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Boeing 787's Inaugural Flight Lands In Hong Kong (PHOTOS, VIDEO)

Boeing 787

First Posted: 10/26/11 08:58 AM ET Updated: 12/26/11 05:12 AM ET

Scott Mayerowitz, Associated Press

ABOARD ANA FLIGHT 7871 -- Boeing's much-anticipated 787 carried its first passengers Wednesday on a four-hour, 8-minute flight filled with cheers, picture-taking and swapping of aviation stories.

The new long-haul jet aims to change with the way passengers think about flying with larger windows, improved lighting and air pressure and humidity that closer resembles that on the ground. (*SEE PHOTOS & VIDEO BELOW*)

It's not the fastest jet or the largest jet but the plane, nicknamed The Dreamliner by Boeing Corp., is built of lightweight materials that promise to dramatically improve fuel efficiency. The first flight, from Tokyo to Hong Kong, was filled with 240 aviation reporters and enthusiasts - some of whom paid thousands of dollars for the privilege.

"It's silly, but it's a little piece of history. New cars come out all the time but how often do new planes come out?" said Stephanie Wood. She and her husband Dean, of Davie, Fla., won a charity auction, paying nearly $18,700 for two business-class seats. Another passenger paid $32,000.

The most noticeable feature of the plane is its windows, which are 30 percent larger than older jets. Passengers no longer need to hunch forward to see the ground. Those in the middle of the plane can even glance out part of the windows. The shades are replaced with a glare-reducing, electrical dimming system that adds tint to the window within 30 seconds.

"The windows are absolutely amazing. You're not confined. You've got the outside inside," Wood said.

The $193.5 million plane's debut was more than three years delayed because of manufacturing problems. But that didn't bother the fans who broke out in applause at every opportunity.

The highlight for many was a rainbow-colored light show that transformed the sedate white interior into something closer to the Las Vegas strip.

Many of the 106 enthusiasts on board the flight by Japan's All Nippon Airways were carrying memorabilia from past inaugural flights and snapping photos of everything from the overhead bins to the bathroom with a window and bidet.

Thomas Lee, of Los Angeles, handed out his own press release and biography. There was his first inaugural flight - the Boeing 747 as a 17-year-old boy in 1970 - and then the Airbus A380 four years ago.

"I'm not crazy," he said. "For an aviation enthusiast, this is as high as it gets. It's like going to a movie on opening day."

He and the rest of the coach passengers paid the apt sum of 78,700 yen, about $1,035, to be part of the inaugural flight.

The 787 has been sold by Boeing as a "game changer," promising to revolutionize air travel just as its 707 did by allowing nonstop trans-Atlantic service and the 747 did by ushering in an age of mass travel.

The 787 is designed to connect cities that might otherwise not have nonstop flights. Planes like the Boeing 747 and 777 and the Airbus A380 can fly most long-haul routes but finding enough daily passengers to fill the massive jets is a challenge. The A380 typically has 525 passengers but can hold up to 853.

The 787 only carries 210 to 250 passengers. That means it can fly nonstop routes that larger planes can't profitably support like San Francisco to Manchester, England or Boston to Athens, Greece.

"It's going to be a hub-avoiding machine," said Ernie Arvai, partner with aviation consulting firm AirInsight. "You'd pay extra not to go to (London's) Heathrow."

Connecting such smaller cities is the "holy grail" of air travel, said Richard Aboulafia, analyst with the Teal Group. That's why the plane is the fastest-selling new jet in aviation history. There were 821 orders for the 787 before its first flight, although 24 were recently canceled by China Eastern Airlines because of delays. Now, the industry is waiting to see if the plane meets Boeing's 20 percent fuel-savings claims.

"If it performs as promised, it's the iPod of the aircraft world. If it doesn't, it's just another CD player," Aboulafia said.

ANA is the first airline to fly the plane and expects to have seven of them by the end of the year. United Continental Holdings Inc. will be the first U.S. carrier to fly the 787, sometime in the second half of 2012. It's planning to use the plane between Houston and Auckland, New Zealand.

There will probably be a short period when United - which ordered 50 of the jets - uses its first 787 on domestic or short trans-Atlantic flights. To make the Auckland route work, it will need a second 787 flying in the other direction.

For passengers, the changes start with boarding. They enter into a wide-open area with sweeping arches. Eyes instinctively move up. There's an impression of more space. Claustrophobia is reduced just a bit, even if seats are as cramped as ever.

Another physiological trick: lights gradually change color during long flights to reduce jet lag.

But the biggest changes come thanks to the stronger composite shell, which is less susceptible to corrosion than aluminum. Air won't be as dry, with humidity doubled to 16 percent. The cabin will be pressurized at the equivalent of 6,000 feet - 2,000 less than most planes. That should lead to fewer headaches and leave passengers with more energy during long trips. A number of passengers on Wednesday's flight said they thought it was too short to notice any improvement.

Other changes for passengers include:

_ The largest overhead bins ever. They are designed at an angle to make the cabin feel significantly larger. Boeing says there's enough room overhead for every passenger to have one carry-on bag, however, the only way that seemed feasible was with identically rectangle bags, stacked in the optimal order.

_ Less noise. New engines with a wave pattern around the exhaust reduce interior and exterior noise, although Boeing won't say by how much. Since the plane is lighter, additional sound and vibration padding can be added. Wednesday's flight appeared quieter, but a handheld sound meter registered noise levels similar to Boeing's 777.

_ Later models will have a turbulence dampening system. Accelerometers in the nose register a sudden drop. A signal is sent in nano seconds via fiber-optic cables to the wings. Adjustments are made and what would have been a 9-foot drop is cut to 3 feet.

Most passengers don't know the make or model of their plane, unless they read the safety instruction card. The 787's interior is likely to change that. Even those who don't fly it, are likely to notice.

Hundreds of employees at Hong Kong airport stopped working to watch - and take photos - of Wednesday's arrival.

"We're celebrities," said passenger Lee Simonetta of Atlanta. "We ought to just taxi around for an hour."



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Scott Mayerowitz, Associated Press ABOARD ANA FLIGHT 7871 -- Boeing's much-anticipated 787 carried its first passengers Wednesday on a four-hour, 8-minute flight filled with cheers, picture-taking ...
Scott Mayerowitz, Associated Press ABOARD ANA FLIGHT 7871 -- Boeing's much-anticipated 787 carried its first passengers Wednesday on a four-hour, 8-minute flight filled with cheers, picture-taking ...
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02:12 PM on 10/27/2011
sounds like a real comfortable plane to ride in but I would rather see an airplane engineered to cut flight times close to half and still be economical. air speed has not increased dramatically in over 40 years in high capacity airplanes.
rkeeeballs
rock and a hard place
01:37 PM on 10/27/2011
America...A day late and a lot of $$$$ short...Sure Air Bus is glad it took so long ! No pictures of the inside with happy people doing the party thing ?...Come on !...Try putting wings on a cruise ship...they know how to make great interiors......and good food and entertainment..and hot tubs and.....gambling...get with it !
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Totto
Not "noises", One-Round, *music*!
02:20 PM on 10/27/2011
Yeah right, classsssie!
04:28 PM on 10/27/2011
It ain't 1965 anymore. The glamours of the jet age are long over. No more suits and ties, attractive flight attendants, or nice meals. Now it's sweats, a gay guy(disclaimer: not that there is anything wrong with that), and peanuts.
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Dennis Adams
01:26 PM on 10/27/2011
While I am happy that Boeing finally got this plane airborne, I am deeply disappointed with the delays. I was confident that after the a380 airbus delays, that boeing would learn a lesson from over promising and under delivering. Hopefully, some of these 787 jobs will be in south carolina.
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Totto
Not "noises", One-Round, *music*!
02:23 PM on 10/27/2011
No, in the Northwest. The A380 is an aircraft suitable only for Asia: crowded, several babies crying simultaneously, and after deplaning: the wait for luggage! Almost as long as the flight!
09:54 AM on 10/27/2011
I'm in here in a few places, but I have an air line question. How can all the old air planes that used so much fuel and had to have so many people inside to work for the passengers and today fewer stewardesses and air planes that charge you more money for everything that was free then and with all these days advantages, to make them fly so much cheaper with so many passengers?
11:08 AM on 10/27/2011
After reading your post several times I'm still not sure of your question. Flying now is actually cheaper than it was 30 years ago, even without taking inflation into account. Gas prices have risen dramatically. The airlines historically have only a 2-3% profit margin (excluding the past 10 years). It's amazing that you can travel 2200 miles across the country in 5-6 hours and pay well under $500.00 in many cases to do so. Try taking a cab in any major city 20 miles. In San Fran that'll drain your wallet to the tune of $75.00.
rkeeeballs
rock and a hard place
01:43 PM on 10/27/2011
Must be the price of fuel.....Shell oil $7 billion just in the last QUARTER...dang ! We have been getting rear ended for quite some time ...because the last president was an oil man ! so was his vice president....and most of their campaign donors were.........ya know ?
09:46 AM on 10/27/2011
Another awesome Boeing.
09:34 AM on 10/27/2011
Does anybody remember the British Metro air liner, first four engine passenger jet? Its windows failed and depressurized the entire aircraft that crashed several times before they found out, lot of people died in the process of learnig. The smaller/larger doors, again pressurization, so we will see in say a couple or three years how it is really better. Oh, by the way I thought Boeings were built here in the United States, so how did this air craft take off from Toyoko to Hong Kong on its first flight, unless the air craft industry is in the automotive industry now.
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smittlib77
11:27 AM on 10/27/2011
you know, there's this thing called being able to fly across an ocean..
09:21 AM on 10/27/2011
I went on the inaugural flight of my Superman cape from a tree in my backyard. The landing didn't go so well.
08:44 AM on 10/27/2011
i like the bigggest airplane jumbo 747-400 is the best top plane in the world
09:35 AM on 10/27/2011
So far you are right as far as I am concerned.
08:04 AM on 10/27/2011
25% made in the UK :-)

**puts tin hat on**
09:51 AM on 10/27/2011
Then I'm only 25% worried. After all, if the Eurotrash automobiles are any measurement of quality that is.
02:30 PM on 10/27/2011
How come all your bankers drive Mercedes, BMW, Bentley, Aston Martin, Jaguar, Range Rovers, Porsche, Ferrari, Maserati? Or do they drive them round the corner and sneak into their Chryslers?
01:48 AM on 10/27/2011
How about naming it the Over Budget and 3 Years Late Airliner
09:52 AM on 10/27/2011
Yeah.... if it were gubbament managed all number over runs would be tripple as an average.
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ironchefjay2
Apolitical and pissed off
11:07 PM on 10/26/2011
I remember as a kid flying backwards and forewards across the Atlantic on the old 707's. It was great.........what happened? To fly in this day and age now requires that you get foldled before you get to the gate and once on the plane they try to stuff as many humans on the plane as possible all in the smallest seats mankind can make. However that is mostly here in America. Now I just take an air carrier from another country and get treated like a normal human rather than a cow at a meat prosessing factory.
09:39 AM on 10/27/2011
You can only have so much weight on an aircraft, and each passenger has a govermental weight first and probably his luggage too. If you over load an air craft you cut back on the fuel to make up the difference, so take your pick, more money or more fuel, oh sorry more people or more fuel. More people mean fewer aircraft a company;s got to buy.
09:54 AM on 10/27/2011
You wanna fly a Renault .. go ahead. The first one made it 1 mile before it crashed.
10:47 PM on 10/26/2011
Ons small problem. It was supposed to land in London England.
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dwill123
flexing the "golden pipes" on the day's issues
10:22 PM on 10/26/2011
727, 737, 747, 757, 767, 777, 787. Simply put flying nowadays sucks. The days of a great flight are gone with pat downs, cramped seats, delays on the tarmac and over-priced tickets followed by pay-per-piece of luggage.
10:46 PM on 10/26/2011
Welcome to post - 9/11 planet earth and a crummy economy.
11:02 PM on 10/26/2011
Stay home and complain about something else then
09:44 PM on 10/26/2011
OBAMA: "We've lost our ambition, our -- our imagination, and -- and -- our willingness to do the things that built the Golden Gate Bridge and Hoover Dam and unleashed all the potential in this country."

The successful launch of this innovative airplane seems to contradict Obama's claim. However, if the Obama administrations continuing, overbearing, ideologically motivated activity against American ingenuity and entrepreneurship, as evidenced by the NLRB actions to inhibit the flexibility and initiative necessary to the success of Boeings ambitious and imaginative creation continues, his prophecy will be self fulfilling. Oh, the irony.
09:55 PM on 10/26/2011
That or boeing sending everything out of house to be designed then when american engineers told them it would not work fire them so no would point out that this piece or that piece wont work may have had somthing to do with it taking to long. But oh no then we would have to blame the execs who made stupid choices so lets just blame obama ok thats better right since that is not what happened but lets blame him any way.
09:46 AM on 10/27/2011
Ya got a tiny problem with your track of thought hear. Boeing may send it out of the country for engineering and fire the United States engineers for shut up reasons but what happens when one crashes and the plane is examined?, by people that don't belong to Boeing? My line of thought if they did, it is like the automotive industry that has put millions out of work, it is cheaper when our doors became open even to countries that their doors are not open to us.
10:49 PM on 10/26/2011
Big difference between a company trying to make a buck and a country failing to upgrade infrastructure.
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garylinn
Disabled USAF Veteran (God bless America)
09:39 PM on 10/26/2011
It sounds really exciting to be on a "first" flight. I must try it some day. :-)