Airbus A320neo family

A320neo family
A319neo/A320neo/A321neo
A twin-engined jet aircraft with distinctive winglets, in blue and white livery, against a blue sky
An IndiGo A320neo, the largest operator, about to land
Role Narrow-body twin-engine jet airliner
National origin Multi-national
Manufacturer Airbus
First flight 25 September 2014
Introduction 25 January 2016 with Lufthansa[1]
Status In service
Primary users IndiGo
Pegasus Airlines
Scandinavian Airlines
Produced 2012–present[2]
Number built 136 as of 31 July 2017[3]
Program cost "slightly more than €1 billion [$1.3 billion]" predicted in 2010[4]
Unit cost
A319neo: US$99.5 million, approx. 94.5 million (2017)[5]
A320neo: US$108.4 million, approx. €103.0 million (2017)[5]
A321neo: US$127.0 million, approx. €120.6 million (2017)[5]
Developed from Airbus A320 family

The Airbus A320neo family is a development of the A320 family of narrow-body airliners, launched on 1 December 2010 by Airbus. They are essentially a re-engine; neo stands for new engine option, with a choice of CFM International LEAP-1A or Pratt & Whitney PW1000G engines.[6] The original family is now called A320ceo, for current engine option.

The first flight of the A320neo took place on 25 September 2014.[7] It was introduced by Lufthansa on 25 January 2016.[1] Airbus has 5,167 firm orders as of July 2017.[3]

Design and development

At launch in December 2010, Airbus forecast a 4,000 aircraft market over the following 15 years and development costs were predicted to be "slightly more than €1 billion [$1.3 billion]".[4] The neo list price would be $6 million more than the ceo, including $3.5 million for airframe modifications and around $0.9 million for the sharklets.[4] The A320neo was stated for service entry in spring 2016, the A321neo six months later and the A319neo again six months after.[4] The A320neo and A321neo flew around 4,000h for both powerplant versions certification.[8] This is about three-quarters of the certification effort of a new design.[9]

A320 improvements

In 2006 Airbus started the A320 Enhanced (A320E) programme as a series of improvements targeting a 4–5% efficiency gain with large winglets (2%), aerodynamic refinements (1%), weight savings and a new aircraft cabin.[10] At the time Airbus' Chief Operating Officer and executive member John Leahy said "Who's going to roll over a fleet to a new generation aircraft for 5% better than an A320 today? Especially if another 10% improvement might be coming in the second half of the next decade based on new engine technology".[10]

Engine improvements reducing fuel consumption by 1% were fitted into the A320 in 2007 with the CFM56 Tech Insertion[11] and in 2008 with the V2500Select (One).[12]

Sharklets

A320 Enhanced (A320E) and A320neo sharklet detail at ILA 2012

Airbus launched the sharklet blended wingtip device during the November 2009 Dubai air show. Installation adds 200 kilograms (440 lb) but offers a 3.5% fuel burn reduction on flights over 2,800 km (1,500 nmi).[13] Manufactured by Korean Air Aerospace Division, the 2.5 metres (8 ft 2 in) tall devices permits an annual carbon dioxide reduction of 700 tonnes per aircraft.[14] The winglets increase efficiency by decreasing lift-induced drag.

In December 2011, Airbus filed suit in the western district of Texas over Aviation Partners' claims of infringement of its patents on winglet design and construction which were granted in 1993. Airbus' lawsuit seeks to reject responsibility to pay royalties to Aviation Partners for using its designs, despite work performed together with both parties to develop advanced winglets for the A320neo.[15]

The first Sharklet equipped A320 was delivered to AirAsia on 21 December 2012, offering a 450 kg (990 lb) payload increase or 100 nmi (190 km) longer range at the original payload.[16]

Cabin

Virgin America Airbus A320 Enhanced economy class cabin with LED lighting

The new aircraft cabin offers a more modern look and feel, a new air purifier with filters and a catalytic converter removing unpleasant smells from the air before it is pumped into the cabin and light-emitting diodes for ambience lighting and passenger service unit.[17] It offers better and larger luggage storage.[18] The flight crew controls the cabin through touchscreen displays.[19]

The new "Space-Flex" optional cabin configuration increases space-efficiency by a new rear galley configuration and a "Smart-Lav" modular lavatory design allowing an in-flight change of two lavatories into one accessible toilet.[20] With larger, "Cabin-Flex" relocated exit doors, it allows up to 20 more passengers for the A321neo without "putting more sardines in the can",[21] and up to 9 more passengers for the A320neo.[22] For the A321neo, the additional passenger count is enabled through a rearrangement of the exits. While initial A321neo examples share the same exit door configuration as the A321ceo (four exit doors on each side), future examples will permanently delete doors R2 and L2 (forward of the wings) to permit a maximum configuration of 240 seats with two overwing exits replacing doors R2 and L2, and a relocation of doors R3 and L3 (aft of the wings) four frames back. Less dense configurations will also permit the deactivation of either doors R3 and L3 (replaced with a plug; maximum 195 seat configuration) or both doors R3 and L3 and one overwing exit (replaced with plugs; maximum 165 seat configuration). The A321LR, described below, will only be available in a "cabin flex" configuration.[23][24]

Fuel efficiency per seat is increased by 6% with this option, in total exceeding 20% together with the new engines and the sharklets.[22] The moved and enlarged exit doors are estimated to add 100 kg empty weight.[25]

New Engine Option

At the February 2010 Singapore Air Show, Airbus said its decision to launch was scheduled for the July 2010 Farnborough Air Show.[26] It still wasn't decided in August but the choice for new engines included the CFM International LEAP-1A and the Pratt & Whitney PW1100G.[27] Though the new engines will burn 16% less fuel, the actual fuel efficiency gain on an A320 installation will be slightly lower since 1–2% is typically lost upon installation on an existing aircraft and Airbus was comfortable with the 20% lower maintenance cost projections for the Pratt & Whitney's PW1000G compared with today's engines.[27]

On 1 December 2010, Airbus launched the A320neo "New Engine Option" with an additional range of 500 nmi (950 km) or 2 t (4,400 lb) of extra payload, planning to deliver 4,000 over 15 years.[6] Initially scheduled for spring 2016, introduction was advanced to October 2015.[28] Airbus announces a 15% fuel saving thanks to those latest-generation engines and large sharklet wingtip devices, keeping over 95% airframe commonality with the current A320.[29]

In March 2013, airlines' choices between the two engines were almost equal.[30] Its commonality helped to reduce delays associated with large changes.[31] A rearranged cabin allows up to 20 more passengers[32] enabling in total over 20% lower fuel consumption per seat.[22] The first Airbus A320neo rolled out of the Toulouse factory on 1 July 2014 and first flight was scheduled to September 2014.[33]

Flight testing

Its first flight occurred on 25 September 2014.[34] Its Pratt & Whitney PW1100G-JM geared turbofan engine was certified by the Federal Aviation Administration on 19 December 2014.[35]

The A320neo is half as loud than an A320 at take-off with a 85 decibel noise footprint.[36] The LEAP powered A321neo is even quieter at 83.3 dB for flyover noise, substantially lower than the older CFM56 and V2500.[37]

After 36 months, 4,000 hours have been flown: 2,250 with PW GTFs and 1,770 with CFM LEAPs. The flight-test programme will conclude in 2018 with the completion of the A319neo testing. The programme is 75% of what would be done on a new design as the changes impacts flying qualities, performance and system integration, necessitating to retune the fly-by-wire controls and meet type certification requirements which have evolved since 1988, and helped decrease the minimum V speeds. The Neo is a 1.8 t heavier than the Ceo but take-off and landing performance is the same with a modified rotation law, adjusted wing flaps and wing slats angles and rudder deflection increased by 5° to cope with the higher thrust.[38]

Production

First delivery slipped to early 2016.[39] Lufthansa has taken delivery of the first A320neo on 20 January 2016.[40] Two hundred deliveries are targeted in 2017, but as Pratt & Whitney faces ramp-up difficulties, 30 aircraft should be produced waiting for engines. The fourth and latest final assembly line in Hamburg should open in July 2017 and 60 A320s should be produced monthly from 2019.[41]

Variants

Airbus offers three variants of the A320neo family: the A319, A320 and A321. A New Engine Option for the Airbus A318 is not expected but can be developed if needed.[42]

A319neo

Qatar Airways was originally scheduled to be the launch operator of this shortened fuselage variant.[43] It upgraded its order to the larger A320neo in late 2013.[44] No new launch operator has been named since.

It made its first flight on 31 March 2017, powered by LEAP Engines but PW Engines are also available.[45]

A320neo

Lufthansa Airbus A320neo

Lufthansa is the launch operator of this standard variant.[46] The first A320neo rolled out of the Airbus factory in Toulouse on 1 July 2014.[47] It first flew on 25 September 2014.[7] A joint type certification from the European Aviation Safety Agency and the Federal Aviation Administration was received on 24 November 2015.[48]

Nearly 28 years after the first A320, on 25 January 2016, the A320neo entered service with Lufthansa, the type's launch customer.[1] Six months later at Farnborough Airshow, John Leahy reported that the eight in-service aircraft had achieved 99.7% dispatch reliability.[49] After a year in service, Lufthansa confirmed the 20% efficiency gain per passenger with up to 180 seats, along with reduced noise and CO2 emissions.[36]

By the end of February 2017, 28,105 scheduled flights had been performed by 71 A320neo aircraft with 134 cancellations for a 99.5% completion rate.[50] Spirit faces Pratt & Whitney PW1000G issues on four of its five A320neos and don't fly them above 30,000 ft because the bleed air system froze shut on occasion due to cold temperatures, the same problem facing IndiGo.[51]

By March 2017, 88 A320neos had been delivered to 20 airlines, 49 with the PW1000G and 39 with the CFM International LEAP-1A, and the fleet had accumulated more than 57,600 flight hours and 37,500 cycles (1.5h average); over 142 routes the average stage length is 900 nm and like the A320ceo the neo flies an average of 8.4 block hours and up to 10 cycles a day with Lufthansa operating 45 min. sectors from Frankfurt to Hamburg or Munich to China Southern Airlines flying close to 6 hr sectors.[52] Operators confirm the 15% per seat fuel-burn savings even counterbalanced by the added weight on short sectors, which can rise to 16–17% on longer routes and to 20% or more for Lufthansa with 180 passengers up from 168 with two more seat rows; and Airbus plans to deliver about 200 A320neos in 2017.[52]

A321neo

An A321neo prototype in flight

ILFC is the first customer for the A321neo.[53] This lengthened fuselage variant have structural strengthening in the landing gear (undercarriage) and wing, increased wing area and other minor modifications due to higher weights.

The Airbus A321neo prototype, D-AVXB, first flew on 9 February 2016.[54] However, the plane suffered a tailstrike three days later, requiring the aircraft be flown to Toulouse for repairs. Airbus estimates a delay of several weeks for the certification programme due to the time required for repairs.[55] It received its type certification with Pratt & Whitney engines on 15 December 2016,[56] and simultaneous EASA and FAA certification for the CFM Leap powered variant on 1 March 2017.[57]

Leased by GECAS, the first A321neo was delivered in Hamburg to Virgin America, configured with 184 seats and LEAP engines. It entered service in May 2017. All leased from the same lessor, five A321neos should be delivered to Virgin in 2017 and five in 2018 if its buyer Alaska Airlines keeps two fleet types.[58]

The neo empty weight is 1.8t heavier than the ceo due to new engines and associated airframe modifications : engine pylons, wing structure and bleed and oil systems were adapted. At the same maximum weight, It reaches FL310 30-nm before and 4 min earlier than the CEO.[9]

At FL330 (10 000 m), ISA –2 °C and 67 t (148,000 lb), it burns 2,200 kilograms per hour (4,850 lb/h) at Mach 0.76 / 501 knots (928 km/h) long-range cruise or 2,440 kg/h (5,400 lb/h) at Mach 0.80 / 527 knots (976 km/h) high-speed cruise. To offer similar takeoff performance, pitch response to stick input is a rate-command to hit the 3°/sec rotation rate to capture the right pitch attitude and there is an "electronic tail bumper" preventing a tail-strike if the stick is less than three-quarters of the way aft; additional thrust, slower rotation and lift-off speeds require more rudder authority and its maximum deflection went from 25° to 30°.[8]

A321LR

In October 2014, Airbus started marketing a 164-seat, 97 t (214,000 lb) maximum takeoff weight variant with three auxiliary fuel tanks called the A321neoLR (Long Range) with 100 nm more operational range than a Boeing 757-200 configured with 169 seats, 27% lower trip costs and 24% lower per seat costs; it is scheduled for introduction in the second half of 2018, two years after the A321neo.[59]

Airbus launched the A321LR on 13 January 2015 with Air Lease Corporation as the launch customer, hoping to sell 1,000 examples of the variant.[60] The initial layout of 164 seats (20 in business, 30 in premium economy and 114 in economy) was replaced by a two-class 206-seat configuration (16 in business and 190 in economy) and range is 4,000 nmi (7,400 km), 500 nmi (930 km) farther than the regular 93.5t MTOW A321.[25] The A321LR is taking the place of the B757 in the middle of the market.[61]

Orders and deliveries

The A320neo family received over 2,000 orders in a little over two years following launch in December 2010, making it the fastest selling commercial aircraft in history.[62][63] By May 2017 it had 5,052 orders : 49 A319neos (1%), 3,617 A320neos (72%) and 1,386 A321neos (27%), with 1,712 of them powered by CFM LEAPs (34%), 1,429 by PW GTFs (28%) and 1,911 undisclosed (38%).[38]

A320neo orders and deliveries (as of 31 July 2017)[64]
20102011201220132014201520162017Total
Orders A319neo2619235−550
A320neo301,081378387824583343673,693
A321neo11981341183301363361,424
Total301,2264787281,009887711985,167
Deliveries A319neo
A320neo6843131
A321neo55
Total6868136

Cumulative A320neo family orders and deliveries (as of 31 July 2017)[64]

Orders

Deliveries

2011

Virgin America became the launch customer with a firm order of 30 A320neo aircraft as a part of a 60 aircraft order on 17 January 2011.[65] IndiGo ordered 150 aircraft.[66][67] At the Paris Air Show 2011, Airbus confirmed orders from GECAS, Scandinavian Airlines, TransAsia Airways, IndiGo, LAN Airlines, AirAsia and GoAir.[68] Airbus also received commitments for 83 A320neo aircraft from Air Lease Corporation and Avianca. The A320neo gathered 667 commitments at the 2011 Paris Air Show for a 1,029 units backlog since its launch, making it the best selling airliner of commercial aviation.[69] 200 aircraft were ordered by Malaysian low-cost carrier AirAsia, which was hailed as the largest-ever deal in Airbus history.[70][71]

On July 20, 2011, American Airlines announced an order for 460 narrowbody jets including 130 A320ceos and 130 A320neos, and intended to order 100 re-engined 737 with CFM LEAPs, pending Boeing confirmation.[72] The order broke Boeing's monopoly with the airline and forced Boeing into a re-engined 737.[73]

Lufthansa became the aircraft's first German customer, ordering 30 examples.[74] The Dubai Airshow in November 2011 saw a further total of 130 orders and 105 commitments by several customers. On 25 January 2012 Norwegian and Airbus confirmed an order of 100 A320neo.[75]

2012

In November 2012 Virgin America deferred the deliveries of the A320neo aircraft until 2020, making ILFC the new launch customer along with the A321neo.[76] In December 2012 Pegasus Airlines, the second largest airline in Turkey, signed a deal for up to 100 A320neo family aircraft, of which 75 (57 A320neo and 18 A321neo models) are firm orders.[77]

2013

Lufthansa ordered an additional 70 A320neo and A321neo aircraft in March 2013.[78] easyJet, who already operates 195 A320ceo family aircraft, intends to acquire 100 Airbus A320neo for delivery between 2017 and 2022. As part of the deal, easyJet have options on a further 100 A320neo aircraft, and the Japanese carrier ANA is to order the A320neo and A321neo.[79] Lion Air ordered 183.

2014

On 15 October 2014 IndiGo signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Airbus for the purchase of 250 A320neo family aircraft. The deal would be worth over $25.5 billion as per the list price per aircraft. This order will also be the largest by the airline, marking the largest number of jets ever sold by the European planemaker in a single order. The airline had earlier ordered 100 aircraft in 2005 and another 180 aircraft in 2011.[80]

Operators

A Lufthansa Airbus A320neo taking off from Frankfurt Airport, Lufthansa was the A320neo family launch customer.
A Virgin America A321neo taxiing at New York-JFK Airport. Virgin America was the A321neo launch customer.[81]

As of 31 July 2017, 136 Airbus A320neo family aircraft were in service with 28 operators,[3] with IndiGo and Pegasus Airlines operating the largest A320neo fleets of 22 and 10 aircraft respectively.[3]

A Thai AirAsia Airbus A320neo parking at Hat Yai International Airport, Thai AirAsia was the A320neo family first airlines of Thailand launch customer.

Specifications

Airbus family figures[82]
Variant A319neo A320neo A321neo
Cockpit crew Two
2-class seats 140 165 206 (16 J @ 36 in + 190 Y @ 30 in)[25]
1-class maximum 160 195[83] @ 27 in[84] 240 @ 28 in[21]
Seat width Economy at 6 abreast: 18 in (46 cm)[21]
Cargo capacity 27 m³ (976 ft³) 37 m³ (1,322 ft³) 51 m³ (1,828 ft³)[lower-alpha 1]
Length 33.84 m (111 ft) 37.57 m (123 ft 3 in) 44.51 m (146 ft)
Wingspan 35.80 m (117 ft 5 in)
Height 11.76 m (38 ft 7 in)
Cabin width 3.7 m (12 ft 1 in)
Max. takeoff weight 75.5 t (166.400 lb) 79 t (174.200 lb) 97 t (213.800 lb)[lower-alpha 2]
Max. landing weight 63.9 t (140.900 lb) 67.4 t (148.600 lb) 79.2 t (174.600 lb)
Max. zero-fuel weight 60.3 t (132,900 lb) 64.3 t (141.800 lb) 75.6 t (166.700 lb)
Operating empty 50.8 t (112,000 lb)[8]
Jet fuel capacity 26,730 l (7,060 USg) 26,730 l (7,060 USg) 32,940 l (8,700 USg)[lower-alpha 3]
Engines (×2) CFM International LEAP-1A or Pratt & Whitney PW1100G[86]
Fan diameter PW1100G: 81 in (206 cm),[87] LEAP-1A: 78 in (198 cm)[88]
Thrust 106.8–107.8 kN
24,000–24,200 lbf[89][90]
120.4–120.6 kN
27,100–27,100 lbf[89][90]
143.1–147.3 kN
32,200–33,100 lbf[89][90]
Maximum speed Mach 0.82 (473 kn; 876 km/h)[8]
Cruising speed Mach 0.78 (450 kn; 833 km/h)[86]
Ceiling 39,000 ft (12,000 m)[8]
Typical range 6,950 km / 3,750 nmi[lower-alpha 4] 6,500 km / 3,500 nmi[lower-alpha 5] 6,500 km / 3,500 nmi
LR: 7,400 km / 4,000 nmi [lower-alpha 6]
Takeoff 1,988 m (6,522 ft)[8]

Engines

Type certificate[83]
Aircraft model designation Engines Type certification date Take-off thrust Maximum continuous thrust
A320-271N PW1127G-JM 24 November 2015 12043 daN (27075 lb) 11718 daN (26345 lb)
A320-251N CFM LEAP-1A26 31 May 2016 12064 daN (27120 lb) 11868 daN (26680 lb)
A321-271N PW1133G-JM 15 December 2016 14728 daN (33110 lb) 14581 daN (32780 lb)
A321-251N CFM LEAP-1A32 1 March 2017 14305 daN (32160 lb) 14096 daN (31690 lb)
A321-253N CFM LEAP-1A33 3 March 2017 14305 daN (32160 lb) 14096 daN (31690 lb)

ICAO Aircraft Type Designators

Designation[94] Type
A19N Airbus A319neo
A20N Airbus A320neo
A21N Airbus A321neo

See also

Related development
Aircraft of comparable role, configuration and era

Related lists

Notes

  1. no Additional Centre Tank
  2. A321LR, A321: 93.5 t (206.100 lb)[25]
  3. A321LR with 3 Additional Centre Tank, no ACT: 23,700 l (6,261 Us gal)[85]
  4. with 140 passengers, with 124 : 7,750km / 4,200nmi[91]
  5. with 165 passengers, with 150 : 6,850km / 3,700nmi[92]
  6. A321LR with 206 passengers, A321: 6,500 km / 3,500 nmi,[25] with 185 passengers: 6,850km / 3,700nmi[93]

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