Was this Soviet transport really the last of its kind?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Buran_AN-225.jpg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Buran_AN-225.jpg
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I was talking in regards to it moving large military or civilian forms of cargo, I wasn't really going to mention the Buran project.The last of its kind in what way? Also, I presume from the heading that you're talking about the AN-225 heavy transport plane and not the Buran shuttle. It would be helpful if you would clarify your question.
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There is a partially completed one that is supposed to be finished by next year. But the purpose of it is unclear, although more likely it will be in the service of Antonov Airlines.Didn't Antonov announce at the end of last year that the second airframe was finally going to be completed by 2008 ? What happens then ? Can they build more if required ?
I can only see aircraft getting bigger in the very long term.
Thanks for the clarification.I was talking in regards to it moving large military or civilian forms of cargo, I wasn't really going to mention the Buran project.
I suspect it will be a long time, though, before another aircraft of this size is put into production.
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Yes the specs show the max take off weight of the A380-800F version as being very close to that of the An-225.although there is the aurbus 380 - if they ever get to sought out the cargo model problems...
But the A380 would never be able to carry anywhere near the weight or outsized loads of the An-124/225, C-5 or even C-17. The A380 is designed primarily as a package or container freighter, whereas the others can carry vehicles, helicopters, tanks and even railway locomotives.Yes the specs show the max take off weight of the A380-800F version as being very close to that of the An-225.
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Airbus is saying they're putting the A380F variant on indefinite hold until the pax versions of its aircraft are being fully delivered. This was due to its only 2 major orders being cancelled (UPS and FedEx). With no orders to purchase the plane Airbus is trying to save its development money as much as possible.although there is the aurbus 380 - if they ever get to sought out the cargo model problems...
Nor density. Like you said the A380F if it ever got completed was almost specifically designed for package carriers rather than bulk carriers.But the A380 would never be able to carry anywhere near the weight or outsized loads of the An-124/225, C-5 or even C-17. The A380 is designed primarily as a package or container freighter, whereas the others can carry vehicles, helicopters, tanks and even railway locomotives.
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Magoo
true, but I guess I was looking at the issue of sheer mass rather than capability. the thread seemed to be driven by the issue of "presence" etc.. over capability.But the A380 would never be able to carry anywhere near the weight or outsized loads of the An-124/225, C-5 or even C-17. The A380 is designed primarily as a package or container freighter, whereas the others can carry vehicles, helicopters, tanks and even railway locomotives.
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Magoo
maybe we can finesse it further by only looking at heavy lifters that use the me gigant legacy suspension....Aircraft like the Myria, Galaxy, and Condor hold a very niche use and shouldn't be compared to bulk package aircraft like Boeing and Airbus freighters.
Max payload for an An-225 Mriya is 250,000 kg (550,000 lbs).I know that this aircraft is larger than the Boeing-747
But how do their cargo capacities compare(weight)
Sure thing. Unfortunately I don't have info on Buran (currently) so while the Space Shuttle (Enterprise IIRC) might be physically larger, I don't know which had greater weight. Also to keep in mind, the first space shuttle wasn't really a "space shuttle" since it wasn't designed to go exo-atmospheric (sp?) rather is was to test the design to see if it could operate in the atmosphere. That, and Buran was a decade+ later.Thanks tod*, I became curious because the 747 is the plane that NASA uses to transport the American Space Shuttle which is larger than the one the russians developed.