivered to Air France on 26 February, the first of nine it planned to operate by the end of the year.[34] Air France replaced its Boeing 747s with A340s on its Paris–Washington D.C. route, flying four times weekly.[37] Lufthansa intended to replace aging DC-10s with the A340s on Frankfurt–New York services.

On 16 June 1993, an A340-200 dubbed the World Ranger flew from the Paris Air Show to Auckland, New Zealand in 21 hours 32 minutes and back in 21 hours 46 minutes after a five-hour stop; this was the first non-stop flight between Europe and New Zealand and the longest non-stop flight by an airliner at the time.[38] The 19,277 km (10,409 nmi) flight from Paris to Auckland broke six world records with 22 persons and five center tanks.[39] Taking off at 11:58 local time, it arrived back in Paris 48 hours and 22 minutes later, at 12:20.[39][40] This record held until 1997 when a Boeing 777-200ER flew 20,044 km (10,823 nmi) from Seattle to Kuala Lumpur.[41]

Stretch: -500/-600 variants

 
The A340-600 was the longest passenger airliner until the introduction of the Boeing 747-8 in 2010

Formulated in 1991, the A340-400X concept was a simple 12-frame, 20 ft 10 in (6.35 m) stretch of the −300 from 295 to 335 passengers with the MTOW increased to 553,360 to 588,600 lb (251 to 267 t) and the range decreased by 1,390 to 10,930 km (750 to 5,900 nmi).[42] CFM International was then set to develop a new engine for $1–1.5 billion that generated a thrust rating between the 150 kN (34,000 lbf) CFM56 and the 315–400 kN (70–90,000 lbf) GE90.[43] In 1994, Airbus was studying a heavier A340 Advanced with a reinforced wing and a selection of 178 kN (40,000 lbf) engines; these included the Pratt & Whitney advanced ducted propulsor, CFM International CFMXX or Rolls-Royce RB411, to a −300 stretch for 50 more passengers over the same range, a −300 with the −200 range and a −200 with more range. These models were slated to be introduced in 1996.[44] In 1995, the A340-400 was slated for introduction in the year 2000, seating 380 passengers with a 300 t (660,000 lb) take-off weight.[45]

In April 1996, GE Aviation obtained an exclusivity for the 13,000 km (8,100 mi; 7,000 nmi) 375-passenger −600 stretch with 226 kN (51,000 lbf) engines, above the 225.5 kN (50,700 lbf) limit of the CFM International engines made in partnership with SNECMA and dropping the 191 kN (43,000 lbf) CFMXX.[46] The −600 would be stretched by 20–22 frames to 75 m (246 ft), unit thrust was raised from 227 kN (51,000 lbf) to 249 kN (56,000 lbf) and maximum takeoff weight would be increased to 330 t (730,000 lb). The wing area would increase by 56 m2 (600 sq ft) to 420 m2 (4,500 sq ft) through a larger chord needing a three-frame centre fuselage insert and retaining the existing front and rear spars, and a span increased by 3.5 to 63.8 m (11 to 209 ft), alongside a 25% increase in wing fuel capacity and four wheels replacing the centre twin-wheel bogie. A −500 with the larger wing and engines and three extra frames for 310 passengers would cover 15,725 km (9,770 mi; 8,490 nmi) to replace the smaller 14,800 km (9,200 mi; 8,000 nmi) range A340-200. At least $1 billion would be needed to develop the airframe, excluding the $2 billion required for engine development supported by the engine manufacturer. A 12 frame −400 simple stretch would cover 11,290 km (6,100 nmi) with 340 passengers in a three-class configuration.[47]

It was enlarged by 40% to compete with the then in-development 777-300ER/200LR: the wing would be expanded with a tapered wing box insert along the span extension, it would have enlarged horizontal stabilizers and the larger A330-200 fin and it would need 222–267 kN (50–60,000 lbf) of unit thrust. The ultra-long-haul 1.53 m (5.0 ft) -500 stretch would seat 316 passengers, a little more than the −300, over 15,355 km (8,290 nmi), while the 10.07 m (33.0 ft) -600 stretch would offer a 25% larger cabin for 372 passengers over a range of 13,700 km (7,400 nmi).[48] MTOW was increased to 356 t (785,000 lb).[49]

Unwilling to commit to a $1 billion development without good return on investment prospects and a second application, in 1997 GE Aviation stopped exclusivity talks for GE90 scaled down to 245–290 kN (55–65,000 lbf), leaving Rolls-Royce proposing a more cost-effective Rolls-Royce Trent variant needing less development and Pratt & Whitney suggesting a PW2000 advanced ducted propulsor, a PW4000 derivative or a new geared turbofan.[50] In June 1997, the 250 kN (56,000 lbf) Rolls-Royce Trent 500 was selected, with growth potential to 275 kN (62,000 lbf), derived from the A330 Rolls-Royce Trent 700 and the B777 Rolls-Royce Trent 800 with a reduced fan diameter and a new LP turbine, for a 7.7% lower TSFC than the 700. Airbus claims 10% lower operating costs per seat than the −300, 3% below those of what Boeing was then advertising for the 777-300X.[51] The $2.9 billion program was launched in December 1997 with 100 commitments from seven customers worth $3 billion, aiming to fly the first −600 in January 2001 and deliver it from early 2002 to capture at least half of the 1,500 sales forecast in the category through 2010.[52]

In 1998, the −600 stretch was stabilised at 20 frames for 10.6 m (35 ft), the MTOW rose to 365 t (805,000 lb) and the unit thrust to 52,000 to 60,000 lbf (230 to 270 kN), keeping the Trent 700 2.47 m (8.1 ft) fan diameter with its scaled IP and HP compressors and the high-speed, low-loading HP and IP turbines of the Trent 800.[53]

A340 stretch concepts
Period 1991[42] 1994[44] 1995[45] 1996[48] 1998[53]
Unit thrust 178 kN (40,000 lbf) 267 kN (60,000 lbf) 267 kN (60,000 lbf)
Stretch 12 frames (40 pax) 50 pax 20–22 frames, 10.07 m (33.0 ft) 20 frames, 10.6 m (35 ft)
Passengers 335 380 375 380
Range 10,900 km (5,900 nmi) same as −300 13,700 km (7,400 nmi) 13,900 km (7,500 nmi)
MTOW 267.0 t (588,600 lb) 300 t (660,000 lb) 356 t (785,000 lb) 365 t (805,000 lb)

Despite the −500/600 introduction, sales slowed in the 2000s as the Boeing 777-200LR/-300ER dominated the long-range 300–400 seat market. The A340-500IGW/600HGW high gross weight variants did not arouse much sales interest.[54][55][56] In January 2006, Airbus confirmed it had studied an A340-600E (Enhanced) that was more fuel-efficient than earlier A340s, reducing the per-seat fuel consumption by 8–9% compared to the −600. This model would become more competitive with the Boeing 777-300ER by utilizing new Trent 1500 engines and technologies from the A350 initial design.[54]

At 380 passengers, the advertised three-class seating of the −600 was well above the real world average of 323 seats, while the B777-300ER is advertised for 365 and offers 332, impacting seat costs. By 2018, a 2006 -600 was worth $18M and a 2003 one $10M, projected to fall to $7M in 2021 with a $200,000/month lease rate falling to $180,000 in 2021; its D check cost $4.5M and its engine overhaul $3–6M.[57]

End of production

In 2005, 155 B777s were ordered against 15 A340s: twin engine ETOPS restrictions were overcome by lower operating costs compared to quad jets and the relaxation of ETOPS requirements for the A330, 777, and other twinjets.[58] In 2007, Airbus predicted that another 127 A340 aircraft would likely be produced through 2016, the projected end of production.[59]

In 2011, the unit cost of an A340-300 was US$238.0M ($286.7M today), US$261.8M for an A340-500 ($315.4M today) and US$275.4M for an A340-600 ($331.7M today).[60] On 10 November 2011, Airbus announced the end of the A340 program. At that time, the company indicated that all firm orders had been delivered.[61] The decision to terminate the program came as A340-500/600 orders came to a halt, with analyst Nick Cunningham pointing out that the A340 "was too heavy and there was a big fuel burn gap between the A340 and Boeing's 777". Bertrand Grabowski, managing director of aircraft financier DVB Bank SE, noted "in an environment where the fuel price is high, the A340 has had no chance to compete against similar twin engines, and the current lease rates and values of this aircraft reflect the deep resistance of any airlines to continue operating it".[54][55][56]

As a sales incentive amid low customer demand during the Great Recession, Airbus had offered buy-back guarantees to airlines that chose to procure the A340. By 2013, the resale value of an A340 declined by 30% over ten years, and both Airbus and Rolls-Royce were incurring related charges amounting to hundreds of millions of euros. Some analysts have expected the price of a flight-worthy, CFM56-powered A340 to drop below $10 million by 2023.[62]

Airbus could offer used A340s to airlines wishing to retire older aircraft such as the Boeing 747-400, claiming that the cost of purchasing and maintaining a second-hand A340 with increased seating and improved engine performance reportedly compared favourably to the procurement costs of a new Boeing 777.[63]

In 2013, as ultra-long range is a niche, the A340 was less attractive with best usage on long, thin routes, from hot-and-high airports or as interim air charter. A 10-year-old A340-300 had a base value of $35m and a market value of $24m, leading to $320,000/mo ($240,000–$350,000) lease rate, while a −500 is $425,000 and a −600 is leased $450,000 to $500,000 per month, versus $1.3m for a 777-300ER. The lighter A340-300 consumes 5% less fuel per trip with 300 passengers than the 312 passengers 777-200ER while the heavier A340-600 uses 12% more fuel than a 777-300ER.[64]

As an effort to support the A340's resale value, Airbus has proposed reconfiguring the aircraft's interior for a single class of 475 seats. As the Trent 500 engines are half the maintenance cost of the A340, Rolls-Royce proposed a cost-reducing maintenance plan similar to the company's existing program that reduced the cost of maintaining the RB211 engine powering Iberia's Boeing 757 freighters. Key to these programs is the salvaging, repair and reuse of serviceable parts from retired older engines.[65]

Airbus has positioned the larger versions of the A350, specifically the A350-900 and A350-1000, as the successors to the A340-500 and A340-600.

The ACJ340 is listed on the Airbus Corporate Jets website, as Airbus can convert retired A340 airliners to VIP transport configuration.[66]

Design

 
The 9.2 aspect ratio and 31° sweep of the A340-600 wing

The Airbus A340 is a twin-aisle passenger airliner that was the first long-range Airbus,[67] powered by four turbofan jet engines.[68] It was developed with technology from earlier Airbus aircraft and their features like the A320 glass cockpit; it shares many components with the A330, notably identical fly-by-wire control systems and similar wings.[16][69] Its features and improvements were usually shared with the A330.[70] The four engines configuration avoided the ETOPS constraints such as more frequent inspections.

The A340 has a low cantilever wing; the A340-200/300 wing is virtually identical to that of the A330, with both engine pylons used while only the inboard one is used on the A330. The two engines for each wing provide a more distributed weight; and a more outboard engine weight for a lower wing root bending moment at equal TOW, allowing a higher wing limited MTOW for more range. The wings were designed and manufactured by BAe, which developed a long slender wing with a high aspect ratio for a higher aerodynamic efficiency.[71][a]

The wing is swept back at 30 degrees, allowing a maximum operating Mach number of 0.86.[73][74] 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%[75] or 12.8%.[76][b] Jet airliners have thickness-to-chord ratios ranging from 9.4% (MD-11 or Boeing 747) to 13% (Avro RJ or 737 Classic).[77] Each wing also has a 2.74 m (9.0 ft) tall winglet instead of the wingtip fences found on earlier Airbus aircraft. The failure of the ultra-high-bypass IAE SuperFan, promising around 15% better fuel burn, led to wing upgrades to compensate.[78][79] Originally designed with a 56 m (184 ft) span, the wing was later extended to 58.6 m (192 ft) and finally to 60.3 m (198 ft).[78] This wingspan is similar to that of the larger Boeing 747-200, but with 35% less wing area.[73][74]

The A340 uses a modified A320 glass cockpit, with side-stick controls instead of a conventional yoke. The main instrument panel is dominated by six displays, cathode ray tube monitors initially then liquid crystal displays.[68] Flight information is directed via the Electronic Flight Instrument System (EFIS) and systems information through the Electronic Centralised Aircraft Monitor (ECAM).[80][unreliable source?][81]

The aircraft monitors various sensors and automatically alerts the crew to any parameters outside of their normal range; pilots can also inspect individual systems. Electronic manuals are used instead of paper ones, with optional web-based updates. Maintenance difficulty and cost were reduced to half of that of the earlier and smaller Airbus A310.[82] Improved engine control and monitoring improved time on wing. The centralised maintenance computer can transmit real-time information to ground facilities via the onboard satellite-based ACARS datalink.[68][82] Heavy maintenance like structural changes remained unchanged, while cabin sophistications, like the in-flight entertainment, were increased over preceding airliners.[82]

Operational history

 
Air Lanka was the Asian launch customer of the aircraft.

The first variant of the A340 to be introduced, the A340-200, entered service with the launch customer, Lufthansa, in 1993. It was followed shortly thereafter by the A340-300 with its operator, Air France. Lufthansa's first A340, which had been dubbed Nürnberg (D-AIBA),[36] began revenue service on 15 March 1993.[34][83] Air Lanka (later renamed Sri Lankan Airlines) became the Asian launch customer of the Airbus A340; the airline received its first A340-300, registered (4R-ADA), in September 1994. British airline Virgin Atlantic was an early adopter of the A340; in addition to operating several A340-300 aircraft, Virgin Atlantic announced in August 1997 that it was to be the worldwide launch customer for the new A340-600.[84] The first commercial flight of the A340-600 was performed by Virgin in July 2002.[84]

Singapore Airlines ordered 17 A340-300s and operated them until October 2003. The A340-300s were purchased by Boeing as part of an order for Boeing 777s in 1999.[85] The airline then purchased five long-range A340-500s, which joined the fleet in December 2003. In February 2004, the airline's A340-500 performed the longest non-stop commercial air service in the world, conducting a non-stop flight between Singapore and Los Angeles.[86] In 2004, Singapore Airlines launched an even longer non-stop route using the A340-500 between Newark and Singapore, SQ 21, a 15,344 kilometres (8,285 nmi) journey that was the longest scheduled non-stop commercial flight in the world.[87] The airline continued to operate this route regularly until the airline decided to retire the type in favour of new A380 and A350 aircraft;[88] its last A340 flight was performed in late 2013.

The A340 was typically used by airlines as a medium-sized long-haul aircraft, and was often a replacement for older Boeing 747s as it was more likely to be profitable compared to the larger and less efficient 747.[89] Airbus produced a number of A340s as large private jets for VIP customers, often to replace aging Boeing 747s in this same role. In 2008, Airbus launched a dedicated corporate jetliner version of the A340-200: one key selling point of this aircraft was a range of up to 8,000 nautical miles (15,000 km). Airbus had built up to nine different customized versions of the A340 to private customer's specific demands prior to 2008.[90]

 
A South African Airways A340-300 with 2-wheel centre-line bogie on final approach at Perth Airport in 2018

The A340 has frequently been operated as a dedicated transport for heads of state. A pair of A340-300s were acquired from Lufthansa by the Flugbereitschaft of the German Air Force; they serve as VIP transports for the German Chancellor and other key members of the German government.[91] The A340 is also operated by the air transport division of the French Air and Space Force, where it is used as a strategic transport for troop deployments and supply missions, as well as to transport government officials.[92] A one-of-a-kind aircraft, the A340-8000, was originally built for Prince Jefri Bolkiah, brother of the Sultan of Brunei Hassanal Bolkiah. The aircraft was unused and stored in Hamburg until it was procured by Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal of the House of Saud,[93] and later sold to Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, then-President of Libya; the aircraft was operated by Afriqiyah Airways and was often referred to as Afriqiyah One.[94]

In 2008, jet fuel prices doubled compared to the year before; consequently, the A340's fuel consumption led airlines to reduce flight stages exceeding 15 hours. Thai Airways International cancelled its 17-hour, nonstop Bangkok–New York/JFK route on 1 July 2008, and placed its four A340-500s for sale. While short flights stress aircraft more than long flights and result in more frequent fuel-thirsty take-offs and landings, ultra-long flights require completely full fuel tanks. The higher weights in turn require a greater proportion of an aircraft's fuel fraction just to take off and to stay airborne. In 2008, Air France-KLM SA's chief executive Pierre-Henri Gourgeon disparagingly referred to the A340 as a "flying tanker with a few people on board".[95] While Thai Airways consistently filled 80% of the seats on its New York City–Bangkok flights, it estimated that, at 2008 fuel prices, it would need an impossible 120% of seats filled just to break even.[96] Other airlines also re-examined long-haul flights. In August 2008 Cathay Pacific stated that rising fuel costs were hurting its trans-Pacific long-haul routes disproportionately, and that it would cut the number of such flights and redeploy its aircraft to shorter routes such as between Hong Kong and Australia. "We will ... reshap[e] our network where necessary to ensure we fly aircraft to where we can cover our costs and also make some money."[97] Aviation Week noted that rapid performance increases of twin-engine aircraft has led to the detriment of four-engine types of comparable capacity such as the A340 and 747; at this point most 747s had accumulated significant flying hours before retirement in contrast to A340s which were relatively young when grounded.[98][99][100]

By 2014, Singapore Airlines had phased out the type, discontinuing SQ21 and SQ22, which had been the longest non-stop scheduled flights in the world. Emirates Airlines decided to accelerate the retirement of its A340 fleet, writing down the value of the A340-500 type to zero despite the oldest −500 only being 10 years old, with president Tim Clark saying they were "designed in the late 1990s with fuel at $25–30. They fell over at $60 and at $120 they haven’t got a hope in hell".[101]

 
Eight-abreast, 2-4-2 economy cabin

International Airlines Group, the parent of Iberia Airlines (which is also the operator of the last production A340 built), is overhauling its A340-600s for continued service for the foreseeable future, while it is retiring its A340-300s. The IAG overhaul featured improved conditions and furnishings in the business and economy classes; the business-class capacity was raised slightly while not changing the type's overall operating cost. Lufthansa, which operates both Airbus A340-300s and −600s, concluded that, while it is not possible to make the A340 more fuel efficient, it can respond to increased interest in business-class services by replacing first-class seats with more business-class seats to increase revenue.[101][102]

In 2013, Snecma announced that they planned to use the A340 as a flying testbed for the development of a new open rotor engine. This test aircraft is forecast to conduct its first flight in 2019. Open rotor engines are typically more fuel-efficient but noisier than conventional turbofan engines; introducing such an engine commercially has been reported as requiring significant legislative changes within engine approval authorities due to its differences from contemporary jet engines. The engine, partly based on the Snecma M88 turbofan engine used on the Dassault Rafale, is being developed under the European Clean Sky research initiative.[103][104]

In January 2021, Lufthansa, which was the largest remaining operator by then, announced that their entire Airbus A340-600 fleet will be retired with immediate effect and not return to service in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.[105] Ultimately, Lufthansa reactivated their A340-600s in late 2021,[106] while remaining committed to operating the smaller Airbus A340-300.[107][108] Later in 2021, a Portuguese charter carrier landed an A340 in Antarctica for the first time in history.[109]

As of December 2021, the global A340 fleet had carried over 600 million passengers and completed more than 2.5 million flights over 20 million block hours since its entry into service with 99 percent operational reliability.[110]

Variants

 
Airbus A340 family
Airbus A340 variants
ICAO code[111] Model(s)
A342 A340-200
A343 A340-300
A345 A340-500
A346 A340-600

There are four variants of the A340. The A340-200 and A340-300 were launched in 1987 with introduction into service in March 1993 for the −200. The A340-500 and A340-600 were launched in 1997 with introduction into service in 2002. All variants were available in a corporate version.

A340-200

The −200 is one of two initial versions of the A340; it has seating for 261 passengers in a three-class cabin layout with a range of 13,800 kilometres (7,500 nmi) or seating for 240 passengers also in a three-class cabin layout for a range of 15,000 kilometres (8,100 nmi).[112] This is the shortest version of the family and the only version with a wingspan measuring greater than its fuselage length. It is powered by four CFMI CFM56-5C4 engines and uses the Honeywell 331–350[A] auxiliary power unit (APU).[113] It initially entered service with Air France in May 1993. Due to its large wingspan, four engines, low capacity and general inferiority to the larger and more improved A340-300, the −200 proved very unpopular with mainstream airlines. Only 28 A340-200s were produced. The closest Boeing competitor is the Boeing 767-400ER.

One version of this type (referred to by Airbus as the A340-8000) was ordered by the prince Jefri Bolkiah, with the request for a non-stop range of 15,000 kilometres (8,100 nmi). This A340-8000, in the Royal Brunei Airlines livery had an increased fuel capacity, an MTOW of 275 tonnes (606,000 lb), similar to the A340-300, and minor reinforcements to the undercarriage. It is powered by the 150 kilonewtons (34,000 lbf) thrust CFM56-5C4s similar to the −300E. Only one A340-8000 was produced. Besides the −8000, some A340-200s are used for VIP or military use; these include Royal Brunei Airlines, Qatar Amiri Flight, Arab Republic of Egypt Government, Royal Saudi Air Force, Jordan and the French Air and Space Force. Following the −8000, other A340-200s were later given performance improvement packages (PIPs) that helped them achieve similar gains in capability as to the A340-8000. Those aircraft are labeled A340-213X. The range for this version is 15,000 kilometres (8,100 nmi).

As of October 2022, all active remaining A340-200s still flying were VIP or government planes. Conviasa operated the world's last commercial A340-200. The aircraft's last flight was documented in March 2022 before being scrapped.[114]

A340-300

 
Lufthansa Airbus A340-300 from above

The A340-300 flies 295 passengers in a typical three-class cabin layout over 6,700 nautical miles (12,400 km). This is the initial version, having flown on 25 October 1991, and it entered service with Lufthansa and Air France in March 1993. It is powered by four CFMI CFM56-5C engines and uses the Honeywell 331–350[A] APU,[113] similar to the version used on the −200. The A340-300 was superseded by the A350-900.[115] Its closest competitor was the Boeing 777-200ER.[116] A total of 218 -300s were delivered.

The A340-300E, often mislabelled as A340-300X, has an increased MTOW of up to 275 tonnes (606,000 lb) and is powered by the more powerful 34,000 lbf (150 kN) thrust CFMI CFM56-5C4 engines. Typical range with 295 passengers is between 7,200 to 7,400 nautical miles (13,300 to 13,700 km). The largest operator of this type is Lufthansa, who has operated a fleet of 30 aircraft. The A340-300 Enhanced is the latest version of this model and was first delivered to South African Airways in 2003, with Air Mauritius receiving the A340-300 Enhanced into its fleet in 2006. It received newer CFM56-5C4/P engines and improved avionics and fly-by-wire systems developed for the A340-500 and −600.

As of July 2018, there were 96 Airbus A340-300s in airline service.[117][needs update]

A340-500

 
Slightly longer than the −300, the −500 has a larger wing, larger Rolls-Royce Trent 500 turbofans and three 4-wheel bogies for the main landing gear, it was introduced by Emirates in 2003.

When the A340-500 was introduced, it was the world's longest-range commercial airliner. It first flew on 11 February 2002 and was certified on 3 December 2002. Air Canada was supposed to be the launch customer, but filed for bankruptcy in January 2003, delaying delivery to March. This allowed early deliveries to the new launch customer, Emirates, allowing the carrier to launch nonstop service from Dubai to New York—its first route in the Americas. The A340-500 can fly 313 passengers in a three-class cabin layout over 16020 km (8650 nm). Compared with the A340-300, the −500 features a 4.3-metre (14.1 ft) fuselage stretch, an enlarged wing, a significant increase in fuel capacity (around 50% larger than the −300), slightly higher cruising speed, a larger horizontal stabilizer and a larger vertical tailplane. The centerline main landing gear was changed to a four-wheel bogie to support the additional weight. The A340-500 is powered by four 240 kN (54,000 lbf) thrust Rolls-Royce Trent 553 turbofans and uses the Honeywell 331–600[A] APU.[118]

Designed for ultra long-haul routes, the −500 has a range of 9,000 nautical miles.[119] Due to its range, the −500 is capable of travelling non-stop from London to Perth, Western Australia, though a return flight requires a fuel stop due to headwinds.[120] Singapore Airlines used this model (initially in a two-class 181-passenger layout, later in a 100-passenger business-only layout) between early 2004 and late 2013 for its NewarkSingapore and Singapore–Newark nonstop routes SQ21 and SQ22. The former was an 18-hour, 45-minute 'westbound' (actually a polar route northbound to 130 km (70 nm) abeam the North Pole, then south across Russia, Mongolia and the People's Republic of China) and the latter was an 18-hour, 30-minute eastbound, 15,344 kilometres (8,285 nmi) journey. At the time, the flight was the longest scheduled non-stop commercial flight in the world.[87][121] Singapore Airlines even added a special compartment to the aircraft to store a corpse if a passenger were to die during the flight, though it was reported that its use had not been necessary.[122][121] Singapore Airlines suspended operating the flight from 2013 onwards partly due to high fuel prices at that time and returned its aircraft to Airbus in exchange for ordering new Airbus A350 aircraft.[121] The SQ21/SQ22 route was eventually resumed, flown by A350-900ULR aircraft.[123]

The A340-500IGW (Increased Gross Weight) version has a range of 17,000 km (9,200 nmi) and a MTOW of 380 t (840,000 lb) and first flew on 13 October 2006. It uses the strengthened structure and enlarged fuel capacity of the A340-600. The certification aircraft, a de-rated A340-541 model, became the first delivery, to Thai Airways International, on 11 April 2007.[124] Nigerian airline Arik Air received a pair of A340-542s in November 2008, using the type to immediately launch two new routes, Lagos–London Heathrow and Lagos–Johannesburg; a non-stop Lagos–New York route began in January 2010.[125][126] The A340-500IGW is powered by four 250 kN (56,000 lbf) thrust Rolls-Royce Trent 556 turbofans.

Like the A340-200, a shortened derivative of the −300, the −500 was unpopular.[127] The −500 series was considered "very inefficient for how few seats they have because they still carry most of the guts of the larger airplanes [the A340-600] from which they were shrunk". Also the ultra long-haul market was a niche that was difficult to profit from, due to the amount of fuel that had to be carried.

As of August 2022, there are no longer any commercial A340-500 routes.[128] However, Azerbaijan Airlines later put both of its aircraft back in service later in 2022, but removed them from service as of January 2023.

A340-600

 
The A340-600 has five doors per side as seen here on a since retired Iberia aircraft.

Designed to replace early-generation Boeing 747-200/300 airliners, the A340-600 is capable of carrying 379 passengers in a three-class cabin layout for 13,900 km (7,500 nmi). It provides similar passenger capacity to a 747 but with 25 percent more cargo volume and with lower trip and seat costs. The first flight of the A340-600 was made on 23 April 2001.[129] Virgin Atlantic began commercial services in August 2002.[130][131] The variant's main competitor is the 777-300ER. The A340-600 was replaced by the A350-1000.

The A340-600 is 12 m (39 ft 4.4 in) longer than a −300, more than 4 m (13 ft 1.5 in) longer than the Boeing 747-400 and 2.3 m (7 ft 6.6 in) longer than the A380, and has two emergency exit doors added over the wings. It held the record for the world's longest commercial aircraft until the first flight of the Boeing 747-8 in February 2010. The A340-600 is powered by four 250 kN (56,000 lbf) thrust Rolls-Royce Trent 556 turbofans and uses the Honeywell 331–600[A] APU.[118] As with the −500, it has a four-wheel undercarriage bogie on the fuselage centre-line to cope with the increased MTOW along with the enlarged wing and rear empennage. Upper deck main cabin space can be optionally increased by locating facilities such as crew rest areas, galleys, and lavatories upon the aircraft's lower deck. In early 2007, Airbus reportedly advised carriers to reduce cargo in the forward section by 5.0 t (11,000 lb) to compensate for overweight first and business class sections; the additional weight caused the aircraft's centre of gravity to move forward thus reducing cruise efficiency. Affected airlines considered filing compensation claims with Airbus.[132]

The A340-600HGW (High Gross Weight) version first flew on 18 November 2005[133] and was certified on 14 April 2006.[134] It has an MTOW of 380 t (840,000 lb) and a range of up to 14,630 km (7,900 nmi), made possible by strengthened structure, increased fuel capacity, more powerful engines and new manufacturing techniques like laser beam welding. The A340-600HGW is powered by four 61,900 lbf (275 kN) thrust Rolls-Royce Trent 560 turbofans. Emirates became the launch customer for the −600HGW when it ordered 18 at the 2003 Paris Air Show;[135] but postponed its order indefinitely and later cancelled it. Rival Qatar Airways, which placed its order at the same airshow, took delivery of only four aircraft with the first aircraft on 11 September 2006.[136] The airline has since let its purchase options expire in favour of orders for the Boeing 777-300ER.[137]

As of July 2018, there were 60 A340-600s in service with six airlines worldwide.[117][needs update]

Operators

Over the duration of the programme, a total of 377 A340 family aircraft were delivered, of which 203 were in service as of December 2022. The largest scheduled airline operators were Lufthansa (34), Mahan Air (12), South African Airways (7), Swiss International Air Lines (5), and amongst other airlines, governments, charter and private operators with fewer aircraft of the type.[138]

Deliveries

Deliveries
Type Total 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993
A340-200 28 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 3 3 5 4 12
A340-300 218 - - - - 3 2 2 4 5 10 8 22 19 20 23 30 25 14 21 10
A340-500 34 2 0 2 2 1 4 5 9 7 2 - - - - - - - - - -
A340-600 97 2 8 8 8 18 15 14 16 8 - - - - - - - - -
A340 family 377 2 0 4 10 12 14 25 28 26 28 16 22 19 20 24 33 28 19 25 22

'Note: The total number of deliveries corresponds to the Airbus O&D file,[2] while the details are given in the ABCD list..[139]

Accidents and incidents

The A340 has never been involved in a fatal accident, although there have been six hull losses:[140][141]

Accidents

Landing phase
  • 5 November 1997 – a Virgin Atlantic Airbus A340-311 conducted an emergency landing on Runway 27L at London Heathrow Airport with the aircraft's left-main landing gear partially extended. The aircraft was repaired and returned to service.[142][143]
  • 29 August 1998 – a Sabena A340-200 (OO-SCW) was severely damaged while landing on Runway 25L at Brussels Airport. The right main gear collapsed; the right engines and wingtip hit the runway and slid to the right in soft ground. The 248 passengers and 11 crew were safely evacuated. The cause of the gear failure was found to be a fatigue crack. Although severely damaged, the aircraft was repaired and returned to service for 16 years until it was stored.[144]
  • 2 August 2005 – Air France Flight 358 was destroyed by a crash and subsequent fire after it overran runway 24L at Toronto Pearson International Airport while landing in a thunderstorm. The aircraft slid into Etobicoke Creek and caught fire. All 297 passengers and 12 crew survived; 43 people were injured, 12 seriously.[145][146]
  • 9 November 2007 – Iberia Airlines Flight 6463, an A340-600, was badly damaged after sliding off the runway at Ecuador's Mariscal Sucre International Airport. The landing gear collapsed and two engines broke off. All 345 passengers and 14 crew members were evacuated by inflatable slides, and there were no serious injuries. The aircraft was scrapped.[147]
Take-off phase
  • 20 March 2009 – Emirates Flight 407 was an Emirates flight flying from Melbourne to Dubai-International using an A340-500. The flight failed to take off properly from Melbourne Airport, hitting several structures at the end of the runway before eventually climbing enough to return to the airport for a safe landing. The occurrence was severe enough to be classified an accident by the Australian Transport Safety Bureau.[148][149] The plane was subsequently repaired, and returned to service for five years before it was scrapped.[150]

Incidents

 
This A340-600 was written off after a ground testing accident prior to delivery for Etihad Airways.
Fire related
  • 20 January 1994 – an Air France A340-200 registered F-GNIA was destroyed by fire during servicing at Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport.[151] This marks the first hull-loss of an A340.
  • 11 June 2018 – A Lufthansa A340-300, registration D-AIFA, was being towed with maintenance staff on board to the departure gate at Frankfurt's terminal when the tow truck caught fire. The flames substantially damaged the aircraft front section, and 10 people on the ground received minor injuries.[152] The damage was assessed to be beyond economical repair and the aircraft was written off.[150]
Test related
  • 15 November 2007 – an A340-600, A6-EHG, was damaged beyond repair during ground testing at Airbus' facilities at Toulouse Blagnac International Airport. During a pre-delivery engine test, some safety checks had been disabled,[153] leading to the unchocked aircraft accelerating to 31 knots (57 km/h; 36 mph) and colliding with a concrete blast deflection wall. The right wing, tail, and left engines made contact with the ground or wall, leaving the forward section elevated several metres and the cockpit broken off; nine people on board were injured, four of them seriously.[153][154] The aircraft was written off and was later used at Virgin Atlantic's cabin crew training facility in Crawley, England.[155] It had been due to be delivered to Etihad Airways.[156]
War related

Specifications

Variant A340-200[159] A340-300[159] A340-500[160] A340-600[160]
Cockpit crew Two
3-class seats[161] 210–250 250–290 270–310 320–370
typ. layout 303 (30F + 273Y) 335 (30F + 305Y) 313 (12F + 36J + 265Y) 380 (12F + 54J + 314Y)
Exit limit[162] 420[c]/375 375/440[c] 375 440
Length[162] 59.39 m / 194 ft 10 in 63.66 m / 208 ft 10 in 67.33 m / 220 ft 11 in 74.77 m / 245 ft 3 in
Wingspan 60.3 m / 197.83 ft 63.45 m / 208.17 ft
Wing[163] 363.1 m2 (3,908 sq ft), 29.7° sweep, 10 AR 437.3 m2 (4,707 sq ft), 31.1° sweep, 9.2 AR
Height 17.03 m / 55.86 ft 16.99 m / 55.72 ft 17.53 m / 57.51 ft 17.93 m / 58.84 ft
Fuselage 5.287 m / 208.15 in cabin width, 5.64 m / 18.5 ft outside width
Cargo volume 132.4 m3 (4,680 cu ft) 158.4 m3 (5,590 cu ft) 149.7 m3 (5,290 cu ft) 201.7 m3 (7,120 cu ft)
MTOW 275 t (606,000 lb) 276.5 t (610,000 lb) 380 t (840,000 lb)
Max. PL 51 t (112,000 lb) 52 t (115,000 lb) 54 t (119,000 lb) 66 t (146,000 lb)<
OEW 118 t (260,000 lb) 131 t (289,000 lb) 168 t (370,000 lb) 174 t (384,000 lb)
Max. Fuel 110.4 t / 243,395 lb 175.2 t / 386,292 lb 155.5 t / 342,905 lb [d]
Engines (×4) CFM International CFM56-5C Trent 553 Trent 556
Thrust (×4)[162] 138.78–151.24 kN (31,200–34,000 lbf) 248.12–275.35 kN (55,780–61,902 lbf)
Speed Mach 0.86 (493 kn; 914 km/h) max,[161]Mach 0.82 (470 kn; 871 km/h) cruise
Range, 3-class[161] 12,400 km / 6,700 nmi 13,500 km / 7,300 nmi 16,670 km / 9,000 nmi 14,450 km / 7,800 nmi
Take off[e] 2,900 m (9,500 ft) 3,000 m (10,000 ft) 3,350 m (10,990 ft) 3,400 m (11,200 ft)
Ceiling[162] 41 100 ft (12 527 m) 41 450 ft (12 634 m)
Line drawings

Engines

Model Certification date Engines[162]
A340-211 22 December 1992 CFM 56-5C2
A340-212 14 March 1994 CFM 56-5C3
A340-213 19 December 1995 CFM 56-5C4
A340-311 22 December 1992 CFM 56-5C2
A340-312 14 March 1994 CFM 56-5C3
A340-313 16 March 1995 CFM 56-5C4
A340-541 3 December 2002 RR Trent 553-61 / 553A2-61
A340-542 15 February 2007 RR Trent 556A2-61
A340-642 21 May 2002 RR Trent 556-61 / 556A2-61
A340-643 11 April 2006 RR Trent 560A2-61

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References

Notes
  1. ^ The higher the aspect ratio, the greater the aerodynamic efficiency: A higher aspect ratio wing has a lower drag and a slightly higher lift than a lower aspect ratio wing.[72]
  2. ^ This is the thickness to chord ratio of the early Airbus A340 variants, which share the same wing with the A330
  3. ^ a b 4 Type A doors
  4. ^ no aux. tank, 164 t / 361 595 lb with 1 aux. tank
  5. ^ MTOW, SL, ISA
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  4. ^ Gunston 2009, p. [page needed].
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  6. ^ a b c Eden 2008, p. 30
  7. ^ a b c d e f Norris & Wagner 2001, p. 23.
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  18. ^ Norris & Wagner 2001, p. 26.
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Bibliography
  • Doganis, Rigas (2002). Flying Off Course: The Economics of International Airlines. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-4152-1323-3.
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  • Norris, Guy; Wagner, Mark (2001). Airbus A340 and A330. St. Paul, Minnesota: MBI Publishing. ISBN 0-7603-0889-6.
  • Norris, Guy; Wagner, Mark (1999). Airbus. St. Paul, Minnesota: MBI Publishing. ISBN 0-7603-0677-X.
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External links

  • Airbus A340-200/300 page on airliners.net
  • Airbus A340 production list
  • "Airbus A340 Report". Forecast International. April 2007.

airbus, a340, a340, redirects, here, road, hampshire, berkshire, a340, road, long, range, wide, body, passenger, airliner, that, developed, produced, airbus, 1970s, airbus, conceived, several, derivatives, a300, first, airliner, developed, a340, quadjet, paral. A340 redirects here For the road in Hampshire and Berkshire see A340 road The Airbus A340 is a long range wide body passenger airliner that was developed and produced by Airbus In the mid 1970s Airbus conceived several derivatives of the A300 its first airliner and developed the A340 quadjet in parallel with the A330 twinjet In June 1987 Airbus launched both designs with their first orders and the A340 300 took its maiden flight on 25 October 1991 It was certified along with the A340 200 on 22 December 1992 and both versions entered service in March 1993 with launch customers Lufthansa and Air France The larger A340 500 600 were launched on 8 December 1997 the A340 600 flew for the first time on 23 April 2001 and entered service on 1 August 2002 A340An A340 300 the most widespread variant of Lufthansa the largest operatorRole Wide body jet airlinerNational origin Multi nationalManufacturer AirbusFirst flight 25 October 1991 31 years ago 1991 10 25 Introduction 15 March 1993 30 years ago 1993 03 15 with Lufthansa amp Air FranceStatus In servicePrimary users LufthansaMahan AirSwiss International Air LinesEdelweiss AirProduced 1991 2012 1 Number built 380 377 delivered to airlines 2 Developed from Airbus A300Keeping the eight abreast economy cross section of the A300 the early A340 200 300 has a similar airframe to the A330 Differences include four 151 kN 34 000 lbf CFM56s instead of two high thrust turbofans to bypass ETOPS restrictions on trans oceanic routes and a three leg main landing gear instead of two for a heavier 276 t 608 000 lb MTOW Both airliners have fly by wire controls which was first introduced on the A320 as well as a similar glass cockpit The later A340 500 600 have a larger wing and are powered by 275 kN 62 000 lbf Rolls Royce Trent 500 for a heavier 380 t 840 000 lb MTOW The shortest A340 200 measured 59 4 m 195 ft and could cover 12 400 km 6 700 nmi with 210 250 seats in 3 class The most common A340 300 reached 63 7 m 209 ft to accommodate 250 290 passengers and had a 13 500 km 7 300 nmi range The A340 500 was 67 9 m 223 ft long to seat 270 310 over 16 670 km 9 000 nmi the longest range airliner at the time The longest A340 600 was stretched to 75 4 m 247 ft then the longest airliner to accommodate 320 370 passengers over 14 450 km 7 800 nmi As improving engine reliability allowed ETOPS operations for almost all routes more economical twinjets have replaced quadjets on many routes On 10 November 2011 Airbus announced that the production reached its end after 380 orders had been placed and 377 delivered from Toulouse France The A350 is its successor the McDonnell Douglas MD 11 and the Boeing 777 were its main competitors By the end of 2021 the global A340 fleet had completed more than 2 5 million flights over 20 million block hours and carried over 600 million passengers with no fatalities As of December 2022 update there were 203 A340 aircraft in service with 45 operators worldwide Lufthansa is the largest A340 operator with 27 aircraft in its fleet Contents 1 Development 1 1 Background 1 2 Design effort 1 3 Production and testing 1 4 Entry into service and demonstration 1 5 Stretch 500 600 variants 1 6 End of production 2 Design 3 Operational history 4 Variants 4 1 A340 200 4 2 A340 300 4 3 A340 500 4 4 A340 600 5 Operators 5 1 Deliveries 6 Accidents and incidents 6 1 Accidents 6 2 Incidents 7 Specifications 7 1 Engines 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksDevelopment EditSee also Development of the Airbus A330 Background Edit Compared to the A340 quadjet flying the lighter A330 on ground has two engines and no centre line wheel bogie When Airbus designed the Airbus A300 during the 1970s it envisioned a broad family of airliners to compete against Boeing and McDonnell Douglas two established US aerospace manufacturers From the moment of formation Airbus had begun studies into derivatives of the Airbus A300B in support of this long term goal 3 Prior to the service introduction of the first Airbus airliners Airbus had identified nine possible variations of the A300 known as A300B1 to B9 4 A tenth variation conceived in 1973 later the first to be constructed was designated the A300B10 5 It was a smaller aircraft that would be developed into the long range Airbus A310 Airbus then focused its efforts on the single aisle market which resulted in the Airbus A320 family which was the first digital fly by wire commercial aircraft The decision to work on the A320 instead of a four engine aircraft proposed by the Germans created divisions within Airbus 5 As the SA or single aisle studies which later became the successful Airbus A320 underwent development to challenge the successful Boeing 737 and Douglas DC 9 in the single aisle narrow body airliner market Airbus turned its focus back to the wide body aircraft market The A300B11 6 a derivative of the A310 was designed upon the availability of ten ton thrust engines 7 Using four engines it would seat between 180 and 200 passengers and have a range of 11 000 kilometres 6 000 nmi 8 It was deemed a replacement for the less efficient Boeing 707s and Douglas DC 8s still in service 7 The A300B11 was joined by another design the A300B9 which was a larger derivative of the A300 The B9 was developed by Airbus from the early 1970s at a slow pace until the early 1980s It was essentially a stretched A300 with the same wing coupled with the most powerful turbofan engine available at the time 7 It was targeted at the growing demand for high capacity medium range transcontinental trunk routes 7 The B9 offered the same range and payload as the McDonnell Douglas DC 10 but it used between 25 7 to 38 9 less fuel The B9 was therefore considered a replacement for the DC 10 and the Lockheed L 1011 Tristar 10 To differentiate the programme from the SA studies the B9 and B11 were redesignated the TA9 and TA11 SA standing for single aisle and TA standing for twin aisle 6 In an effort to save development costs it was decided that the two would share the same wing and airframe the projected savings were estimated at US 500 million about 490 million or 495 million 11 The adoption of a common wing structure also had one technical advantage the TA11 s outboard engines could counteract the weight of the longer range model by providing bending relief 7 Another factor was the split preference of those within Airbus and more importantly prospective airliner customers Airbus vice president for strategic planning Adam Brown recalled North American operators were clearly in favour of a twin jet while Asians wanted a quad jet In Europe opinion was split between the two The majority of potential customers were in favour of a quad despite the fact in certain conditions it is more costly to operate than a twin They liked that it could be ferried with one engine out and could fly anywhere ETOPS extend range twin engine operations hadn t begun then 12 13 Design effort Edit The first specifications of the TA9 and TA11 were released in 1982 14 While the TA9 had a range of 6 100 kilometres 3 300 nmi the TA11 range was up to 12 650 kilometres 6 830 nmi 14 At the same time Airbus also sketched the TA12 a twin engine derivative of the TA11 which was optimised for flights of a 3 700 kilometres 2 000 nmi lesser range 14 By the time of the Paris Air Show in June 1985 more refinements had been made to the TA9 and TA11 including the adoption of the A320 flight deck fly by wire FBW flight control system and side stick control 15 Adopting a common cockpit across the new Airbus series allowed operators to make significant cost savings flight crews would be able to transition from one to another after one week of training 16 The TA11 and TA12 would use the front and rear fuselage sections of the A310 17 Components were modular and also interchangeable with other Airbus aircraft where possible 16 to reduce production maintenance and operating costs The A330 A340 shares a common flight deck with the A320 Airbus briefly considered a variable camber wing the concept was that the wing could change its profile to produce the optimum shape for a given phase of flight Studies were carried out by British Aerospace BAe at Hatfield and Bristol Airbus estimated this would yield a 2 improvement in aerodynamic efficiency 18 However the plan was later abandoned on grounds of cost and difficulty of development 6 Airbus had held discussions with McDonnell Douglas to jointly produce the aircraft which would have been designated as the AM 300 19 This aeroplane would have combined the wing of the A330 with the fuselage of the McDonnell Douglas MD 11 19 However talks were terminated as McDonnell Douglas insisted on the continuation of its trijet heritage 20 Although from the start it was intended that the A340 would be powered by four CFM56 5 turbofans each capable of 25 000 pounds force 110 kN 21 Airbus had also considered developing the aircraft as a trijet due to the limited power of engines available at the time namely the Rolls Royce RB211 535 and Pratt amp Whitney JT10D 232 22 redesignated PW2000 in December 1980 As refinements in the A340 s design proceeded a radical new engine option the IAE SuperFan was offered by International Aero Engines a group comprising Rolls Royce Pratt amp Whitney Japanese Aero Engines Corporation Fiat and MTU Aero Engines MTU The engine nacelles of the superfan engine consisted of provisions to allow a large fan near the rear of the engine As a result of the superfan cancellation by IAE the CFM56 5C4 was used as the sole engine choice instead of there being an alternate option as originally envisioned The later longer range versions namely the A340 500 and 600 are powered by Rolls Royce Trent 500 engines On 27 January 1986 the Airbus Industrie Supervisory Board held a meeting in Munich West Germany after which board chairman Franz Josef Strauss released a statement Airbus Industrie is now in a position to finalise the detailed technical definition of the TA9 which is now officially designated 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 15 The designations were originally reversed and were switched so the quad jet airliner would have a 4 in its name On 12 May 1986 Airbus dispatched fresh sale proposals to five prospective airlines including Lufthansa and Swissair 15 Production and testing Edit In preparations for production of the A330 A340 Airbus s partners invested heavily in new facilities Filton was the site of BAe s 7 million investment in a three storey technical centre with an extra 15 000 square metres 160 000 sq ft of floor area 23 BAe also spent 5 million expanding the Broughton wing production plant by 14 000 m2 150 000 sq ft 23 to accommodate a new production line However France saw the biggest changes with Aerospatiale starting construction of a new Fr 2 5 billion 411 million assembly plant adjacent to Toulouse Blagnac Airport in Colomiers 24 By November 1988 the first 21 m 69 ft pillars were erected for the new Clement Ader assembly hall 24 The assembly process meanwhile would feature increased automation with holes for the wing fuselage mating process drilled by eight robots 25 The use of automation for this particular process saved Airbus 20 on labour costs and 5 on time 25 An A340 200 demonstrator at the 1992 Farnborough Air Show British Aerospace accepted 450 million funding from the UK government short of the 750 million originally requested 26 Funds from the French and West German governments followed thereafter Airbus also issued subcontracts to companies in Austria Australia Canada China Greece Italy India Japan South Korea Portugal the United States and Yugoslavia 27 The A330 and A340 programmes were jointly launched on 5 June 1987 28 just prior to the Paris Air Show The program cost was 3 5 billion with the A330 in 2001 dollars 29 The order book then stood at 130 aircraft from 10 customers apart from the above mentioned Lufthansa and International Lease Finance Corporation ILFC Eighty nine of the total orders were A340 models 26 At McDonnell Douglas ongoing tests of the MD 11 revealed a significant shortfall in the aircraft s performance An important carrier Singapore Airlines SIA required a fully laden aircraft that could fly from Singapore to Paris against strong headwinds during mid winter in the northern hemisphere 30 The MD 11 according to test results would experience fuel starvation over the Balkans 30 Due to the less than expected performance figures SIA cancelled its 20 aircraft MD 11 order on 2 August 1991 and ordered 20 A340 300s instead 31 A total of 200 MD 11s were sold versus 380 A340s 20 The first flight of the A340 occurred on 21 October 1991 20 marking the start of a 2 000 hour test flight programme involving six aircraft 32 From the start engineers noticed that the wings were not stiff enough to carry the outboard engines at cruising speed without warping and fluttering To alleviate this an underwing bulge called a plastron was developed to correct airflow problems around the engine pylons 33 and to add stiffness European JAA certification was obtained on 22 December 1992 the FAA followed on 27 May 1993 34 In 1992 unit cost of an A340 200 was US 105M and US 110M for an A340 300 35 equivalent to 185 million in 2021 dollars Entry into service and demonstration Edit The first A340 a 200 was delivered to Lufthansa on 2 February 1993 and entered service on 15 March 34 The 228 seat airliner was named Nurnberg 36 The first A340 300 the 1000th Airbus was delivered to Air France on 26 February the first of nine it planned to operate by the end of the year 34 Air France replaced its Boeing 747s with A340s on its Paris Washington D C route flying four times weekly 37 Lufthansa intended to replace aging DC 10s with the A340s on Frankfurt New York services On 16 June 1993 an A340 200 dubbed the World Ranger flew from the Paris Air Show to Auckland New Zealand in 21 hours 32 minutes and back in 21 hours 46 minutes after a five hour stop this was the first non stop flight between Europe and New Zealand and the longest non stop flight by an airliner at the time 38 The 19 277 km 10 409 nmi flight from Paris to Auckland broke six world records with 22 persons and five center tanks 39 Taking off at 11 58 local time it arrived back in Paris 48 hours and 22 minutes later at 12 20 39 40 This record held until 1997 when a Boeing 777 200ER flew 20 044 km 10 823 nmi from Seattle to Kuala Lumpur 41 Stretch 500 600 variants Edit The A340 600 was the longest passenger airliner until the introduction of the Boeing 747 8 in 2010 Formulated in 1991 the A340 400X concept was a simple 12 frame 20 ft 10 in 6 35 m stretch of the 300 from 295 to 335 passengers with the MTOW increased to 553 360 to 588 600 lb 251 to 267 t and the range decreased by 1 390 to 10 930 km 750 to 5 900 nmi 42 CFM International was then set to develop a new engine for 1 1 5 billion that generated a thrust rating between the 150 kN 34 000 lbf CFM56 and the 315 400 kN 70 90 000 lbf GE90 43 In 1994 Airbus was studying a heavier A340 Advanced with a reinforced wing and a selection of 178 kN 40 000 lbf engines these included the Pratt amp Whitney advanced ducted propulsor CFM International CFMXX or Rolls Royce RB411 to a 300 stretch for 50 more passengers over the same range a 300 with the 200 range and a 200 with more range These models were slated to be introduced in 1996 44 In 1995 the A340 400 was slated for introduction in the year 2000 seating 380 passengers with a 300 t 660 000 lb take off weight 45 In April 1996 GE Aviation obtained an exclusivity for the 13 000 km 8 100 mi 7 000 nmi 375 passenger 600 stretch with 226 kN 51 000 lbf engines above the 225 5 kN 50 700 lbf limit of the CFM International engines made in partnership with SNECMA and dropping the 191 kN 43 000 lbf CFMXX 46 The 600 would be stretched by 20 22 frames to 75 m 246 ft unit thrust was raised from 227 kN 51 000 lbf to 249 kN 56 000 lbf and maximum takeoff weight would be increased to 330 t 730 000 lb The wing area would increase by 56 m2 600 sq ft to 420 m2 4 500 sq ft through a larger chord needing a three frame centre fuselage insert and retaining the existing front and rear spars and a span increased by 3 5 to 63 8 m 11 to 209 ft alongside a 25 increase in wing fuel capacity and four wheels replacing the centre twin wheel bogie A 500 with the larger wing and engines and three extra frames for 310 passengers would cover 15 725 km 9 770 mi 8 490 nmi to replace the smaller 14 800 km 9 200 mi 8 000 nmi range A340 200 At least 1 billion would be needed to develop the airframe excluding the 2 billion required for engine development supported by the engine manufacturer A 12 frame 400 simple stretch would cover 11 290 km 6 100 nmi with 340 passengers in a three class configuration 47 It was enlarged by 40 to compete with the then in development 777 300ER 200LR the wing would be expanded with a tapered wing box insert along the span extension it would have enlarged horizontal stabilizers and the larger A330 200 fin and it would need 222 267 kN 50 60 000 lbf of unit thrust The ultra long haul 1 53 m 5 0 ft 500 stretch would seat 316 passengers a little more than the 300 over 15 355 km 8 290 nmi while the 10 07 m 33 0 ft 600 stretch would offer a 25 larger cabin for 372 passengers over a range of 13 700 km 7 400 nmi 48 MTOW was increased to 356 t 785 000 lb 49 Unwilling to commit to a 1 billion development without good return on investment prospects and a second application in 1997 GE Aviation stopped exclusivity talks for GE90 scaled down to 245 290 kN 55 65 000 lbf leaving Rolls Royce proposing a more cost effective Rolls Royce Trent variant needing less development and Pratt amp Whitney suggesting a PW2000 advanced ducted propulsor a PW4000 derivative or a new geared turbofan 50 In June 1997 the 250 kN 56 000 lbf Rolls Royce Trent 500 was selected with growth potential to 275 kN 62 000 lbf derived from the A330 Rolls Royce Trent 700 and the B777 Rolls Royce Trent 800 with a reduced fan diameter and a new LP turbine for a 7 7 lower TSFC than the 700 Airbus claims 10 lower operating costs per seat than the 300 3 below those of what Boeing was then advertising for the 777 300X 51 The 2 9 billion program was launched in December 1997 with 100 commitments from seven customers worth 3 billion aiming to fly the first 600 in January 2001 and deliver it from early 2002 to capture at least half of the 1 500 sales forecast in the category through 2010 52 In 1998 the 600 stretch was stabilised at 20 frames for 10 6 m 35 ft the MTOW rose to 365 t 805 000 lb and the unit thrust to 52 000 to 60 000 lbf 230 to 270 kN keeping the Trent 700 2 47 m 8 1 ft fan diameter with its scaled IP and HP compressors and the high speed low loading HP and IP turbines of the Trent 800 53 A340 stretch concepts Period 1991 42 1994 44 1995 45 1996 48 1998 53 Unit thrust 178 kN 40 000 lbf 267 kN 60 000 lbf 267 kN 60 000 lbf Stretch 12 frames 40 pax 50 pax 20 22 frames 10 07 m 33 0 ft 20 frames 10 6 m 35 ft Passengers 335 380 375 380Range 10 900 km 5 900 nmi same as 300 13 700 km 7 400 nmi 13 900 km 7 500 nmi MTOW 267 0 t 588 600 lb 300 t 660 000 lb 356 t 785 000 lb 365 t 805 000 lb Despite the 500 600 introduction sales slowed in the 2000s as the Boeing 777 200LR 300ER dominated the long range 300 400 seat market The A340 500IGW 600HGW high gross weight variants did not arouse much sales interest 54 55 56 In January 2006 Airbus confirmed it had studied an A340 600E Enhanced that was more fuel efficient than earlier A340s reducing the per seat fuel consumption by 8 9 compared to the 600 This model would become more competitive with the Boeing 777 300ER by utilizing new Trent 1500 engines and technologies from the A350 initial design 54 At 380 passengers the advertised three class seating of the 600 was well above the real world average of 323 seats while the B777 300ER is advertised for 365 and offers 332 impacting seat costs By 2018 a 2006 600 was worth 18M and a 2003 one 10M projected to fall to 7M in 2021 with a 200 000 month lease rate falling to 180 000 in 2021 its D check cost 4 5M and its engine overhaul 3 6M 57 End of production Edit In 2005 155 B777s were ordered against 15 A340s twin engine ETOPS restrictions were overcome by lower operating costs compared to quad jets and the relaxation of ETOPS requirements for the A330 777 and other twinjets 58 In 2007 Airbus predicted that another 127 A340 aircraft would likely be produced through 2016 the projected end of production 59 In 2011 the unit cost of an A340 300 was US 238 0M 286 7M today US 261 8M for an A340 500 315 4M today and US 275 4M for an A340 600 331 7M today 60 On 10 November 2011 Airbus announced the end of the A340 program At that time the company indicated that all firm orders had been delivered 61 The decision to terminate the program came as A340 500 600 orders came to a halt with analyst Nick Cunningham pointing out that the A340 was too heavy and there was a big fuel burn gap between the A340 and Boeing s 777 Bertrand Grabowski managing director of aircraft financier DVB Bank SE noted in an environment where the fuel price is high the A340 has had no chance to compete against similar twin engines and the current lease rates and values of this aircraft reflect the deep resistance of any airlines to continue operating it 54 55 56 As a sales incentive amid low customer demand during the Great Recession Airbus had offered buy back guarantees to airlines that chose to procure the A340 By 2013 the resale value of an A340 declined by 30 over ten years and both Airbus and Rolls Royce were incurring related charges amounting to hundreds of millions of euros Some analysts have expected the price of a flight worthy CFM56 powered A340 to drop below 10 million by 2023 62 Airbus could offer used A340s to airlines wishing to retire older aircraft such as the Boeing 747 400 claiming that the cost of purchasing and maintaining a second hand A340 with increased seating and improved engine performance reportedly compared favourably to the procurement costs of a new Boeing 777 63 In 2013 as ultra long range is a niche the A340 was less attractive with best usage on long thin routes from hot and high airports or as interim air charter A 10 year old A340 300 had a base value of 35m and a market value of 24m leading to 320 000 mo 240 000 350 000 lease rate while a 500 is 425 000 and a 600 is leased 450 000 to 500 000 per month versus 1 3m for a 777 300ER The lighter A340 300 consumes 5 less fuel per trip with 300 passengers than the 312 passengers 777 200ER while the heavier A340 600 uses 12 more fuel than a 777 300ER 64 As an effort to support the A340 s resale value Airbus has proposed reconfiguring the aircraft s interior for a single class of 475 seats As the Trent 500 engines are half the maintenance cost of the A340 Rolls Royce proposed a cost reducing maintenance plan similar to the company s existing program that reduced the cost of maintaining the RB211 engine powering Iberia s Boeing 757 freighters Key to these programs is the salvaging repair and reuse of serviceable parts from retired older engines 65 Airbus has positioned the larger versions of the A350 specifically the A350 900 and A350 1000 as the successors to the A340 500 and A340 600 The ACJ340 is listed on the Airbus Corporate Jets website as Airbus can convert retired A340 airliners to VIP transport configuration 66 Design Edit The 9 2 aspect ratio and 31 sweep of the A340 600 wing The Airbus A340 is a twin aisle passenger airliner that was the first long range Airbus 67 powered by four turbofan jet engines 68 It was developed with technology from earlier Airbus aircraft and their features like the A320 glass cockpit it shares many components with the A330 notably identical fly by wire control systems and similar wings 16 69 Its features and improvements were usually shared with the A330 70 The four engines configuration avoided the ETOPS constraints such as more frequent inspections The A340 has a low cantilever wing the A340 200 300 wing is virtually identical to that of the A330 with both engine pylons used while only the inboard one is used on the A330 The two engines for each wing provide a more distributed weight and a more outboard engine weight for a lower wing root bending moment at equal TOW allowing a higher wing limited MTOW for more range The wings were designed and manufactured by BAe which developed a long slender wing with a high aspect ratio for a higher aerodynamic efficiency 71 a The wing is swept back at 30 degrees allowing a maximum operating Mach number of 0 86 73 74 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 75 or 12 8 76 b Jet airliners have thickness to chord ratios ranging from 9 4 MD 11 or Boeing 747 to 13 Avro RJ or 737 Classic 77 Each wing also has a 2 74 m 9 0 ft tall winglet instead of the wingtip fences found on earlier Airbus aircraft The failure of the ultra high bypass IAE SuperFan promising around 15 better fuel burn led to wing upgrades to compensate 78 79 Originally designed with a 56 m 184 ft span the wing was later extended to 58 6 m 192 ft and finally to 60 3 m 198 ft 78 This wingspan is similar to that of the larger Boeing 747 200 but with 35 less wing area 73 74 The A340 uses a modified A320 glass cockpit with side stick controls instead of a conventional yoke The main instrument panel is dominated by six displays cathode ray tube monitors initially then liquid crystal displays 68 Flight information is directed via the Electronic Flight Instrument System EFIS and systems information through the Electronic Centralised Aircraft Monitor ECAM 80 unreliable source 81 The aircraft monitors various sensors and automatically alerts the crew to any parameters outside of their normal range pilots can also inspect individual systems Electronic manuals are used instead of paper ones with optional web based updates Maintenance difficulty and cost were reduced to half of that of the earlier and smaller Airbus A310 82 Improved engine control and monitoring improved time on wing The centralised maintenance computer can transmit real time information to ground facilities via the onboard satellite based ACARS datalink 68 82 Heavy maintenance like structural changes remained unchanged while cabin sophistications like the in flight entertainment were increased over preceding airliners 82 The A340 200 300 is powered by four CFM56 5Cs with exhaust mixers The A340 500 600 is powered by four larger Rolls Royce Trent 500s with separate flowsOperational history Edit Air Lanka was the Asian launch customer of the aircraft The first variant of the A340 to be introduced the A340 200 entered service with the launch customer Lufthansa in 1993 It was followed shortly thereafter by the A340 300 with its operator Air France Lufthansa s first A340 which had been dubbed Nurnberg D AIBA 36 began revenue service on 15 March 1993 34 83 Air Lanka later renamed Sri Lankan Airlines became the Asian launch customer of the Airbus A340 the airline received its first A340 300 registered 4R ADA in September 1994 British airline Virgin Atlantic was an early adopter of the A340 in addition to operating several A340 300 aircraft Virgin Atlantic announced in August 1997 that it was to be the worldwide launch customer for the new A340 600 84 The first commercial flight of the A340 600 was performed by Virgin in July 2002 84 Singapore Airlines ordered 17 A340 300s and operated them until October 2003 The A340 300s were purchased by Boeing as part of an order for Boeing 777s in 1999 85 The airline then purchased five long range A340 500s which joined the fleet in December 2003 In February 2004 the airline s A340 500 performed the longest non stop commercial air service in the world conducting a non stop flight between Singapore and Los Angeles 86 In 2004 Singapore Airlines launched an even longer non stop route using the A340 500 between Newark and Singapore SQ 21 a 15 344 kilometres 8 285 nmi journey that was the longest scheduled non stop commercial flight in the world 87 The airline continued to operate this route regularly until the airline decided to retire the type in favour of new A380 and A350 aircraft 88 its last A340 flight was performed in late 2013 The A340 was typically used by airlines as a medium sized long haul aircraft and was often a replacement for older Boeing 747s as it was more likely to be profitable compared to the larger and less efficient 747 89 Airbus produced a number of A340s as large private jets for VIP customers often to replace aging Boeing 747s in this same role In 2008 Airbus launched a dedicated corporate jetliner version of the A340 200 one key selling point of this aircraft was a range of up to 8 000 nautical miles 15 000 km Airbus had built up to nine different customized versions of the A340 to private customer s specific demands prior to 2008 90 A South African Airways A340 300 with 2 wheel centre line bogie on final approach at Perth Airport in 2018 The A340 has frequently been operated as a dedicated transport for heads of state A pair of A340 300s were acquired from Lufthansa by the Flugbereitschaft of the German Air Force they serve as VIP transports for the German Chancellor and other key members of the German government 91 The A340 is also operated by the air transport division of the French Air and Space Force where it is used as a strategic transport for troop deployments and supply missions as well as to transport government officials 92 A one of a kind aircraft the A340 8000 was originally built for Prince Jefri Bolkiah brother of the Sultan of Brunei Hassanal Bolkiah The aircraft was unused and stored in Hamburg until it was procured by Prince Al Waleed bin Talal of the House of Saud 93 and later sold to Colonel Muammar Gaddafi then President of Libya the aircraft was operated by Afriqiyah Airways and was often referred to as Afriqiyah One 94 In 2008 jet fuel prices doubled compared to the year before consequently the A340 s fuel consumption led airlines to reduce flight stages exceeding 15 hours Thai Airways International cancelled its 17 hour nonstop Bangkok New York JFK route on 1 July 2008 and placed its four A340 500s for sale While short flights stress aircraft more than long flights and result in more frequent fuel thirsty take offs and landings ultra long flights require completely full fuel tanks The higher weights in turn require a greater proportion of an aircraft s fuel fraction just to take off and to stay airborne In 2008 Air France KLM SA s chief executive Pierre Henri Gourgeon disparagingly referred to the A340 as a flying tanker with a few people on board 95 While Thai Airways consistently filled 80 of the seats on its New York City Bangkok flights it estimated that at 2008 fuel prices it would need an impossible 120 of seats filled just to break even 96 Other airlines also re examined long haul flights In August 2008 Cathay Pacific stated that rising fuel costs were hurting its trans Pacific long haul routes disproportionately and that it would cut the number of such flights and redeploy its aircraft to shorter routes such as between Hong Kong and Australia We will reshap e our network where necessary to ensure we fly aircraft to where we can cover our costs and also make some money 97 Aviation Week noted that rapid performance increases of twin engine aircraft has led to the detriment of four engine types of comparable capacity such as the A340 and 747 at this point most 747s had accumulated significant flying hours before retirement in contrast to A340s which were relatively young when grounded 98 99 100 By 2014 Singapore Airlines had phased out the type discontinuing SQ21 and SQ22 which had been the longest non stop scheduled flights in the world Emirates Airlines decided to accelerate the retirement of its A340 fleet writing down the value of the A340 500 type to zero despite the oldest 500 only being 10 years old with president Tim Clark saying they were designed in the late 1990s with fuel at 25 30 They fell over at 60 and at 120 they haven t got a hope in hell 101 Eight abreast 2 4 2 economy cabin International Airlines Group the parent of Iberia Airlines which is also the operator of the last production A340 built is overhauling its A340 600s for continued service for the foreseeable future while it is retiring its A340 300s The IAG overhaul featured improved conditions and furnishings in the business and economy classes the business class capacity was raised slightly while not changing the type s overall operating cost Lufthansa which operates both Airbus A340 300s and 600s concluded that while it is not possible to make the A340 more fuel efficient it can respond to increased interest in business class services by replacing first class seats with more business class seats to increase revenue 101 102 In 2013 Snecma announced that they planned to use the A340 as a flying testbed for the development of a new open rotor engine This test aircraft is forecast to conduct its first flight in 2019 Open rotor engines are typically more fuel efficient but noisier than conventional turbofan engines introducing such an engine commercially has been reported as requiring significant legislative changes within engine approval authorities due to its differences from contemporary jet engines The engine partly based on the Snecma M88 turbofan engine used on the Dassault Rafale is being developed under the European Clean Sky research initiative 103 104 In January 2021 Lufthansa which was the largest remaining operator by then announced that their entire Airbus A340 600 fleet will be retired with immediate effect and not return to service in the wake of the COVID 19 pandemic 105 Ultimately Lufthansa reactivated their A340 600s in late 2021 106 while remaining committed to operating the smaller Airbus A340 300 107 108 Later in 2021 a Portuguese charter carrier landed an A340 in Antarctica for the first time in history 109 As of December 2021 the global A340 fleet had carried over 600 million passengers and completed more than 2 5 million flights over 20 million block hours since its entry into service with 99 percent operational reliability 110 Variants Edit Airbus A340 family Airbus A340 variants ICAO code 111 Model s A342 A340 200A343 A340 300A345 A340 500A346 A340 600There are four variants of the A340 The A340 200 and A340 300 were launched in 1987 with introduction into service in March 1993 for the 200 The A340 500 and A340 600 were launched in 1997 with introduction into service in 2002 All variants were available in a corporate version A340 200 Edit French Air Force A340 200 at Toulouse Blagnac Airport The 200 is one of two initial versions of the A340 it has seating for 261 passengers in a three class cabin layout with a range of 13 800 kilometres 7 500 nmi or seating for 240 passengers also in a three class cabin layout for a range of 15 000 kilometres 8 100 nmi 112 This is the shortest version of the family and the only version with a wingspan measuring greater than its fuselage length It is powered by four CFMI CFM56 5C4 engines and uses the Honeywell 331 350 A auxiliary power unit APU 113 It initially entered service with Air France in May 1993 Due to its large wingspan four engines low capacity and general inferiority to the larger and more improved A340 300 the 200 proved very unpopular with mainstream airlines Only 28 A340 200s were produced The closest Boeing competitor is the Boeing 767 400ER One version of this type referred to by Airbus as the A340 8000 was ordered by the prince Jefri Bolkiah with the request for a non stop range of 15 000 kilometres 8 100 nmi This A340 8000 in the Royal Brunei Airlines livery had an increased fuel capacity an MTOW of 275 tonnes 606 000 lb similar to the A340 300 and minor reinforcements to the undercarriage It is powered by the 150 kilonewtons 34 000 lbf thrust CFM56 5C4s similar to the 300E Only one A340 8000 was produced Besides the 8000 some A340 200s are used for VIP or military use these include Royal Brunei Airlines Qatar Amiri Flight Arab Republic of Egypt Government Royal Saudi Air Force Jordan and the French Air and Space Force Following the 8000 other A340 200s were later given performance improvement packages PIPs that helped them achieve similar gains in capability as to the A340 8000 Those aircraft are labeled A340 213X The range for this version is 15 000 kilometres 8 100 nmi As of October 2022 all active remaining A340 200s still flying were VIP or government planes Conviasa operated the world s last commercial A340 200 The aircraft s last flight was documented in March 2022 before being scrapped 114 A340 300 Edit Lufthansa Airbus A340 300 from above The A340 300 flies 295 passengers in a typical three class cabin layout over 6 700 nautical miles 12 400 km This is the initial version having flown on 25 October 1991 and it entered service with Lufthansa and Air France in March 1993 It is powered by four CFMI CFM56 5C engines and uses the Honeywell 331 350 A APU 113 similar to the version used on the 200 The A340 300 was superseded by the A350 900 115 Its closest competitor was the Boeing 777 200ER 116 A total of 218 300s were delivered The A340 300E often mislabelled as A340 300X has an increased MTOW of up to 275 tonnes 606 000 lb and is powered by the more powerful 34 000 lbf 150 kN thrust CFMI CFM56 5C4 engines Typical range with 295 passengers is between 7 200 to 7 400 nautical miles 13 300 to 13 700 km The largest operator of this type is Lufthansa who has operated a fleet of 30 aircraft The A340 300 Enhanced is the latest version of this model and was first delivered to South African Airways in 2003 with Air Mauritius receiving the A340 300 Enhanced into its fleet in 2006 It received newer CFM56 5C4 P engines and improved avionics and fly by wire systems developed for the A340 500 and 600 As of July 2018 there were 96 Airbus A340 300s in airline service 117 needs update A340 500 Edit Slightly longer than the 300 the 500 has a larger wing larger Rolls Royce Trent 500 turbofans and three 4 wheel bogies for the main landing gear it was introduced by Emirates in 2003 When the A340 500 was introduced it was the world s longest range commercial airliner It first flew on 11 February 2002 and was certified on 3 December 2002 Air Canada was supposed to be the launch customer but filed for bankruptcy in January 2003 delaying delivery to March This allowed early deliveries to the new launch customer Emirates allowing the carrier to launch nonstop service from Dubai to New York its first route in the Americas The A340 500 can fly 313 passengers in a three class cabin layout over 16020 km 8650 nm Compared with the A340 300 the 500 features a 4 3 metre 14 1 ft fuselage stretch an enlarged wing a significant increase in fuel capacity around 50 larger than the 300 slightly higher cruising speed a larger horizontal stabilizer and a larger vertical tailplane The centerline main landing gear was changed to a four wheel bogie to support the additional weight The A340 500 is powered by four 240 kN 54 000 lbf thrust Rolls Royce Trent 553 turbofans and uses the Honeywell 331 600 A APU 118 Designed for ultra long haul routes the 500 has a range of 9 000 nautical miles 119 Due to its range the 500 is capable of travelling non stop from London to Perth Western Australia though a return flight requires a fuel stop due to headwinds 120 Singapore Airlines used this model initially in a two class 181 passenger layout later in a 100 passenger business only layout between early 2004 and late 2013 for its Newark Singapore and Singapore Newark nonstop routes SQ21 and SQ22 The former was an 18 hour 45 minute westbound actually a polar route northbound to 130 km 70 nm abeam the North Pole then south across Russia Mongolia and the People s Republic of China and the latter was an 18 hour 30 minute eastbound 15 344 kilometres 8 285 nmi journey At the time the flight was the longest scheduled non stop commercial flight in the world 87 121 Singapore Airlines even added a special compartment to the aircraft to store a corpse if a passenger were to die during the flight though it was reported that its use had not been necessary 122 121 Singapore Airlines suspended operating the flight from 2013 onwards partly due to high fuel prices at that time and returned its aircraft to Airbus in exchange for ordering new Airbus A350 aircraft 121 The SQ21 SQ22 route was eventually resumed flown by A350 900ULR aircraft 123 The A340 500IGW Increased Gross Weight version has a range of 17 000 km 9 200 nmi and a MTOW of 380 t 840 000 lb and first flew on 13 October 2006 It uses the strengthened structure and enlarged fuel capacity of the A340 600 The certification aircraft a de rated A340 541 model became the first delivery to Thai Airways International on 11 April 2007 124 Nigerian airline Arik Air received a pair of A340 542s in November 2008 using the type to immediately launch two new routes Lagos London Heathrow and Lagos Johannesburg a non stop Lagos New York route began in January 2010 125 126 The A340 500IGW is powered by four 250 kN 56 000 lbf thrust Rolls Royce Trent 556 turbofans Like the A340 200 a shortened derivative of the 300 the 500 was unpopular 127 The 500 series was considered very inefficient for how few seats they have because they still carry most of the guts of the larger airplanes the A340 600 from which they were shrunk Also the ultra long haul market was a niche that was difficult to profit from due to the amount of fuel that had to be carried As of August 2022 there are no longer any commercial A340 500 routes 128 However Azerbaijan Airlines later put both of its aircraft back in service later in 2022 but removed them from service as of January 2023 A340 600 Edit The A340 600 has five doors per side as seen here on a since retired Iberia aircraft Designed to replace early generation Boeing 747 200 300 airliners the A340 600 is capable of carrying 379 passengers in a three class cabin layout for 13 900 km 7 500 nmi It provides similar passenger capacity to a 747 but with 25 percent more cargo volume and with lower trip and seat costs The first flight of the A340 600 was made on 23 April 2001 129 Virgin Atlantic began commercial services in August 2002 130 131 The variant s main competitor is the 777 300ER The A340 600 was replaced by the A350 1000 The A340 600 is 12 m 39 ft 4 4 in longer than a 300 more than 4 m 13 ft 1 5 in longer than the Boeing 747 400 and 2 3 m 7 ft 6 6 in longer than the A380 and has two emergency exit doors added over the wings It held the record for the world s longest commercial aircraft until the first flight of the Boeing 747 8 in February 2010 The A340 600 is powered by four 250 kN 56 000 lbf thrust Rolls Royce Trent 556 turbofans and uses the Honeywell 331 600 A APU 118 As with the 500 it has a four wheel undercarriage bogie on the fuselage centre line to cope with the increased MTOW along with the enlarged wing and rear empennage Upper deck main cabin space can be optionally increased by locating facilities such as crew rest areas galleys and lavatories upon the aircraft s lower deck In early 2007 Airbus reportedly advised carriers to reduce cargo in the forward section by 5 0 t 11 000 lb to compensate for overweight first and business class sections the additional weight caused the aircraft s centre of gravity to move forward thus reducing cruise efficiency Affected airlines considered filing compensation claims with Airbus 132 The A340 600HGW High Gross Weight version first flew on 18 November 2005 133 and was certified on 14 April 2006 134 It has an MTOW of 380 t 840 000 lb and a range of up to 14 630 km 7 900 nmi made possible by strengthened structure increased fuel capacity more powerful engines and new manufacturing techniques like laser beam welding The A340 600HGW is powered by four 61 900 lbf 275 kN thrust Rolls Royce Trent 560 turbofans Emirates became the launch customer for the 600HGW when it ordered 18 at the 2003 Paris Air Show 135 but postponed its order indefinitely and later cancelled it Rival Qatar Airways which placed its order at the same airshow took delivery of only four aircraft with the first aircraft on 11 September 2006 136 The airline has since let its purchase options expire in favour of orders for the Boeing 777 300ER 137 As of July 2018 there were 60 A340 600s in service with six airlines worldwide 117 needs update Operators EditMain article List of Airbus A340 operators Over the duration of the programme a total of 377 A340 family aircraft were delivered of which 203 were in service as of December 2022 update The largest scheduled airline operators were Lufthansa 34 Mahan Air 12 South African Airways 7 Swiss International Air Lines 5 and amongst other airlines governments charter and private operators with fewer aircraft of the type 138 Deliveries Edit DeliveriesType Total 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993A340 200 28 1 3 3 5 4 12A340 300 218 3 2 2 4 5 10 8 22 19 20 23 30 25 14 21 10A340 500 34 2 0 2 2 1 4 5 9 7 2 A340 600 97 2 8 8 8 18 15 14 16 8 A340 family 377 2 0 4 10 12 14 25 28 26 28 16 22 19 20 24 33 28 19 25 22 Note The total number of deliveries corresponds to the Airbus O amp D file 2 while the details are given in the ABCD list 139 Accidents and incidents EditThe A340 has never been involved in a fatal accident although there have been six hull losses 140 141 Accidents Edit Remains of Air France Flight 358 at Toronto Pearson International Airport Landing phase5 November 1997 a Virgin Atlantic Airbus A340 311 conducted an emergency landing on Runway 27L at London Heathrow Airport with the aircraft s left main landing gear partially extended The aircraft was repaired and returned to service 142 143 29 August 1998 a Sabena A340 200 OO SCW was severely damaged while landing on Runway 25L at Brussels Airport The right main gear collapsed the right engines and wingtip hit the runway and slid to the right in soft ground The 248 passengers and 11 crew were safely evacuated The cause of the gear failure was found to be a fatigue crack Although severely damaged the aircraft was repaired and returned to service for 16 years until it was stored 144 2 August 2005 Air France Flight 358 was destroyed by a crash and subsequent fire after it overran runway 24L at Toronto Pearson International Airport while landing in a thunderstorm The aircraft slid into Etobicoke Creek and caught fire All 297 passengers and 12 crew survived 43 people were injured 12 seriously 145 146 9 November 2007 Iberia Airlines Flight 6463 an A340 600 was badly damaged after sliding off the runway at Ecuador s Mariscal Sucre International Airport The landing gear collapsed and two engines broke off All 345 passengers and 14 crew members were evacuated by inflatable slides and there were no serious injuries The aircraft was scrapped 147 Take off phase20 March 2009 Emirates Flight 407 was an Emirates flight flying from Melbourne to Dubai International using an A340 500 The flight failed to take off properly from Melbourne Airport hitting several structures at the end of the runway before eventually climbing enough to return to the airport for a safe landing The occurrence was severe enough to be classified an accident by the Australian Transport Safety Bureau 148 149 The plane was subsequently repaired and returned to service for five years before it was scrapped 150 Incidents Edit This A340 600 was written off after a ground testing accident prior to delivery for Etihad Airways Fire related20 January 1994 an Air France A340 200 registered F GNIA was destroyed by fire during servicing at Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport 151 This marks the first hull loss of an A340 11 June 2018 A Lufthansa A340 300 registration D AIFA was being towed with maintenance staff on board to the departure gate at Frankfurt s terminal when the tow truck caught fire The flames substantially damaged the aircraft front section and 10 people on the ground received minor injuries 152 The damage was assessed to be beyond economical repair and the aircraft was written off 150 Test related15 November 2007 an A340 600 A6 EHG was damaged beyond repair during ground testing at Airbus facilities at Toulouse Blagnac International Airport During a pre delivery engine test some safety checks had been disabled 153 leading to the unchocked aircraft accelerating to 31 knots 57 km h 36 mph and colliding with a concrete blast deflection wall The right wing tail and left engines made contact with the ground or wall leaving the forward section elevated several metres and the cockpit broken off nine people on board were injured four of them seriously 153 154 The aircraft was written off and was later used at Virgin Atlantic s cabin crew training facility in Crawley England 155 It had been due to be delivered to Etihad Airways 156 War related24 July 2001 a SriLankan Airlines A340 300 registered 4R ADD was destroyed on the ground at Bandaranaike International Airport being one of 26 aircraft which were damaged or destroyed during a major attack upon the airport by Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam militants 157 158 Specifications EditVariant A340 200 159 A340 300 159 A340 500 160 A340 600 160 Cockpit crew Two3 class seats 161 210 250 250 290 270 310 320 370typ layout 303 30F 273Y 335 30F 305Y 313 12F 36J 265Y 380 12F 54J 314Y Exit limit 162 420 c 375 375 440 c 375 440Length 162 59 39 m 194 ft 10 in 63 66 m 208 ft 10 in 67 33 m 220 ft 11 in 74 77 m 245 ft 3 inWingspan 60 3 m 197 83 ft 63 45 m 208 17 ftWing 163 363 1 m2 3 908 sq ft 29 7 sweep 10 AR 437 3 m2 4 707 sq ft 31 1 sweep 9 2 ARHeight 17 03 m 55 86 ft 16 99 m 55 72 ft 17 53 m 57 51 ft 17 93 m 58 84 ftFuselage 5 287 m 208 15 in cabin width 5 64 m 18 5 ft outside widthCargo volume 132 4 m3 4 680 cu ft 158 4 m3 5 590 cu ft 149 7 m3 5 290 cu ft 201 7 m3 7 120 cu ft MTOW 275 t 606 000 lb 276 5 t 610 000 lb 380 t 840 000 lb Max PL 51 t 112 000 lb 52 t 115 000 lb 54 t 119 000 lb 66 t 146 000 lb lt OEW 118 t 260 000 lb 131 t 289 000 lb 168 t 370 000 lb 174 t 384 000 lb Max Fuel 110 4 t 243 395 lb 175 2 t 386 292 lb 155 5 t 342 905 lb d Engines 4 CFM International CFM56 5C Trent 553 Trent 556Thrust 4 162 138 78 151 24 kN 31 200 34 000 lbf 248 12 275 35 kN 55 780 61 902 lbf Speed Mach 0 86 493 kn 914 km h max 161 Mach 0 82 470 kn 871 km h cruiseRange 3 class 161 12 400 km 6 700 nmi 13 500 km 7 300 nmi 16 670 km 9 000 nmi 14 450 km 7 800 nmiTake off e 2 900 m 9 500 ft 3 000 m 10 000 ft 3 350 m 10 990 ft 3 400 m 11 200 ft Ceiling 162 41 100 ft 12 527 m 41 450 ft 12 634 m Line drawings A340 200 300 A340 500 600Engines Edit Model Certification date Engines 162 A340 211 22 December 1992 CFM 56 5C2A340 212 14 March 1994 CFM 56 5C3A340 213 19 December 1995 CFM 56 5C4A340 311 22 December 1992 CFM 56 5C2A340 312 14 March 1994 CFM 56 5C3A340 313 16 March 1995 CFM 56 5C4A340 541 3 December 2002 RR Trent 553 61 553A2 61A340 542 15 February 2007 RR Trent 556A2 61A340 642 21 May 2002 RR Trent 556 61 556A2 61A340 643 11 April 2006 RR Trent 560A2 61See also Edit Aviation portalCompetition between Airbus and BoeingRelated development Airbus A330Aircraft of comparable role configuration and era Ilyushin Il 96 300 Boeing 747 400 Boeing 777 McDonnell Douglas MD 11Related lists List of jet airliners List of civil aircraftReferences EditNotes The higher the aspect ratio the greater the aerodynamic efficiency A higher aspect ratio wing has a lower drag and a slightly higher lift than a lower aspect ratio wing 72 This is the thickness to chord ratio of the early Airbus A340 variants which share the same wing with the A330 a b 4 Type A doors no aux tank 164 t 361 595 lb with 1 aux tank MTOW SL ISA References Completion of production marks new chapter in the A340 success story Press release Airbus 10 November 2011 a b Airbus orders and deliveries Airbus 31 July 2017 Archived from the original on 10 October 2017 Retrieved 6 August 2017 Wensveen 2007 p 63 Gunston 2009 p page needed a b Norris amp Wagner 2001 p 18 a b c Eden 2008 p 30 a b c d e f Norris amp Wagner 2001 p 23 Norris amp Wagner 1999 p 59 Maynard Micheline 11 June 2008 To Save Fuel Airlines Find No Speck Too Small The New York Times Commercial Aircraft of the World part 2 Flight International 17 October 1981 Retrieved 23 January 2011 Norris amp Wagner 2001 p 22 Kingsley Jones Max 4 November 1997 Airbus A330 A340 Flight International Retrieved 26 January 2011 Norris amp Wagner 2001 pp 22 23 a b c Norris amp Wagner 1999 p 24 a b c Norris amp Wagner 2001 p 27 a b c Lawrence amp Thornton 2005 p 73 Norris amp Wagner 2001 p 24 Norris amp Wagner 2001 p 26 a b Norris amp Wagner 2001 p 28 a b c Norris amp Wagner 1999 p 67 Gunston 2009 p 201 Norris amp Wagner 2001 p 36 a b Norris amp Wagner 2001 p 51 a b Norris amp Wagner 2001 p 52 a b Norris amp Wagner 2001 p 53 a b Norris amp Wagner 2001 p 32 Norris amp Wagner 2001 p 55 Timeline 40 Years of Innovation PDF Airbus Archived from the original PDF on 27 May 2011 Retrieved 8 June 2011 Long time coming Flight International 12 June 2001 a b Norris amp Wagner 1999 p 66 Norris amp Wagner 2001 p 59 Norris amp Wagner 2001 p 65 Norris amp Wagner 2001 p 67 a b c d Norris amp Wagner 2001 p 71 David M North 13 July 1992 A340 Handling Cockpit Design Improve on Predecessor A320 Aviation Week amp Space Technology a b Eden 2008 p 35 Norris amp Wagner 2001 p 72 World ranger Press release Airbus 16 June 1993 Archived from the original on 23 February 2017 a b Norris amp Wagner 2001 pp 73 74 Eden 2008 pp 29 37 Boeing 777 Distance and Speed World Records Confirmed Press release Boeing 29 July 1997 a b Brian Bostick 24 September 2012 The A340 400X Aviation Week Network New engine for stretched A340 Flight International 6 November 1991 a b Kieran Daly 15 June 1994 Airbus selects A3XX concept and works to fill gaps in product line Flight International a b Airliners of the world Flight International 6 December 1995 Julian Moxon 24 April 1996 GE Airbus sign for A340 600 Flight International Max Kingsley Jones Guy Norris 28 August 1996 X tended players Flight Global a b David Learmount 9 October 1996 Airbus pushes on with new versions of A340 Flight International Airliners of the world Flight International 4 December 1996 Andrew Doyle 25 February 1997 Airbus suffers setback as GE walks away from A340 600 Flight International Julian Moxon 18 June 1997 Airbus makes Trent 500 deal with Rolls Royce Flight International Max Kingsley Jones and Kevin O Toole 17 December 1997 Airbus board gives the goahead for A340 offspring Flight International a b Max Kingsley Jones 2 September 1998 Have four engines will travel far Flight International a b c Enhanced A340 to take on 777 Flight International 29 November 2005 a b Flottau Jens Airbus Bids Adieu to A340 Postpones A350 Delivery Archived 14 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine Aviation Week amp Space Technology 14 November 2011 a b Andrea Rothman 10 November 2011 Airbus s Longest Plane Proves Short Lived as A340 Orders Dry Up Bloomberg A340 600 Values Represent Disaster for Owners Aircraft Value News 20 August 2018 A340 300 amp B777 200ER Current amp Residual Values On Watch Status Aviation Today 23 January 2006 Archived from the original on 29 April 2015 Airbus A340 Aviation Week amp Space Technology 29 October 2007 p 63 Airbus aircraft 2011 average list prices PDF Airbus January 2011 Airbus Delays A350 900 Terminates A340 Archived 21 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine Aviation Week 10 November 2011 The company also announced that it is terminating the A340 program which has not seen any sales 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July 2021 Archived from the original PDF on 29 November 2021 a b Aircraft Characteristics Airport Planning A340 500 600 PDF Airbus July 2021 Archived from the original PDF on 29 November 2021 a b c A340 200 16 June 2021 A340 300 16 June 2021 A340 500 16 June 2021 A340 600 Airbus 16 June 2021 a b c d e Type Certificate Data Sheet A 015 AIRBUS A340 Issue 20 PDF European Aviation Safety Agency 21 October 2010 Archived from the original PDF on 19 July 2011 Retrieved 28 January 2011 Airbus Aircraft Data File Civil Jet Aircraft Design Elsevier July 1999 BibliographyDoganis Rigas 2002 Flying Off Course The Economics of International Airlines London Routledge ISBN 978 0 4152 1323 3 Eden Paul E ed 2008 Civil Aircraft Today London Amber Books ISBN 978 1 905704 86 6 Gunston Bill 2009 Airbus The Complete Story Sparkford Yeovil Somerset UK Haynes Publishing ISBN 978 1 84425 585 6 Lawrence Phillip K Thornton David Weldon 2005 Deep Stall The Turbulent Story of Boeing Commercial Airplanes London Ashgate Publishing ISBN 978 0 7546 4626 6 Norris Guy Wagner Mark 2001 Airbus A340 and A330 St Paul Minnesota MBI Publishing ISBN 0 7603 0889 6 Norris Guy Wagner Mark 1999 Airbus St Paul Minnesota MBI Publishing ISBN 0 7603 0677 X Obert Ed 2009 Aerodynamic Design of Transport Aircraft IOS Press ISBN 978 1 6075 0407 8 Wensveen J G 2007 Air Transportation A Management Perspective Burlington Vermont Ashgate Publishing ISBN 978 0 7546 7171 8 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Airbus A340 category Official Airbus A330 and A340 airliners web page Airbus A340 200 300 page on airliners net Airbus A340 production list Airbus A340 Report Forecast International April 2007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Airbus A340 amp oldid 1141273332, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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