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JAL drops 787-3 order in favour of longer-range 787-8

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By Jon Ostrower

Japan Airlines has dropped its 787-3 order in favour of the longer-range 787-8, leaving just one customer for the short- to medium-haul type designed for Japanese airlines requiring a high-density configuration with a trimmed wingspan for use at space-constrained gates.

The backlog for the -3 now stands at 28, with remaining customer All Nippon Airways converting two -3s to -8s as well.

However, Boeing marketing vice-president Randy Tinseth says it remains committed to building the 787-3.

Boeing
© Boeing

And the Chicago Tribune has reported that United Airlines is considering replacing its 757, 767 and 777 fleets with 787s - including -3s to replace 96 757-200s used on routes of around 4,600km (2,500nm).

Tinseth says that such an aircraft is being explored as a "light twin-aisle" aircraft built into an offering that could cover the upper part of the 737 replacement market. He believes there is market demand for an aircraft around seating around 200 people with a 7,400km range, but says it is not clear if there is enough demand to sell it at an attractive price.

Teal Group analyst Richard Aboulafia says Boeing can feasibly market such an aircraft, although the technical execution is "highly uncertain" as the basic 787 airframe optimised long-range performance, not short-haul routes.

Boeing initially planned for the 787-3 to be the first variant after the -8, but postponed development to refocus resources on resolving design and production issues with the -8 and moving forward with the -9.

According to Steven-Udvar Hazy, chairman and chief executive of International Lease Finance, Boeing has been studying a medium-haul 787 variant for the US transcontinental and intra-Asian markets as either a supplement to, or a further derivation of, the 787-3.





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