China's transport, tanker & heavy lift aircraft

tphuang

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Re: China's transport plane capacities

more on Ukrainian help on the large transport project
there are a bunch of other civilian aircraft news coming out of the show, you guys can search them up.
Kyiv, September 4 (Interfax-Ukraine) - Ukraine and China will
continue discussing long-term cooperation in aircraft-building at the
AviationExpo China 2007 air show to be held in Beijing on September 18-
23, Antonov ANTK Designer General Dmitry Kiva told Interfax-Ukraine.
ANTK is interested in participating in Chinese AVIC-I-initiated
projects, aimed at developing a new Chinese air transport with a payload
capacity of 60 tons of more, as well as a new long-range air liner with
a seating capacity of 150-200 passengers.
"China is serious about cooperation with us. We will hold a new
round of talks at the show. Corresponding documents are being prepared,"
Kiva said.
ANTK and AVIC-I signed a memorandum of understanding on developing
a new Chinese 70-seat regional turboprop last week.
Head of the AVIC-I international sales department Zou Zhanfeng told
Interfax-Ukraine that his company was interested in long-term
cooperation with ANTK in the field of developing new Chinese aircraft.
China is considering several options of involving ANTK in such
development: a joint design of new aircraft, buying ANTK shares give a
corresponding permission of the Ukrainian government, or establishing a
joint venture in Ukraine or China.
 
Re: China's transport plane capacities

i'm not sure if this is an old order or a new one, but probably the one that got announced a while back. Nice to see an export of 15 MA-60
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I'm pretty sure it was part of an older order from 2 years ago. Found pictures also.
 

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New Civil Aircraft Plans For Chinese Manufacturers

Sep 5, 2007

By Bradley Perrett/Aviation Daily

Chinese aircraft makers are planning a range of new civil models, even before their current big project, the ARJ21 large regional jet, rolls out at the end of this year.

Avic I, one of the country's two aviation conglomerates, says it is considering a new turboprop transport, a business jet and a new aircraft for general aviation.

AviChina, a listed unit of the other conglomerate, Avic II, says it is considering whether to build a new regional or business jet, possibly an Embraer model to build alongside its current ERJ 145 line, or possibly something completely new.

Avic I says its strategy is to build a family of aircraft, with turboprops filling demand for aircraft up to 70 seats and its ARJ21 up to about 100. It already has an aircraft near the top end of its turboprop range, the 50- to 60-seat MA 60.

"We are doing research and studies for new aircraft, namely a stretched version of the ARJ21 and a new turboprop," Hu Wenming, executive VP of Avic I, told reporters at the Asian Aerospace exhibition in Hong Kong on Monday.

The proposal for a stretched ARJ21, the ARJ21-900, was already known. The other aircraft sound firmer than mere studies: "We will also develop a business jet and a general [aviation] aircraft," Hu says.

AviChina says its cooperation with Embraer is supposed to have three phases, the first two being building ERJ145s for sale in Asia and the production of parts for the aircraft.

The third stage, which the company is now considering, is the development of a new regional jet or business jet. Since this would be part of the company's cooperation with Embraer, another model from that company, such as the E170, would seem likely. But AviChina says a new aircraft is also a possibility -- although it is hard to see how any such development could avoid clashing with the current Embraer product line.

Anything much larger than the ERJ 145 would compete with the ARJ21.
more news from China on ARJ-21 and possible new developments. A lot of these are from Hong Kong air show.
 

Chengdu J-10

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Re: China's transport plane capacities

With the Chinese order on the IL-76 & 78 they shouldnt give in to their current position of accepting the higher price. The price should remain the same and Russia should fill in the order. Russia agreed to deliver the planes for that price and so they should even if it means that Russia itself has to open their pockets to finance it. Russia should quickly seize the moment and accept it, as soon China will be manufacturing their own transport aircraft and soon wont be ordering anymore of Russia's IL-76 & 78. So if I was Russia I wouldn't argue with China now as its export are getting smaller and smaller to China.

If Russia want to still export military stuff to China they should promote better products to them as in newer models not olds ones that are lying around, and give them better pricing.

Funny how russia is more friendly to india than china.

Ok enough of me blabbering on back to the thread. China has made a huge gap in transport aircraft sector. Jumping from the Turboprop equivalent of the C-130 straight to the C-17, as China has its Y-9 and FTP, it has no current project that equates to the IL-76 equivalent.
 

dollarman

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Re: China's transport plane capacities

Well duh India has surpassed China as Russia's number one military exports partner. Also, due to geographical reasons, the Russians trust the Indian's more with advanced offensive equipments. Finally India always has the option of buying weapons from the west, which means Russia always has to market extra hard to them. No surprise the Russians are friendlier to the Indians.

The U.S seems quite content with operating C-30s and C-17's with nothing in between. So naturally the PLA would follow suit. Besides, they'll still have more than 40 Il-76's assuming the situation works out.
 

Schumacher

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Re: China's transport plane capacities

Liming & GE to co-produce the CF34-10A which is chosen to power the ARJ21 regional jet.

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一航黎明与美国GE航空合作生产民机发动机
新闻动态 [2007-09-07]
 

据新华社9月7日消息,中国一航沈阳黎明航空发动机(集团)有限公司与美国GE航空公司合作生产ARJ21-700新支线客机发动机CF34-10A的签约仪式,7日在沈阳举行。这是国内第一个民用客机发动机生产的对外合作项目,标志着我国民机发动机项目与欧美国家的合作首次进入了实质性的领域,是我国民机发展史上的重要里程碑。
  据了解,ARJ21-700新支线飞机是中国一航自主研发的拥有我国自主知识产权的新一代航空产品。CF34-10A发动机是美国GE航空研制的航空发动机。2003年中国一航通过竞标,CF34-10A发动机成为ARJ21-700支线客机的动力装置。
  一航黎明与美国GE航空合作生产ARJ21新支线客机发动机CF34-10A,是中国一航ARJ21支线客机项目的一部分。
  美国GE公司是国际知名的跨国公司,一航黎明是中国大中型航空发动机科研生产基地。一航黎明从上个世纪80年代初就与美国GE公司在燃气轮机零部件的加工方面进行合作。20多年来,双方逐步扩大了合作范围,实现了互惠互利、共同发展的目标。
  ARJ21新支线客机为70-90座级,适用于中、短程航空运输。根据中航商用飞机公司和GE公司预测,未来几年内,ARJ21飞机在中国和全球潜在市场上的需求将达到50架/年左右,发动机每年需求100多台。
  GE航空根据今年4月份对一航黎明现有装配和试车生产能力的评估,认为一航黎明完全有能力承担并完成CF34-10A发动机的装配试车任务。根据合作文件的规定,黎明公司将在GE航空的技术支持下,分四个阶段承担CF34-10A的装配试车工作,并新建专门的装配和试车生产线,用以满足CF34-10A 发动机的生产需求。

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tphuang

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Re: China's transport plane capacities

Just when I thought I had things figured out with Y-8F600 situation figured out, I guess maybe not? Or maybe the Y-8F600 in service with KJ-200 are just pre-production versions? And then they are still trying to improve it?
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AVIC II brings in Antonov to help with new Y8F
By Leithen Francis

China Aviation Industry (AVIC) II has delayed the manufacture of its new commercial freighter, the Y8-F600, because it wants Antonov's help to improve the aircraft.

"In the world arena Antonov has a strong capability and we are now meeting with experts at Antonov to evaluate the Y8" on aspects such as the "aerodynamics, structure and relevant systems and have asked for help to make advances, modifications and improvements," says AVIC II president Zhang Hongbiao.

The Y8-F600 is a derivative of the Y8-F400 and the Y8-F100. The original Y8 was derived from the Antonov An-12.

"Our ultimate goal is to have an advanced state-of-the art" aircraft, says Zhang, adding that AVIC II prefers to "be a little bit slow" if it means the company ends up with the best aircraft.

AVIC II subsidiary Shaanxi Aircraft makes the Y-8F600 and Shaanxi's VP Liu Bin told Flight International last November that the company planned to roll-out the aircraft and complete flight testing in time to have it certificated in China by the end of 2007.

However, Zhang declines to give the new time-frame for roll-out saying it depends on the outcome of the current evaluation. "If we can be successful with the Y8" it will last 30 to 50 years and there will be an opportunity to sell it in overseas markets such as Africa and South America, he says.

The Y8-F600 differs from the Y8-F400 in having a modern two-pilot cockpit against the Y8-F400's three-crew cockpit. The Y8-F400 was powered by the indigenous WJ6 engines whereas the new version will have Pratt & Whitney Canada PW150Bs "but in the meantime we are developing our own turboprop engine...design of the core engine is almost complete", Zhang says.

When asked why AVIC II wants to develop its own engine for the Y8, Zhang says for a nation to develop its aviation manufacturing industry without developing its engine capabilities "is not a complete development or perfect solution".
 

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China Learning How To Develop, Support Airliners With ARJ21

Sep 16, 2007

By Bradley Perrett

It might be the beginnings of a giant of commercial aviation. The ARJ21 regional jet is shaping up as China’s equivalent of the Airbus A300—a project that in its time seemed merely interesting but later was recognized as the origin of a product range that would challenge the established order of civil aircraft makers.

The significance of the project isn’t in the sales potential of the initial version, the ARJ21-700, which is very much a niche aircraft designed for hot and high airports. Even the market potential of the more widely saleable ARJ21-900, the planned stretched version, isn’t really the key point about this project.

Above all, the ARJ21 program is important as the occasion in which Chinese industry is learning to develop a commercial aircraft to full Western standards and with its own intellectual property rights, to coordinate with many subcontractors, to gain certification from the U.S. FAA, to establish an international marketing operation, and—crucially—to prove that it will support aircraft in service.

If in 30 or 40 years China has a powerful industry turning out competitive airliners and freighters, from regional jets to widebodies, observers of the day will probably say “they learned to do it with the ARJ21.”

It won’t matter much if the ARJ21 itself achieves only modest commercial success.

Such a long-term view is typical of Chinese officials in almost any part of the economy as they plan the historic rise of their country. And so is the notion of deliberate, step-by-step learning, each step based on experience from the previous one and yielding more experience for the next.

“Cross the river by feeling the stones,” said former paramount leader Deng Xiaoping.

The ARJ21 project is a line of big stones that will lead Chinese industry far across the river. It follows experience with the MA60 turboprop, in which the ARJ21’s builder—aircraft conglomerate Avic I—improved the basic Antonov An-24 design and worked with a major Western supplier, Pratt & Whitney Canada.

For the ARJ21, the foreign supplier team has grown to include such companies as Honeywell and Parker for flight controls, General Electric for engines and Rockwell Collins for avionics. The design is Avic I’s, although Bombardier will work on the -900. And, unlike the MA60, sales won’t be limited to countries willing to do without Western airworthiness certification.

Getting Western certification is a key challenge for the project and is one of the most valuable lessons that Avic I expects to learn from it.

The first ARJ21-700 prototype is under final assembly at the Shanghai Aircraft Manufacturing Factory, which is being absorbed by Avic I Commercial Aircraft Corp. (ACAC), a profit-oriented spinoff from Avic I that’s leading the project. The plant is the one that put together Chinese-built McDonnell Douglas MD-80s and MD-90s.

Rollout is scheduled for late this year, with 14 months of flight testing to begin in March. Chinese type certification should follow in July 2009 and first delivery three months later.

Three production aircraft are to be completed in 2009, 14 in 2010 and 30 in 2011. So the backlog of 71 orders, all from Chinese customers, implies that the plant will be busy until late 2011.

Once the -700 is in service, development will begin on the ARJ21-900, which will have more improvements than just a longer fuselage. The Chinese engineers want to reach out to feel a few more stones.

“The ARJ21-900 will serve the international market,” says ACAC Vice President Chen Jin, describing the -700 as tailored for domestic needs.

Designed especially to serve China’s hot and high western districts, the ARJ21-700 is naturally heavy for its seating capacity of 78 in two classes or 90 with an all-economy cabin. The -900 should be much more attractive for ordinary routes. Preliminary plans show empty weight per seat falling 15% in the stretched version, which is to seat 98 in two classes or 105 all-economy.

But the big challenge in the ARJ21 isn’t the engineering, even if commercial aircraft development is never easy.

Wang Yawei, head of Avic I’s civil aircraft department, points out that a complete civil aircraft industry has three main systems: marketing, customer service, and development and production.

“But in the past the Chinese aviation industry had only one of the three, the development and production system,” he says.

For example, China’s aviation marketing experience has been almost nil.

“In customer service, the industry could only provide some simple after-sales support, far from satisfying customers’ demands,” he told International Aviation, a Chinese-language partner magazine of Aviation Week & Space Technology.

Avic I is addressing the marketing challenge by handing that responsibility to a specialized company, ACAC.

ACAC also plans to float its shares in China and on a foreign stock exchange, possibly New York—which is another side of the modernization of the Chinese aircraft industry.

Another listed Avic I company, Xi’an Aircraft International, will be heavily involved in making ARJ21 components and major assemblies, partly through joint ventures with Avic I units in Chengdu and Shenyang.

Avic I is strongly emphasizing service. Even before the aircraft flies, a customer support center has been built in Shanghai and is due to begin training operators by year-end.

“Clearly, with the ARJ program the Chinese are taking a large step forward,” says Boeing’s vice president for China, John Bruns, adding a warning heard before from his company: “It would be naive of us to think that our two companies [Airbus and Boeing] are going to dominate this industry forever.”

China will have a special problem in breaking into the duopoly, however. An executive from one U.S. company in the program says reports of bad Chinese consumer goods will deter big foreign airlines from the ARJ21—not because they will think there’s anything wrong with it, but because many passengers won’t want to hear that they’re flying on a Chinese aircraft.

“They will think that, if the Chinese can’t be trusted to make toys, how can they be trusted to make aircraft?” says that executive, who notes that China actually makes high-quality aircraft parts.

“Airlines like British Airways and Qan*tas won’t be buying the ARJ21.”

At least not yet. But they might have a few decades in which to change their minds, since the program is only just beginning and the aircraft has obvious potential for development.

The ARJ21-700’s weight, seating and range are similar to those of regional jets from Embraer, Bombardier and, coming up soon, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (see table, p. 77). But it’s also remarkably comparable with the DC-9-10, whose configuration it shares and which was repeatedly stretched until it offered two-class seating for 152.

And whereas those competitors have chosen four-abreast seating, minimizing drag, Avic I has gone for the DC‑9’s five-abreast. Sukhoi has made the same choice for its Superjet 100, and so has Bombardier for its 110- and 130-seat CSeries proposal, calculating that such fuselages are more efficient than six-abreast up to about 150 seats.

ACAC’s Chen is emphatic that there’s no current plan to stretch the ARJ21 beyond the -900, although he says doing so would offer no technical problem. Instead, he’s planning freight and private versions of the -700. The company has enough on its plate.

But, clearly, once the -900 is developed in the next decade, the manufacturer will be able to cheaply stretch the aircraft again, especially since it’s already talking about enlarging the wing (see following story). Importantly, the rear-engine layout should present no obstacle to installing bigger powerplants.

Moreover, the likelihood of an eventual 150-seat ARJ21 derivative has risen over the past year as China has firmed up plans for its second commercial aircraft. Rather than follow up its regional jet with an aircraft in the next standard size category— a standard six-abreast narrowbody—the government has approved what state media are calling a jumbo with more than 150 seats and a takeoff weight of more than 100 metric tons.

That should be a small widebody—the next line of stones across the river.
talks about the importance of ARJ-21. Don't know how far it will go, but definitely a good perspective to look from.
 
From Jakarta Post on MA60

Troubled Merpati Airlines on verge of taking off again
Business and Investment - September 17, 2007


Andi Haswidi, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta

While it seemed doomed last year, troubled PT Merpati Nusantara Airlines is beginning to see the light at the end of the tunnel thanks to a restructuring process that appears to be paying off.

This year, boosted by the reopening of several former routes and the refurbished of its fleet, the company hopes to generate total revenue of Rp 2 trillion (about US$212.8 million), and is looking forward to a steady 30 percent growth over the next two years.

"I think we have emerged from the restructuring process. We are at a growth stage now. We are continuing to add more routes and flights, and further consolidate our operations so as to regain our foothold in the domestic market," executive vice president for commercial affairs, Jaka Pujiono, told The Jakarta Post last week.

Jaka said that the focus of the restructuring was the reestablishment of former routes that were closed during the company's dark days, and the opening up of new, profitable markets in remote areas of the archipelago.

Merpati recently reestablished its Jakarta-Palembang, Jakarta-Ambon, Banjar-Balikpapan and Bandung-Yogyakarta services, and increased its Jakarta-Papua flights to five times a day. In addition, it also expects to commence a Jakarta-Tanjung Pinang, Riau, service on Sept. 24.

"Merpati is probably the only airline that can deliver connecting flights, in all its operations, to remote areas of the archipelago. That is why our services are useful for mining company workers, government officials and scientists who need flights to remote areas," Jaka said.

To support its restructuring program, Merpati has bought two Boeing 737-300 aircraft, and expects to have two Boeing 737-400 aircraft operational by November.

On top of that, it has bought three 56-seater MA-60 turbo-jet propeller aircraft made by China's Xian Aircraft Industrial Corporation, and expects to take delivery of another 12 of these in the following months.

"Many people may doubt Chinese products, but they should know that the engines and parts are made in the West. The engine is made by Pratt & Whitney from Canada, while the propellers are being made by Hamilton Sundstrand from the U.S.," Jaka explained.

"These days, no single production chain can be carried out in a single country," he said.

Merpati's fleet now consists of 14 jet aircraft and 14 propeller aircraft.

The restructuring process began when the government agreed in March, 2006, to inject Rp 450 billion in bailout funds to help cover the state-owned airline's Rp 1.7 trillion in debt, and the company's cash-flow deficit of up to Rp 20 billion per month at the time.

About Rp 150 billion was allocated to pay arrears in aircraft rentals and maintenance costs, Rp 180 billion for debt restructuring, and Rp 120 billion for severance pay and human resources development programs.

In terms of financial performance, the company reported that as of the end of June this year, its operating revenues amounted to Rp 755.3 billion, while the total number of passengers stood at 1.2 million, with a 77 percent load factor.

This is likely to more than double by the end of the year as the peak season nears, with the end of Ramadhan coming in November, where the country usually sees a massive once-a-year migration of people to their hometowns.

As for the remaining debts, Jaka said that the company had negotiated deals with a number of its creditors and was still in talks with others. Among Merpati's major creditors are Bank Mandiri (Rp 164 billion), Bank Danamon (Rp 95 billion) and the government (Rp 92 billion).

The company also expects to sell a stake this year in the Merpati Maintenance Facility (MMF), with the proceeds expected to be reinvested in the MMF.

"Our development program is moving in the right direction. We've been reborn and regain our supremacy in the domestic market. For the future, we will increase the number of our regional flights," Jaka said.

Internationally, Merpati flies to Kuala Lumpur, Singapore and Dili in East Timor.
 
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