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Active Member
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2007
- Posts
- 772
Before you say - they were developed for the 737NGs, I know that.
What I am asking is if winglets improve fuel consumption by as much as is claimed (between 3 and 5% depending on the aircraft in question), why havent all the operators of 737-originals (-100 and -200) and classics (-300, -400 and -500) retrofitted their aircraft with winglets (either from Boeing or aftermarket) to improve the efficiency of their fleet?
With most commercial airliners spending most of their days working hard, I would have thought the commercial justification would have been easy to make.
Along these lines, I noticed that Aviation Partners have test flown their winglets on a B767 and have got (or just about got) FAA approval - they claim to have orders from 10 separate airlines for those winglets. Why not the 737s?
I am hoping some of you (especially those in the industry) may be able to share some wisdom.
What I am asking is if winglets improve fuel consumption by as much as is claimed (between 3 and 5% depending on the aircraft in question), why havent all the operators of 737-originals (-100 and -200) and classics (-300, -400 and -500) retrofitted their aircraft with winglets (either from Boeing or aftermarket) to improve the efficiency of their fleet?
With most commercial airliners spending most of their days working hard, I would have thought the commercial justification would have been easy to make.
Along these lines, I noticed that Aviation Partners have test flown their winglets on a B767 and have got (or just about got) FAA approval - they claim to have orders from 10 separate airlines for those winglets. Why not the 737s?
I am hoping some of you (especially those in the industry) may be able to share some wisdom.