TRANSCRIPTIONEnglish

Why Did Boeing KILL Their Perfect Jet - Against All Logic

17m 59s2,525 mots443 segmentsEnglish

TRANSCRIPTION COMPLÈTE

0:00

January 1983, Boeing launches the 757,

0:05

an aircraft that would become a legend.

0:07

With its powerful engines and

0:09

exceptional range, it could do things

0:11

other narrow bodies simply couldn't. It

0:14

dominated transatlantic routes. It

0:16

thrived at challenging airports. Charter

0:19

operators loved it. By the time

0:21

production ended, Boeing had sold over

0:23

1,000 of them, making it one of the

0:26

bestselling aircraft in the company's

0:28

[music] history. But here's what doesn't

0:30

make sense. In 2003, Boeing [music] made

0:33

a stunning announcement. They were

0:36

killing the entire 757 program. Not

0:39

because it was failing, not because it

0:41

was old. In fact, Boeing's newer

0:44

stretched 757 had entered service just 4

0:47

years earlier. Because Boeing was

0:49

convinced [music] that they had

0:50

something better coming, something

0:53

revolutionary that would make the 757

0:56

obsolete. At least that's what they

0:59

thought. That replacement, however, it

1:02

never came. And now, 20 years later,

1:05

Boeing is watching Airbus [music]

1:07

dominate the most profitable segment in

1:09

aviation with an airplane that does

1:12

exactly what the 757 used to do. This is

1:15

the story of the 757's demise and the

1:19

strategic miscalculation that haunts

1:21

Boeing to this day.

1:26

But before we get to why Boeing killed

1:28

the 757, we need to understand why they

1:31

built it in the first place. The 757

1:34

story begins in the late 1970s when

1:36

Boeing faced a critical decision about

1:38

the future of one of their bestselling

1:40

jetliners of its time, the Boeing 727.

1:44

That aircraft had dominated short and

1:46

mediumh hall routes since entering

1:48

service in the mid 1960s, [music]

1:50

earning a reputation for exceptional

1:52

performance at challenging airports

1:55

thanks to its powerful triple engine

1:57

configuration.

1:59

But after barely a decade in service,

2:01

Boeing began hearing from customers

2:03

about their evolving needs with several

2:05

airlines indicating they wanted

2:07

additional capacity, [music] something

2:09

bigger than what the 727 could provide.

2:13

In response, Boeing proposed a newer

2:15

variant called the 727300,

2:17

essentially [music] a stretched version

2:19

of the existing 727 with some minor

2:22

changes to avionics [music] and design.

2:24

But the response was lukewarm at best.

2:27

[music]

2:27

Boeing had failed to understand the two

2:30

seismic shifts that were transforming

2:32

commercial aviation at the time, and

2:34

both of which would make a stretched 727

2:36

obsolete before it even reached the

2:38

drawing board. First, a new generation

2:41

of high bypass turboan engines were

2:44

emerging, promising fuel consumption

2:46

improvements that old generation low

2:48

bypass engines simply couldn't match.

2:52

Secondly, the 1973 Yam Kapor war and

2:55

subsequent oil crisis permanently

2:57

[music] transformed airline economics,

3:00

forcing carriers to treat fuel

3:01

efficiency as a necessity [music] rather

3:04

than a luxury. Moreover, Airbus had

3:06

launched the A300 a few years earlier,

3:09

proving to airlines how economical a

3:12

wide body with just two engines could

3:14

be. This two engine configuration

3:17

offered obvious advantages. Fewer

3:19

engines meant lower purchase costs,

3:21

reduced [music] maintenance expenses,

3:23

and simplified operations.

3:25

As a result, Boeing quickly abandoned

3:28

the 727300 concept and pivoted to

3:31

something far more ambitious. They

3:33

showed airlines a preliminary design

3:35

called the 7N7, [music] a twin engine

3:38

aircraft borrowing heavily from the 767

3:40

that would eventually become the 757.

3:43

This new approach solved virtually every

3:45

limitation plaguing the stretched 727

3:48

proposal, but it required Boeing to

3:50

fundamentally rethink their design

3:52

philosophy. You see, the original 727,

3:56

like the 737, sat relatively low to the

3:59

ground, a design feature that simplified

4:01

ground handling when many airports

4:03

lacked sophisticated equipment. But by

4:05

the late 1970s, even smaller airports

4:08

had acquired the machinery needed to

4:10

service taller aircraft. This meant

4:13

Boeing could design the 7N7 with much

4:15

longer landing gear, creating

4:17

substantial clearance under the wings.

4:20

This ground clearance proved

4:22

transformative. With space available

4:24

beneath the wing, Boeing could install

4:26

the new generation of large diameter

4:28

high bypass turboan engines which would

4:31

have been physically impossible to fit

4:33

under a lowslung airframe. The new

4:36

engines combined with an advanced superc

4:38

critical wing design and comprehensive

4:40

aerodynamic refinements delivered an

4:42

extraordinary 30% [music]

4:44

improvement in fuel efficiency compared

4:46

to the 727. This represented a

4:49

staggering leap, particularly

4:51

considering the 727 itself was barely a

4:54

decade old at the time. The 757 entered

4:58

service with Eastern Airlines in January

5:00

1983, only to see sales fall short of

5:03

Boeing's [music] expectations. But when

5:05

the 1990s travel boom arrived,

5:08

everything changed. The 757's

5:11

exceptional range allowed airlines to

5:14

operate direct flights [music] between

5:15

secondary cities, completely bypassing

5:18

congested hubs. Moreover, charter

5:21

operators found the 757 was almost

5:24

[music] perfectly suited for holiday

5:25

routes, carrying enough passengers to

5:28

make these routes profitable while

5:29

offering the range and performance to

5:31

[music] operate from airports where

5:33

larger wide bodies would struggle.

5:35

Boeing responded to this momentum by

5:37

launching the 757300.

5:40

A substantially stretched variant that

5:41

entered service in 1999. This variant,

5:45

which was nicknamed the flying pencil,

5:47

could accommodate up to 280 passengers,

5:49

[music] making it competitive with

5:51

smaller wide bodies on highdensity

5:53

routes while retaining the economics of

5:55

a narrow-body aircraft. Yet, just 4

5:58

years after launching this variant,

6:00

Boeing made a stunning announcement.

6:02

[music]

6:03

They were terminating the entire 757

6:05

program. And by the time production

6:07

seized in 2004, Boeing had sold almost

6:10

1,50 757s, making it one of the

6:13

bestselling [music] aircraft in Boeing's

6:16

history. But why would Boeing scrap an

6:18

aircraft that had become such a

6:21

versatile success? These videos take a

6:23

lot of time and research to create, so

6:25

if you enjoyed it, please consider

6:27

liking and subscribing to support the

6:29

channel. The immediate trigger was

6:31

devastating and straightforward. [music]

6:34

You see, following the September 11th

6:35

attacks, the US airline industry entered

6:38

what would later be called the lost

6:40

decade. A prolonged period of financial

6:42

[music] devastation that saw airlines

6:45

shut down, merge, and operate under

6:47

bankruptcy protection while trying to

6:49

restructure their debts. While Boeing

6:52

and Airbus both suffered during this

6:54

period, the impact wasn't uniform across

6:57

all aircraft types. The 757 became

7:01

particularly vulnerable because its

7:03

production rate had already been

7:04

relatively modest compared to the 737

7:07

and A320 families. In its final years,

7:11

Boeing was building barely 1757 per

7:14

month. This low production volume meant

7:16

the program had little cushion when

7:18

sales slowed and the fixed costs [music]

7:20

of maintaining production became

7:22

economically untenable. Boeing faced an

7:25

agonizing choice. maintain the

7:27

production line with no incoming orders

7:29

and hope demand eventually returned or

7:32

shut it down and eliminate the overhead

7:34

[music] costs. With the company under

7:36

severe financial pressure and no end to

7:39

the crisis in sight, keeping the 757

7:41

alive on faith alone would have been an

7:44

extraordinarily expensive [music]

7:45

gamble. With hindsight, we know that

7:48

demand for aircraft like the 757

7:50

eventually returned as aviation

7:52

recovered. [music]

7:53

So you might think that if Boeing had

7:55

somehow preserved the production line

7:57

and supply chain, new orders would have

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