Smiling Beluga XL makes its public debut

Planemaker Airbus has rolled out the first structurally complete airframe for the new BelugaXL freighter aircraft from its assembly hangar in Toulouse.
Once operational, a fleet of five next-generation Beluga XLs will be used to transport completed sections of Airbus aircraft among the company’s European production sites and to its final assembly lines in France, Germany and Spain.
The aircraft, replacing the current small fleet of first generation BelugaSTs, are bespoke for Airbus’ production line and will not be available for third party commercial use.
The BelugaXL has a distinctive bulging upper forward fuselage and large cargo area, which Aribus stated is "hardly recognizable" as the outsized airlifter version of the Airbus A330-200 jetliner from which it is derived.
“We have the A330 as a foundation,” said Bertrand George, head of the BelugaXL programme, adding: “But many changes have been successfully designed, introduced into the aircraft and tested. Transforming an existing product into a super transporter is not a simple task.”
This initial BelugaXL is expected to be flying by mid-2018.
“The whole team is really looking forward to seeing its first flight and, of course, its smiling livery,” said George, referring to the supersized smile that will be painted across the ‘face’ of the transporter, the winning design of six options presented to Airbus employees for a vote in early 2017.
Before that can happen, the aircraft will undergo a months-long battery of tests after installation of its two jet engines, ensuring each of the BelugaXL’s systems function as intended.
All the while, said George: “We will perform bench tests in Toulouse and Hamburg, Germany – testing our systems on flight simulators and in laboratories” as well as using hydraulic jacks to simulate flight loads on full-scale copies of specific joints between the new upper bubble and A330’s lower fuselage.
“The data from these tests will be used to clear the aircraft for flight and, later on, to attain type certification,” the official pronouncement of the aircraft’s safety and airworthiness, said George.
While the first structurally complete BelugaXL moves into its testing phase, the second A330 to be converted into a BelugaXL arrived on schedule in Toulouse to begin its integration process.
Airbus said that the lessons learned from the production of the first transporter will see the assembly time for the second reduced by about two months.
The BelugaXL programme was launched in November 2014 to address Airbus’ increasing transport requirements.
The new freighter is six metres longer, one metre wider and with a payload lifting capacity six tonnes greater than the BelugaST transporter version it is replacing.
The BelugaXL will be able to transport both wings of the A350 XWB jetliner at once, instead of the single wing currently accommodated on the BelugaST. 
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