McDonnell Douglas MD-12

Last updated

MD-12
Md-12-2.png
A computer rendering of the proposed MD-12, a full double-decker configuration concept
Role Double-decker wide-body aircraft
National origin United States
Manufacturer McDonnell Douglas
StatusDesign study, canceled

The McDonnell Douglas MD-12 was a large wide-body airliner concept planned by the McDonnell Douglas company in the 1990s. It was first conceived as a trijet larger than the MD-11, then stretched to a quadjet airliner. It was to be similar in size to the Boeing 747, but with greater passenger capacity through two full-length passenger decks. However, the MD-12 received no orders and was canceled. McDonnell Douglas then studied larger MD-11 derivatives named MD-XX without proceeding.

Contents

Design and development

Background

McDonnell Douglas studied improved, stretched versions of the MD-11 trijet, named MD-12X [1] with a possible lower-front passenger deck with panoramic windows. [2] [3] The MDC board of directors agreed in October 1991 to offer the MD-12X design to airlines. The MD-12X had a length of 237 ft 11 in (72.5 m) and a wingspan of 212 ft 6 in (64.8 m). In November 1991, McDonnell Douglas and Taiwan Aerospace Corporation signed a Memorandum of Understanding to form a company to produce the new design. The new company would have McDonnell Douglas as the majority shareholder (51%) with Taiwan Aerospace (40%) and other Asian companies (9%) having the remaining shares. [3]

MD-12

Artist's impression of the MD-12 McDonnell Douglas MD-12-b.png
Artist's impression of the MD-12

In late 1991, McDonnell Douglas made a move to separate its civil and military divisions in a bid to raise the estimated $4 billion development costs needed to develop the MD-12X trijet. Separating the costly development of the military C-17 airlifter, which had been a drain on the company's resources, from the profit-making production of the MD-80 and MD-11 airliners would make it easier to attract foreign investors for the MD-12X. [4]

The design grew into the much larger MD-12 with four engines and two passenger decks extending the length of the fuselage. The length of the main MD-12 variants was 208 ft (63.4 m) with a wingspan of 213 ft (64.9 m). The fuselage was 24 ft 3 in (7.39 m) wide by 27 ft 11 in (8.51 m) high. [3]

McDonnell Douglas unveiled its MD-12 design in April 1992. [3] The design was similar in concept to the Airbus A3XX and Boeing New Large Airplane, and it would have been larger than the Boeing 747 with which it would have directly competed. Douglas Aircraft also studied a smaller double-decker design in the 1960s for the aircraft that would eventually become the DC-10. [5] [6]

The first flight of the MD-12 was to take place in late 1995, with delivery in 1997. [3] Despite aggressive marketing and initial excitement, especially in the aviation press, no orders were placed for the aircraft. MDC lacked the resources after Taiwan Aerospace left the project. [3] Some skeptics believed that MDC launched the project to lure Boeing into paying a higher price for the company. [7] [8] A new double-deck widebody has proved to be extremely expensive and complex to develop, even for the remaining aerospace giants Boeing and Airbus, although the massive Airbus A380, a similar concept to the MD-12, was later brought to fruition, [9] [10] but was not a financial success. [11]

MD-XX

With the MD-12 program over, McDonnell Douglas focused on 300 to 400–seat MD-11 derivatives. At the 1996 Farnborough International Air Show, the company presented plans for a new trijet with high-seating and long-range named "MD-XX". [12] The MD-XX was offered in two variants; MD-XX Stretch with a longer fuselage and MD-XX LR for longer range. Both MD-XX variant designs had 213 ft (64.9 m) wingspan, the same as MD-12. The MD-XX Stretch was lengthened 32 ft (9.8 m) over the MD-11 and had seating for 375 in a typical 3-class arrangement and 515 in all-economy seating. Its range was to be 7,020 nmi (8,080 mi; 13,000 km). The MD-XX LR was the same length as the MD-11, had seating for 309 in a typical 3-class arrangement and featured a range of 8,320 nmi (9,570 mi; 15,400 km). However, the MDC board of directors decided to end the MD-XX program in October 1996, stating the financial investment for the program was too large for the company. [3]

Variants

The MD-12 was offered in a few proposed variants as listed below. [3]

Specifications (MD-12 High Capacity design)

MD-12 three views McDonnell Douglas MD-12 rendering.png
MD-12 three views

Data from McDonnell Douglas promotional materials [1]

General characteristics

Performance

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

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References

Notes
  1. 1 2 "MDC brochures for undeveloped versions of the MD-11 and MD-12." Archived 2008-05-11 at the Wayback Machine md-eleven.net. Retrieved: April 14, 2008.
  2. "MD-11 page." Airliners.net. Retrieved: October 18, 2007.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Steffen, Arthur (2002), McDonnell Douglas MD-11: A Long Beach Swansong, UK: Midland: Hinckley, pp. 92–94, ISBN   1-85780-117-2
  4. "MD-12 divides Douglas." Flight International, November 13–19, 1991.
  5. Berek, D. "Proposed double deck DC-10 design in 1965." Archived 2013-12-27 at the Wayback Machine webshots.com, April 4, 2004. Retrieved: July 15, 2011.
  6. Waddington, Terry. McDonnell Douglas DC-10. Miami, Florida: World Transport Press, 2000. ISBN   1-892437-04-X.
  7. Knowlton, Brian; International Herald Tribune (16 December 1996). "Boeing to Buy McDonnell Douglas". New York Times. Retrieved 25 September 2020.
  8. Bean, Bransom (5 January 2016). "Failure to Launch: The Legacy of the McDonnell Douglas MD-12 Program". AV Geekery. Retrieved 23 March 2017.
  9. "Airbus will lose €4.8bn because of A380 delays." Times Online, October 4, 2006.
  10. Schwartz, Nelson D. (5 March 2007), "Big plane, big problems", CNN
  11. Spaeth, Andreas; Rooks, Tim (16 December 2021). "Airbus A380: End of a multibillion-dollar dream". Deutsche Welle . Retrieved 10 October 2023.
  12. "McDonnell Douglas Unveils New MD-XX Trijet Design." Archived 2011-11-06 at the Wayback Machine McDonnell Douglas, September 4, 1996.