EVERETT, Wash.,
Aug. 18 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- The first of eight
Boeing (NYSE: BA) 777-300ER (Extended Range) jetliners ordered by TAM
Airlines,
Brazil's largest airline, left Paine Field for
Sao Paulo yesterday.
TAM is the first Latin American airline to operate the 777-300ER, the
world's largest, long-range, twin-engine jetliner, powered by General
Electric's GE-90 Series engines. The delivery also marks TAM's first
acquisition of a new Boeing airplane.
The airline's new 777s feature the Boeing Class 3 Electronic Flight Bag
(EFB), a hardware and electronic data package used by pilots that replaces
traditional flight manuals and provides operational and safety benefits. TAM
is the first South American carrier to incorporate a Class 3 EFB, which is
fully integrated into a commercial airplane's avionics. The EFB features an
Onboard Performance Tool, using sophisticated calculations to help the airline
optimize its payload for airport and weather conditions and applicable
regulations and policies.
TAM plans to operate its 777-300ERs on international flights within South
America and connecting South America with Europe and North America.
"The 777-300ER will provide TAM with the lowest fuel consumption and
operating costs available for airplanes in this class," said John Wojick, vice
president sales, Latin America and the Caribbean, Boeing Commercial Airplanes.
"Advanced avionics of the Electronic Flight Bag, will further improve TAM's
operating economics and reduce emissions."
"These acquisitions reinforce our policy of operating a young fleet that
provides more passenger comfort in our quest for TAM 'Service Excellence.' The
777-300ER also supports TAM's two other pillars of excellence upon which our
company measures performance -- 'Technical-Operational Excellence' and
'Excellence in Management,'" said Captain David Barioni Neto, TAM's CEO.
The fuel-efficient 777-300ER is capable of carrying 365 passengers up to
7,930 nautical miles (14, 685 kilometers). The efficient twin-engine design
means low fuel consumption, less noise and cleaner emissions.
EFB is a core technology of Boeing's vision of an e-Enabled air transport
system, where data, information and knowledge can be shared instantly across
an air-transport enterprise. Jeppesen's award-winning Airplane Moving Map
-- currently available only on Class 3 EFBs -- enhances runway situational
awareness by integrating geo-referencing technology with Jeppesen airport taxi
charts to show flight crews exactly where they are on the tarmac.