The Boeing 777 is a two engine jet airplane. If one engine fails and the other engine is still working, yes it can still fly with one engine.
No. It cannot fly with one engine, because it is very heavy.It must have at least two engines to stay in air.
A 737 is smaller and the longest you would ever fly on it is from Los Angeles to Hawaii. the 777 is one of the larger planes Boeing makes. It can fly almost anywhere in the world from a certain point. for example, it is generally used for flight from Los Angeles to London... or ever further.
no one invented Boeing, it is a company that was started by William Boeing, and today is one of the largest, if not largest aircraft manufacturer.
i heard when i worked at pacific aerospace corp that each engine has about 22,000 hp
This is the pure speculation. It is to imagine a piston engine and a propeller which would give same thrust as B737 jet engine. With B737 speed of 0.8 M at altitude and maximum attainable efficacy of a propeller (notwhistanding compressibility effects), for B737 engine (one engine) thrust of 8,400 to 11,300 kg, the Power would be from 32,000 to 43,500 HP per engine ! Vladimir
111,115 lbs. of thrust ea.
The Boeing 777-200 is 247,200kg at the maximum takeoff weight while an empty one is 134,800kg.
No. It cannot fly with one engine, because it is very heavy.It must have at least two engines to stay in air.
The Boeing planes, and most modern multi-engine aircraft, can still manage to fly even if one engine stopped to function.
Only one has crashed which was a British airways
A 737 is smaller and the longest you would ever fly on it is from Los Angeles to Hawaii. the 777 is one of the larger planes Boeing makes. It can fly almost anywhere in the world from a certain point. for example, it is generally used for flight from Los Angeles to London... or ever further.
Quite well. Modern aircraft are configured to fly and land on one engine
yes it does. 2 in its current fleet, one flying non stop to London and the other non stop to Tokya. 4 more are on order.
You have to be able to hand-fly an airplane or the certification bodies won't allow it to be used in their airspace. There are a lot of reasons the airlines don't want you to hand-fly an airliner unless it's an emergency - it's more fuel efficient to use your autopilot, for one thing - but if you wanted to, you could hand-fly a 777 from the gate at the origin airport to the gate at the destination airport.
Boeing 777 can connect any two airports in the world without stopping anywhere. with 300 passengers B 777 can travel 17,300 kilometers. London to Auckland is over 18000 KM. But with load limitations B777 can surely connect London and Auckland without a single stop.
Depends on the distance to your destination and the entertainment levels. I find the Boeing 777 a nice one
The rolls royce trent used to power a boeing 777 would cost in the region of £9 million. This may sound like a lot of money but for rolls royce to develop one new type of engine it costs £600 million.