Airbus A300

If you liked this item, please rate it up on Steam Workshop page.

Author: Alpha Aviation

Last revision: 25 Nov, 2023 at 04:30 UTC

File size: 1.76 MB

On Steam Workshop

Description:

The DHL livery

————————————

Controls:

Roll: F and H /// left and right arrow
Pitch: T and G /// up and down arrow
Yaw: R and Y /// J and L

Start Engine: left Shift /// right shift
Increase throttle: Z /// I
Decrease throttle: X /// K
Gear Up: M
Gear Down: N
Flaps: O (hold)
Airbrakes: U (hold)

————————————

Information:

The first twin-engine widebody airliner, the A300 typically seats 247 passengers in two classes over a range of 5,375 to 7,500 km (2,900 to 4,050 nmi; 3,340 to 4,660 mi). Initial variants are powered by General Electric CF6-50 or Pratt & Whitney JT9D turbofans and have a three-crew flight deck. The improved A300-600 has a two-crew cockpit and updated CF6-80C2 or PW4000 engines; it made its first flight on 8 July 1983 and entered service later that year. The A300 is the basis of the smaller A310 (first flown in 1982) and was adapted in a freighter version. Its cross section was retained for the larger four-engined A340 (1991) and the larger twin-engined A330 (1992). It is also the basis for the oversize Beluga transport (1994).

________________________________________

Credit and Development:

During the 1960s, European aircraft manufacturers such as Hawker Siddeley and the British Aircraft Corporation, based in the UK, and Sud Aviation of France, had ambitions to build a new 200-seat airliner for the growing civil aviation market. While studies were performed and considered, such as a stretched twin-engine variant of the Hawker Siddeley Trident and an expanded development of the British Aircraft Corporation (BAC) One-Eleven, designated the BAC Two-Eleven, it was recognized that if each of the European manufacturers were to launch similar aircraft into the market at the same time, neither would achieve sales volume needed to make them viable. In 1965, a British government study, known as the Plowden Report, had found British aircraft production costs to be between 10% and 20% higher than American counterparts due to shorter production runs, which was in part due to the fractured European market. To overcome this factor, the report recommended the pursuit of multinational collaborative projects between the region’s leading aircraft manufacturers.

(Credit and Shoutout to LeonardoDev for working hard to originally build the plane)

________________________________________

Thank you!