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Naki wrote:787-9s will be used on this route.
Aharon wrote:Naki wrote:787-9s will be used on this route.
This is very strange. That plane has range of 7,635 nautical mile and the non stop flight from KJFK to NZAA is 7,730 nautical miles.
Am I missing something??
Regards,
Aharon
cowpatz wrote:Yes that is correct Aharon.
The aircraft is being configured to have a lot more business and premium economy seating and I guess there will be a premium fare to match as well.
Ironically this configuration leads to other problems too as the premium seats are heavier and located at the front. The trim of the aircraft is super critical, especially at high weights, and without cargo to move around, will make it very challenging.
SUBS17 wrote:They should visit Boeing and get the new technology including FLY BY WIRE and AUTOPILOT which dampens turbulence to nothing.![]()
There is a lot of good technology coming to the AEROSPACE INDUSTRY. They may someday get a HYPERSONIC AIRLINER which could cover that distance in 45 minutes. Of course it would be a VTOL AIRLINER.![]()
Oops looks like a new PATENT is due.
cowpatz wrote:It's a balancing act. More premium seating equals higher yield versus higher weight of seats (more so biz class).
I figure the starting point will be full tanks and then the payload calculated to obtain the distance. The MACTOW will need to be within a tight range of 5% approx
cowpatz wrote:SUBS17 wrote:They should visit Boeing and get the new technology including FLY BY WIRE and AUTOPILOT which dampens turbulence to nothing.![]()
There is a lot of good technology coming to the AEROSPACE INDUSTRY. They may someday get a HYPERSONIC AIRLINER which could cover that distance in 45 minutes. Of course it would be a VTOL AIRLINER.![]()
Oops looks like a new PATENT is due.
The 787 is already fly by wire and also has autopilot turbulence algorithms to dampen oscillations. It would take a very strong structure if the effects of turbulence were to be reduced to "nothing"

SUBS17 wrote:There are no ALGORITHMS IN FLY BY WIRE, ALGORITHMS are for ORBITAL CALCULATIONS ONLY. You do not use ALGORITHMS for FLY BY WIRE! People speak of ALGORITHMS for Cell Phones etc but they are tables for Space Travel for Orbit only. ALGORITHM is a MATHEMATICAL FORMULA.
cowpatz wrote:SUBS17 wrote:There are no ALGORITHMS IN FLY BY WIRE, ALGORITHMS are for ORBITAL CALCULATIONS ONLY. You do not use ALGORITHMS for FLY BY WIRE! People speak of ALGORITHMS for Cell Phones etc but they are tables for Space Travel for Orbit only. ALGORITHM is a MATHEMATICAL FORMULA.
If you are referring to "fly by wire" as being the old physical wire then yes, you would be correct. However in a digital "fly by wire system" there is most definitely algorithms taking place within the Primary Flight Computers.
They are constantly feed with both digital and analogue data and use prescribed algorithms to produced a desired output.
I would genuinely be interested to see any reference material you might have to support that with which you have stated in this series of replies to the the OP.

Aharon wrote:Cowpatz,
I sure hope that CEO of Air New Zealand is lurking around here in the NZFF forums because I have suggestion for him on how to make nonstop KJFK to NZAA route more profitable. Instead of using 787-9 with fewer passengers and higher air fare prices, I would suggest that Air New Zealand should lease two or three Boeing 777-200lrs from Delta airline and use those for the new non stop route while maintaining full passenger load (NOT fewer) that results into good revenues and profits. Whenever I fly into KATl Atlanta airport, I always see few Delta 777-200lrs parked in cargo aprons doing nothing so I am sure Delta would be more than happy to lease those planes to Air New Zealand.
777-200lr can easily handle range of KJFK to NZAA and will have about 800 nautical mile extra of remaining fuel for emergency since the plane has 8,550 nautical mile range and the route is 7,730 nautical miles
SUBS17 wrote:cowpatz wrote:SUBS17 wrote:There are no ALGORITHMS IN FLY BY WIRE, ALGORITHMS are for ORBITAL CALCULATIONS ONLY.
cowpatz wrote:
I beg to differ.
algorithm
/ˈalɡərɪð(ə)m/
noun
noun: algorithm; plural noun: algorithms
a process or set of rules to be followed in calculations or other problem-solving operations, especially by a computer.
"a basic algorithm for division"
Seems clear to me that this is what the PFCs are doing.

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