Posted on 06/28/2020 8:49:01 AM PDT by texas booster
The final Airbus A380 in the Air France fleet is grounded at Paris Charles de Gaulle International Airport (CDG), after taking one last celebration flight to the Mediterranean Sea and back. In a tribute online, the French flag carrier announced the final departure and landing for the superjumbo jet on June 26, 2020.
The legendary #A380 bids a final farewell and makes its last #AirFrance flight today, Friday 26 june. 🛬Bye-bye big bird! #AF380 pic.twitter.com/LNkkqX3htU
Air France (@airfrance) June 26, 2020
Originally scheduled for retirement by 2022, the COVID-19 pandemic forced Air France-KLM to reconsider their plans. After flights around the world were stopped and the demand for travel plummeted, the airline announced on May 20, 2020 they would immediately begin phasing out all A380 operations.
...
The final Air France A380 flight matches another marker of the aircrafts demise. Earlier in June 2020, the last A380 components built near Saint-Nazare, France departed on its final convoy for Airbus headquarters in Toulouse, France.
Although Air France is ending their A380 operations, the program as a whole is expected to live on for years. According to Airbus sale sheet, the manufacturer has outstanding deliveries due to All Nippon Airways (ANA) and Emirates.
(Excerpt) Read more at flyertalk.com ...
These are great fun to fly in. Sitting near the rear on takeoff and landing, you can literally see the fuselage twisting slightly.
“slightly less super jumbo”
Seeing the fuselage shift would take it out of the ‘great fun’ category, for me.
“Good nice plane but one which was not the right fit for the market”
Good summation. I read also that the 747 (with that bulge at the top of the front of the plane) had the ability to hinge up the front end of the fuselage, so it was a good freight plane as well as a passenger plane.
Skies over my home have been much quieter since February.
My last flight on an A380 was for work last year - Air France business-class upper deck from Paris back to San Francisco. Great plane, much more quiet than the 747. I’ll miss both of the super-jumbos.
Yup,these days the 747 is still used very widely as a freighter.
I see em stuck on top of decommissioned rusty windmills.
I flew from Brussels to JFK on a 380. Spent some extra bucks for a slightly larger space; was on the top floor.
It was amazing. The jetway is two stories. I took an escalator to the top floor!
Years ago, my wife and I flew from Chicago to Newark on a 747. There were only 66 passengers. I went to the back of the plane for a cigarette. It was a long walk.
I used to do the same things when I lived up that way. Castle Island in Southie but also another favorite spot was across the harbor in Winthrop, I think it was called Point Shirley or Coughlin Park.
Apparently, a few 727s are still used as freight carriers and as charter or government airplanes. The last scheduled passenger flight on a 727 was last year in Iran.
I flew on one once, Singapore to Sidney, when SQ was one of, maybe THE, first airline to put it into service. Interesting experience. Business class on upper deck in a weirdly wide (est. 30") and impossible-to-be-comfortable-in seat. Even with Singapore Air's as usual fantastic service and staff I was not impressed.
Previously, before they went into service, saw one in Airbus colors flying above AB's home base in Toulouse. THAT was impressive. It looked like a Manhattan skyscraper with wings. Airbus went for capacity and Boeing went for range and economy. It's now obvious who won that bet.
It’s a freaking aircraft carrier with wings!
Wow! Not a very long life of service for this jumbo. When you think of the capital it must have taken to design and build this, it must be considered a colossal failure. I flew on one once.... two separate jetways to facilitate boarding. And a feeling of being packed in like a sardine in coach. Service was problematic as the stewards / stewardesses were just overwhelmed by the numbers of passengers. I did like the video from the tail-mounted camera that you could call up on your screen. Neat during final approach and landing....
The A380 will live on as a cargo plane for a long time.
At least for the 747, you can get a job in the freight industry and fly in them for ever... They are every where...
Yup,Castle Island...
747 may actually outlive the entire service life of the A380.
Dang.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.