A twin engined 747...
Discussion
So, I know there is no such thing and as a commercial prospect the idea would never get off the ground, but that’s exactly my question.....would one physically fly?
I was reading on twitter people getting upset that the 747 is approaching the end of its life and that the new era of twins look boring and one person said why couldn’t they re-engine the 747.
In theory two GE-90’s from a 777 would produce circa 230,00lb of thrust, just shy of what the four engines on a 747-400 do and I assume there would be less drag and weight as well with only two engines....so, would it fly?!?
What do we think?
I was reading on twitter people getting upset that the 747 is approaching the end of its life and that the new era of twins look boring and one person said why couldn’t they re-engine the 747.
In theory two GE-90’s from a 777 would produce circa 230,00lb of thrust, just shy of what the four engines on a 747-400 do and I assume there would be less drag and weight as well with only two engines....so, would it fly?!?
What do we think?
I imagine it would need a complete wing redesign, as it would have been designed for the weight and forces of 2 engines hanging from each of them.
I would think that there may be a shift in Centre of Gravity and other handling anomalies as well.
I would guess that you would be pretty much designing the wing from scratch again. Fitting 4 new (larger) engines to the Nimrod MRA4 didn’t work out well
I would think that there may be a shift in Centre of Gravity and other handling anomalies as well.
I would guess that you would be pretty much designing the wing from scratch again. Fitting 4 new (larger) engines to the Nimrod MRA4 didn’t work out well

Coincidenally, my brother and I were watching one of the NatGeo (I think) channels at the weekend,and there was a documentary about the latest variant of the 747, in which they said one of the engines produces as much thrust as all 8 on a B52, so given when the 747 first flew, a 2 engined version to my inexpert brain seems plausible (although the aerodynamic problem above is a worry)
mr_fibuli said:
anonymous said:
[redacted]
If only they had some kind of computer system that could reliably trim out these side effects... 
It probably only needs one source of data too. Then pilots can fly both the 4 engine 747 and the new 2 engines one with minimal extra training.
They kind of had a go a bit more B52 style than you meant though: https://www.airliners.net/forum/viewtopic.php?t=41...
Don’t forget that the entire 747 airframe is very old tech now. Would you think a 1978 Cortina with a modern Ford engine and safety features would be practical to anyone except weirdos?
These aircraft are competing for sales against very, very tough opposition. A buyer looking at an ancient airframe wouldn’t be tempted, no matter what the engines are, if there’s a brand new Airbus available with a full fatigue life ahead of it.
These aircraft are competing for sales against very, very tough opposition. A buyer looking at an ancient airframe wouldn’t be tempted, no matter what the engines are, if there’s a brand new Airbus available with a full fatigue life ahead of it.
Zad said:
Unless they put the engines above the wing.. 
You'd only need 45 foot tall engineers to service them!
Genuine question, why do the engines go under the wing? Is it just for practicalities of servicing/replacement or is there something more fundamental that means it’s a crap idea?
You'd only need 45 foot tall engineers to service them!
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