Friday, November 22, 2013

The End of the Ultra Long Haul: Goodbye to Flight SQ21-22





A significant event in Aviation History is happening tomorrow. Some people know about it, but those people are generally ones like me, who care about random facts and developments in civil commercial aviation. Most people don’t know about it. Most people will not be in the least way effected by what is happening tomorrow, but it still is significant. It is a chapter in The Book of Aviation that is ending. Tomorrow, November 23rd, 2013, Singapore Airlines is ending their non-stop Singapore-Newark-Singapore flight.

Flight # SQ 21-22, for the past nine years since it was installed, was the world’s longest flight. In fact, Singapore Airlines also, for almost that entire period, ran the world’s 2nd longest flight, a non-stop flight from Singapore to Los Angeles and back. That flight ended about a month ago, and now this one is about to fly its final flight – chances are the final one from Singapore to Newark is in the air right now. This flight is flown by an Airbus A340-500. That particular plane, probably unknown to most, is as important as the flight route that is ending, the final vestige of a period in aviation where to fly as far as possible reigned supreme.
Most commercial aviation fanatics (the type of people that populate the Airliners.net forum – which I frequent but don’t post on due to their fee they charge) love this plane to an unhealthy level. In honesty, it is an absolutely stunning bird. A magnificent plane, the most beautiful plane in the sky. However, it is also a nightmare to run. Airlines have been getting rid of this plane prematurely for years now. Singapore Airlines held onto them for far longer than some of their competitors, running two legacy routes, but finally the costs didn’t justify the means of flying the two longest flights in the world.

30 Years ago, the longest flight in the world was from Los Angeles to Tokyo. 15 years ago, that grew to Chicago to Hong Kong. Between that time and even for a few years after, one of the biggest goals for Boeing and Airbus was to develop planes that could increasingly connect further and further city pairs. The Airbus A340-500 was supposed to end that fight and make Airbus the winner. Airbus A340 directly competed with Boeing’s 777, and the fact that the A340 had four engines gave it a huge leg up. First, it gave the plane slightly more power, and the fact that it had four engines allowed it to travel shorter routes that went over oceans, because back then there were severe restrictions placed on two-engine aircraft as to how far away from a potential emergency landing airport a plane could fly.

Over time, as Boeing developed sturdier, reliable two-engine aircraft, those restrictions loosened, and two-engine aircraft could start running the same routes that the four-engine aircraft could run. That leads to the 2nd development that made Boeing’s 777 the ultimate winner: fuel prices.

Rising fuel prices in the 21st Century made running four-engine aircraft increasingly less profitable. Now that two-engine aircraft could run the same routes (think any route from the US to Tokyo/China/Korea, or routes from the US to the Middle East/India), there was no need for a four-engine aircraft. But the A340-500 was different. It could go further than any two-engine plane. It could run routes that no 777 could run. That is what Airbus was betting on, and they lost – or more directly, the airlines that believed them lost.
Ultra-Long Haul (ULH) travel is what those two flights were deemed, as were a few other. And in the end what matters more than anything is if people want to fly those flights. Are there enough people to fly from New York to Singapore? In the end, not really. Singapore Airlines decided then to cut that supply by making their A340-500 planes business class only, and while they filled the plane, it still wasn’t profitable enough to hold onto these unsellable planes. In the end, what killed ULH travel wasn’t as much fuel prices as that people don’t really need to fly these routes.

There is a big debate going on at airliners.net (and other related aviation blogs) as to whether these types of routes will be brought back in the future, as Boeing and Airbus are developing planes that could fly these routes. All of them are two-engine and more fuel-efficient than the planes that came before them. The Boeing 787-9 can fly Singapore to Newark, and that plane should be out late in 2014. The Airbus A350-900R and yet to be manufactured but planned Boeing 777-9X could both potentially fly that and similar routes and they’ll be out near the end of the decade or beginning of the 2020s. So, the capability will be there, but will those routes return?

Probably not. The demand just isn’t there. The demand for New York to Singapore isn’t big enough to support a direct flight (there is a flight that connects those two cities, but stops in Frankfurt – and as someone who flew that flight the other way, very few people who came on board with me in Singapore flew all the way to New York). There isn’t nearly enough demand to support a direct flight from New York to Bangkok. Thai Airways, using an A340-500, once flew that route. At the time, it was the 3rd longest in the world behind the two Singapore Airlines’ ones. They had far less patience, cutting it back in 2008.

The only ULH route that really has demand is Sydney to London. That is the ultimate goal, to create a plane that could fly that route, and none of these new planes can. In fact, most of the ‘next generation’ of aircraft (Boeing 787, Airbus A350 families of planes) have less range than the previous. Efficiency is replacing range, as airlines, due to rising fuel costs and lack of demand, have decided that getting people from place to place more efficiently is far more important than getting them as far as possible. For years and years and years, getting people further and further was the fight that both the airlines and the manufacturers were fighting. Airbus won the manufacturer battle, and Singapore Airlines won it for airlines, but both ultimately realized it wasn’t a flight really worth winning.

Spending 18 hours and 30 minutes is not appealing to most people. It’s really not appealing to any person except for crazy ones like me. I have come close to that, with my longest flight being the soon to be 11th-longest in the world, a South African Airways flight between New York and Johannesburg. That was about 15.5 hours. That was one of my most enjoyable flights in my life, giving me enough time to get a good sleep and enjoy the plane flight itself. Those flights are the ones I wanted to take. On my recent trip, I took four flights that exceeded 10 hours (that one, Johannesburg-Bangkok, Melbourne-Bangkok, Singapore-Frankfurt), but that was the only one that would be classified as ULH, and I loved it.

I always wanted to take the flight from Newark to Singapore.  I wanted to be on that plane for that long. My Dad took it once, years ago back in the route’s infancy, before it became an all business class flight, before Singapore Airlines realized it was fighting a losing battle. I’ll never get to take it unless Singapore Airlines brings it back, but it won’t be on an Airbus A340-500. It won’t be on the world’s most beautiful plane. It may never come back, and I feel like if it ever does, it will be after a plane is built that could get from Sydney to London, this making the Newark to Singapore flight not the longest in the world.

I’ve been an aviation fanatic since I was a kid. I loved airplanes, airlines and airports. My first real love of an airport was JFK airport in New York. I was devastated when I was about 6 when my Uncle in Chicago told me that O’Hare Airport was busier than JFK (and it wasn’t close back then, it is somewhat closer now that many airlines have pulled out of Newark and relocated to JFK, couple with the rise of JetBlue). I was mystified when I found out that somehow, bizarrely Atlanta Hartsfield Airport was the busiest in the world, and it has been for more than a decade now. I was excited when I learned how to tell the difference between a Boeing 777-200 and a Boeing 777-300, and moreover the difference between a B777-300 and a Boeing 777-300ER (the –ER has bigger, GE made engines). But nothing in aviation made me prouder than when the airport closest to my home, little Newark Airport, that international airlines were constantly pulling out of, making it more and more a United-only airport, had the distinction of having the longest flight.

That will end tomorrow. That flight is gone. What is replacing it as the world’s longest flight? A flight between Sydney and Dallas (oddly, my family in Melbourne are taking this flight in three days, just getting it after it becomes the longest in the world). That seems less fun. Singapore to Newark just seems longer when you look at a globe. Singapore is so far, the quickest way is to fly directly North from Newark, cross over the North Pole, and fly directly South over Russia=>China=>Thailand and finally down into Singapore. They don’t fly that way because of wind currents and other stuff that is too complicated for even me to realize, but that is how the route should be done.

The world is far bigger than most people understand, and to think man made a device that could transport someone from two parts of the world so vastly apart is staggering. Aviation came so far in 100 years (about the time from the Wright Brother’s first flight to Singapore’s first flight to Newark). Because of fuel prices, the world will probably never go further in connecting itself until, in all honesty, some new technology is developed (that Sydney-London flight is not even on the table for planes that won’t be released until the mid-2020s). Flight# SQ 21-22 represented something amazing in aviation, as did the plane that flew it. It represented everything that was alluring about aviation, the longest flight in the world on the world’s most beautiful plane.-

The first flight - Picture taken on June 28, 2004.


All Credit to Airliners.net for the photos.

About Me

I am a man who will go by the moniker dmstorm22, or StormyD, but not really StormyD. I'll talk about sports, mainly football, sometimes TV, sometimes other random things, sometimes even bring out some lists (a lot, lot, lot of lists). Enjoy.