Kawasaki YPX

YPX
Role Jet airliner
National origin Japan
Manufacturer Kawasaki Heavy Industries
Status Proposed
Developed from Kawasaki P-1

The Kawasaki YPX was a new twinjet airliner proposed by Kawasaki Heavy Industries of Japan. The YPX was based on the Kawasaki P-1 aircraft[1] now under development for the JMSDF, but would fly with two engines instead of four.

Design and development

The YPX was to have seated between 100-150 passengers, and would thus have been competitive with the smaller Boeing 737 and Airbus A320 family jets on short haul routes.[2] The engine choice had not been made at the time its development was halted. Entry into service was expected to be somewhere around 2015. However, as of 2015, no prototype was built. Kawasaki hopes to cut fuel costs of up to 15% in comparison to the Boeing 737.[3]

According to specifications issued in 2007, the base model YPX-11 was to seat 113 passengers in a two-class arrangement. The YPX-10 was to seat 93 in two classes while the YPX-12 was to accommodate 137, implying about 150 in an all-economy arrangement. Standard range for all three body lengths would have been 4,260 km (2,300 nautical miles) but the YPX-10 and YPX-11 were to have extended-range sub-variants flying as far as 5,930 km (3,200 nautical miles).

YPX was to have a five-abreast economy cabin and an elliptical cross-section - that is, with a smoothly varying radius, rather than the old double-bubble based on two distinct radii. Economy seats would be 46 cm (18 in) wide; the aisle, 51 cm (20 in).

Specifications

General characteristics

Performance

See also

Related development
Aircraft of comparable role, configuration and era
Related lists

References

  1. Govindasamy, Siva (2008-09-23). "Kawasaki talks civil". Flight International. Reed Business Information Ltd,. Retrieved 2009-02-01.
  2. Gibbens, Robert (2008-08-23). "CSeries to face Japanese competitor". The Montreal Gazette. Canwest Publishing Inc. Retrieved 2008-10-10.
  3. Perrett, Bradley (2008-08-15). "Kawasaki Studies Advanced, Lightweight Competitor to CSeries". Aviation Week and Space Technology. McGraw-Hill. Retrieved 2008-10-10.
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