[quote=lardy;1001053]Look.. I only have info available to the public but I'd be very surprised if they were using fibreglass. It's my understanding that the a380 uses aluminium with fibreglass reinforcement though.
That's what makes the 787 so special and "new". It has a predominately CRP body and the worlds first (for an airliner) carbon fibre wings. From wiki...
"The 787 features lighter-weight construction. Its materials (by weight) are: 50% composite, 20% aluminum, 15% titanium, 10% steel, 5% other.[79] Composite materials are significantly lighter and stronger than traditional aircraft materials, making the 787 a very light aircraft for its capabilities.[80] The 787 will be 80% composite by volume.[81] Each 787 contains approximately 35 tons of carbon fiber reinforced plastic, made with 23 tons of carbon fiber.[82] Composites are used on fuselage, wings, tail, doors, and interior. Aluminum is used on wing and tail leading edges, titanium used mainly on engines with steel used in various places.[79]"
"Composite fuselage
Disassembled fuselage section of the Boeing 787 Dreamliner
The 787's all-composite fuselage makes it the first composite airliner in production. While the Boeing 777 contains 50% aluminum and 12% composites, the numbers for the new airplane are 15% aluminum, 50% composite (mostly carbon fiber reinforced plastic) and 12% titanium. Each fuselage barrel will be manufactured in one piece, and the barrel sections joined end to end to form the fuselage. This will eliminate the need for about 50,000 fasteners used in conventional airplane building. According to the manufacturer the composite is also stronger, allowing a higher cabin pressure during flight compared to aluminum"
You can read lots about it at [ame="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_787"] the wikipedia site.[/ame]
Big thanks at DB for the pics


 
						
					 
					
					 
				
				
				
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					 Originally Posted by Captain_Rightfoot
 Originally Posted by Captain_Rightfoot
					
 
						
					 
  
				

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