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is i airbus a320,a330,a340or boeing 737,747,767,777

2007-09-25 23:01:11 · 17 answers · asked by fly_ey 1 in Cars & Transportation Aircraft

17 answers

Okay lets put it this way, let's say those a/c are made to be the best safety that they can made but they're maintain it to the lowest possible so do you think they will still the safetest a/c. I dont think so, i think safety is all start from the hangar, how you maintain and to the Pilot who have alot of experience to fly that a/c and that's we call safetest aircraft.

2007-09-29 08:45:34 · answer #1 · answered by Nash 3 · 0 1

Actually putting aside differences with Boeing and Airbus The safest airplane would be the T7 aka B777. This plane engines are big enough that if they were to lose or the engine comes off the wing the plane can still fly. Also The wings can take more stress than what is required by the standards. here is a video for you to check it out yourself.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Uo0C01Fwb8


for all those who say Boeing is better than airbus this not true. Airbus has and are making planes as good or better than boeing.

2007-09-29 20:42:30 · answer #2 · answered by Chino 3 · 1 1

The Boeing 717, 777, and Airbus A330/A340 have not had any passenger fatalities.

2007-09-29 19:22:45 · answer #3 · answered by JaK 2 · 0 0

lost_pearly has direct information about the maintaning culture and procedures of air trinidad. Amazing. Complete BS.

The DC-10 is as safe as any other aircraft. Many things have gone wrong? UA 292 was due to human factors not design.

AA191 was due to wrong mantinence not design. MD tried talking with AA to stop the forklift procedure.

The Turkish airlines cargo door problem was the only design fault.

Now, all the aircraft mentioned above compare almost equally in saftey. Even russian airliners are safe. Just because a crappy operator crashes a Tupolev dosent mean that the aircraft isnt safe. But unfortionatly 95% of the people out there do that.

2007-09-26 04:46:51 · answer #4 · answered by Charles 5 · 1 0

We cannot generalise safety standards by the make or model of an aircraft. All passenger liners are built to certain internationally approved and accepted standards, under which safety is always uppermost. Therefore, when current passenger aircraft roll out of their assembly lines, all are considered as safe as any other.

All airlines, however, do not keep a high standard of maintenance and may cut corners in order to be more economical. Over a period of time, such lapses will definitely
reflect on the safety of that particular aircraft which was exposed to such malpractices. At this stage the aircraft relatively becomes less safe. Poor pilot performance also has a direct effect on the safety standards of an airline, if a crash occurs due to pilot error.

In the end, Christian has brilliantly quoted the Concorde as the safest passenger aircraft in the history of aviation. Its demise, unfortunately, was not its own doing (FOD from another aircraft).

2007-09-26 05:15:23 · answer #5 · answered by al_sheda 4 · 1 2

All of them are safe enough.

The problem when it comes to deciding which aircraft is safest is that most aircraft crashes are due to pilot error which is not the fault of the aircraft design (though in some cases the cockpit design may have contributed).

2007-09-26 00:55:42 · answer #6 · answered by bestonnet_00 7 · 0 1

Boeing is the BEST. I would say boeing 777 and 747 are the great and safest aircraft.
someone wrote the quote absolutely rite....'I m not going if its not Boeing'

2007-09-27 08:10:03 · answer #7 · answered by Krish 1 · 0 2

Any Boeing aircraft.
But I preffer the 777

2007-09-26 11:05:44 · answer #8 · answered by sandy_dfw 3 · 0 2

Until recently with the new models the 737 had an excellent record. How about the 727. It was great plane, just noisy and used too much fuel. Survived the worst thunderstorm imaginable in one. Doubt if many others could have made it through those conditions and I had flown in almost everyone made until 3 years ago.

2007-09-25 23:41:09 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 1 3

i hope that it would be the a380 form airbus. this newly designed full double decker has gone through up to 3 years of testing, but i saw a comment from a person who said 'come on! all types have their crashes', which means that probably all airplanes would have at least one crash. that guy is evry pesimistic, and i really hate that. to be more optimistic, i think the guys in airbus will make it as safe as possible. So, you didn't know about the A380 at all? well, the first commercial flight would be on the 25th of October 2007.
trust me, once you're inside it, you'll feel like it's heaven!

2007-09-25 23:07:54 · answer #10 · answered by Billy A 4 · 1 4

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