Philippine Airlines’ very first Airbus, the A300B4

Philippine Airlines’ very first Airbus, the A300B4

Today, Airbus is a common sight in the Philippines. Before, it was a minority, and that’s because it was the only Airbus during the early 70s. This is the Airbus A300B4. It is the world’s first twin-engine widebody aircraft in the world which offers medium-range capabilities. It was also the world’s first aircraft to use composite materials on some parts. This was also Philippine Airlines’ very first Airbus jet.

Today, PAL’s fleet consists of most Airbus jets from the A320, A321ceo, A321neo, A330-300, and A350-900. Two of PAL’s Airbus A350-900 were christened after the iconic “Love Bus,” bearing the symbol and logo of the “Love Bus.” It symbolizes PAL’s working relationship and partnership with Airbus for 40 years!

pal airbus a300

All about the Airbus A300B4

Airbus Industrie, a consortium of European aircraft manufacturers consisting of Aerospatiale (merged from Sud Aviation and Nord Aviation), British Aerospace, Deutsche Aerospace, and CASA, wanted to build an aircraft that comes between the widebody and narrowbody aircraft during that time, which were the Boeing 747-200, the tri-jet McDonnell Douglas DC-10, and the Lockheed L-1011 Tristar. The manufacturer ended up with the twin-engine wide-body aircraft that fills the space between the 737 and DC-10. It was a wide-body like a trijet DC-10, but it only carried two engines like the Boeing 737.

The name “A300” came from “A” for Airbus, and “300” means it can take 300 passengers. From then on, Airbus always used the “300” number regardless of the number of seats. Case in point, the A320 does not even fit more than 240 passengers (A321 series).

pal airbus a300

Different variants of the A300

There were different variants of the A300, starting from the A300B1, the prototype aircraft, and a second one, Trans European Airways. The A300B2 was a few frames longer than the B1 and was powered by GE CF6 or Pratt and Whitney JT9D engines. The A300B4 was the version that went into total production. Philippine Airlines was one of its customers, with 14 in the fleet then. PAL’s very first A300B4 had a “Love Bus” graphic at the forward area of the fuselage, which was later reincarnated 40 years later on the A350. The “Love Bus” graphic was exclusively for Philippine Airlines.

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Airbus later came out with the A300-600. It had the same length as the B2 and B4 but increased space over the previous models. The A300 uses the same rear fuselage as the A310-100 (a shorter version of the A300); it uses higher power GE CF-6-80 engines or Pratt & Whitney PW4000 turbofans. It only required two pilots to fly, eliminating the need for a flight engineer, something its widebody counterparts did not have at that time. The Airbus A300-600 was also equipped with wingtip devices or wing fences which made the aircraft more efficient by reducing vortices on the wingtips.

pal airbus a300

The A300 was a very versatile medium-range aircraft for PAL

The A300 had a range from 5,375 km (A300B4) to 7,500 (A300-600) km and could carry a maximum of 345 passengers in a single-class configuration. PAL’s B4 was perfect for its regional and domestic operations where operating a 747 or DC-10 was too big, and a 737 or BAC-111 was too small. PAL acquired the A300B4 in 1979. Its first commercial flight was with Air France in 1974.

The A300 was also the first ETOPS-rated aircraft or Extended Twin-Engine Operations. It can operate further than one hour from a diversion airport with one-engine inoperative at cruise speed, over water or remote lands, on routes previously restricted to three and four-engine aircraft.

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The A300 ceased production in 2007, when the A320, A330, and A340 were already being produced. The A330 and A340 shared the same cross-section as the A300.

​PAL retired the Airbus A300B4 from service in 2001, replaced by the A330-300. Out of the 561 A300s delivered worldwide, 170 are still in operation, with 11 used for passenger services.

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