The Airbus A220 began life as the CSeries aircraft,manufactured by Canada’s Bombardier Aerospace. Bombardier had recognised a gap in the market for a cost-efficient aircraft in the 100-150 seat category that was not filled by Airbus or Boeing.
After the CSeries made its public debut at the UK’s Farnborough International Airshow in 2008,Airbus saw the aircraft as a threat and shortly after dropped the price of its A320,stymying several deals that were in the pipeline for the CSeries.
Although the airline industry acknowledged the Bombardier as a capable aircraft with cost efficiencies,airlines had concerns over the viability of a relatively small manufacturer. Another problem,aviation fuel prices were relatively low at the time,and the fuel cost saving presented by the CSeries was not a persuasive reason for airlines to change from less fuel-efficient,older model aircraft. As a result,initial orders were sluggish.
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Development of the CSeries had been funded largely by the governments of Quebec,Canada and the UK and Bombardier was facing financial headwinds. In 2015,the company sought a partnership with Airbus,which was declined but two years later Airbus came on board with a majority stake in Bombardier. Early in 2020 Airbus increased its stake to a 75 per cent holding. The Bombardier CS100 became the Airbus A220-100,Airbus switched from foe to friend and orders rocketed. The aircraft entered service with launch customer Swiss Global Air Lines in July 2016.
The specs
There are two variants of the twin-engine,single aisle A220. In a typical two-class configuration,the A220-100 has a capacity of 100-120 passengers while the A220-300 seats between 120 and 150. Range is up to 3450 nautical miles (6390 km) for the smaller aircraft,3400 nautical miles (6297 km) for the A220-300. Configuration in economy class is 2-3,but passenger comfort is enhanced with generous seat pitch and width and larger-than-average windows. Seats aboard Delta’s A220-100s have a seat pitch of 30-32 inches (76-81 cm) and a width of 18.6 inches (47cm).