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The McDonnell Douglas MD-12 was an aircraft design study undertaken by the McDonnell Douglas company in the 1990s for a "superjumbo" aircraft, first conceived as a larger trijet, then stretched to a 4-engine airliner. It was to be similar in size to the Boeing 747, but with more passenger capacity. However, the MD-12 received no orders and was canceled. McDonnell Douglas then studied larger MD-11 derivatives named MD-XX without proceeding. |
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Design and development Background McDonnell Douglas studied improved, stretched versions of the trijet MD-11, named MD-12X with a possible lower-front passenger deck with panoramic windows. The MDC board of directors agreed in October 1991 to offer the MD-12X design to airlines. MD-12X had a length of 237 ft 11 in (72 m) and wingspan of 212.5 ft (64.39 m). |
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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. Financial concerns In late 1991, McDonnell Douglas made a move to separate civil and military divisions in a bid to raise the estimated $4 billion development costs needed to develop the MD-12X trijet. |
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Separating the costly military C-17 airlifter development which had then been a drain on the company's resources from the profit-making MD-80 and MD-11 airliner production would make it easier to attract foreign investors to the MD-12X. The restructuring of the company into McDonnell as a military manufacturer and Douglas as a civil operation would involve offering minority shareholdings in the Douglas concern. A new design emerges The design then grew into the much larger MD-12 with four engines and two passenger decks extending the length of the fuselage. The length for the main MD-12 variants was 208 ft (63 m) and had a wingspan of 213 ft (64.54 m). The fuselage was 24 ft 3 in (7.4 m) high by 27 ft 11 in (8.5 m). |
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McDonnell Douglas unveiled its MD-12 design in April 1992. This design was similar in concept to the Airbus A3XX and Boeing NLA, and would have been larger than the Boeing 747 with which it would have directly competed. Douglas Aircraft had also studied a smaller double-decker design in the 1960s. |
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The first flight of the MD-12 was to be in late 1995, with delivery in 1997. 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. 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, has been successfully brought to fruition. |
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MD-XX |
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However, the MDC board of directors decided to end the MD-XX program in October 1996, stating the financial investment in the program was too large for the company. Variants The MD-12 was offered in a few proposed variants MD-12 HC (High Capacity) MD-12 LR (Long Range) MD-12 ST (Stretch) MD-12 Twin (two engine version) |
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Specifications (MD-12 High Capacity design) General characteristics Crew: 2 (pilot and co-pilot) |
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Capacity: 430 Passengers in 3-class arrangement, up to 511 passengers in high-capacity layout |
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Length: 208 ft 0 in (63.40 m) Wingspan: 213 ft 0 in (64.92 m) |
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Height: 74 ft 0 in (22.55 m) Wing area: 5,846 ft² (543.1 m²) |
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Empty weight: 402,700 lb (187,650 kg) Max takeoff weight: 949,000 lb (430,500 kg) |
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Powerplant: 4 × General Electric CF6-80C2 high-bypass turbofans, 61,500 lbf (274 kN) each |
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Performance Maximum speed: Mach 0.85 (565 mph, 1,050 km/h) Range: 7,170 nmi (9,200 mi, 14,825 km) Wing loading: 162.3 lb/ft² (792.7 kg/m²) More in Link |
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DRAWINGS McDonnell Douglas MD-12 Link TEXTURE BASE by Peter.Pan Link |