MRJ/SpaceJet | A Japanese attempt

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 204

  • @SuperDave_BR549
    @SuperDave_BR549 Год назад +51

    it is always a superb way to start the morning watching a freshly minted aerial masterpiece by the Sky-meister.
    thank you!!

  • @justinskidmore5780
    @justinskidmore5780 Год назад +38

    I almost thought you would talk about MHIRJ buying the CRJ program from Bombardier

  • @AC_702
    @AC_702 Год назад +31

    I remember seeing the MRJ/Spacejet when I flew into Portland airport. It is a good looking aircraft, but it just felt like it had a cloud of "not going to fly on one soon" feel about it.

  • @Incidental104
    @Incidental104 11 месяцев назад +23

    Mitsubishi: "Hey Embraer can I use your homework?"
    Embraer: "Sure but change it up a little"
    Mitsubishi: "Do I have to?"

  • @callenclarke371
    @callenclarke371 Год назад +11

    Goodness! A dramatic tale. I had no idea what the history of this plane was. It's fascinating. Like so many designs prior to it, general technological excellence and even technical innovation do not guarantee success in the red-water Airline industry. A fascinating cautionary tale.

  • @Ficon
    @Ficon Год назад +10

    Excellent story telling, thank you for sharing!

  • @databong
    @databong Год назад +6

    Thanks for all the well edited Godzilla clips :)

  • @dodoubleg2356
    @dodoubleg2356 Год назад +7

    Another great vid. I especially like how you try & stay unbiased, & just report the content.

  • @VoreAxalon
    @VoreAxalon Год назад +7

    I adore this kinda insight into aviation. I love this channel!

  • @rspectx
    @rspectx Год назад +4

    I remember seeing it here at dfw so many years ago. Would have been lovely to see fly

  • @jeffreydeeds9225
    @jeffreydeeds9225 Год назад +12

    I wish it could have worked out. I respect the fact that they gave it a go. It's a very hyper competitive aviation world and gaining a foothold is no small feat. Better luck going forward. I like seeing more diversity of airliners at airports.

    • @4evertrue830
      @4evertrue830 Год назад +2

      Yeah, they gave it a go alright. A go at wasting tax payers money.

    • @paulsz6194
      @paulsz6194 Год назад +2

      Perhaps the could market it as a Business Jet?

  • @randomuser1967
    @randomuser1967 9 месяцев назад +1

    Great channel. Always a pleasure

  • @Legend410c
    @Legend410c Год назад +2

    The PW90 joke, a MOGEURA clip to show off Japanese ability... this one's a work of art.

  • @Iskalawagz24
    @Iskalawagz24 Год назад +21

    It was a beautiful aircraft. It deeply saddened me that the program was scrapped. I believe then it was the teue successor to the YS-11 that is very familiar plane here.

  • @thecouncilofmockingjays
    @thecouncilofmockingjays 4 месяца назад +1

    Mitsubishi, the King of almost.
    Almost having a superior WW2 fighter planes.
    Almost having a great alternative to F-16.
    Almost having great commercial jet airplanes.
    Almost being a great sports car maker.
    Almost being the greatest at rally sports.

  • @GSteel-rh9iu
    @GSteel-rh9iu Год назад +1

    Over the time span certification requirements changed; it turned out the electrical wiring of the first four prototype aircraft had been done differently and redoing electrical wiring would have added more cost and a few years more. Amazing.

  • @Rollexm
    @Rollexm Год назад +6

    Sad. Such a beautiful jet.

  • @TheTompinai
    @TheTompinai Год назад +4

    Beautiful!

  • @tommytomas-fr3sh
    @tommytomas-fr3sh Год назад +4

    the problem with Japanese manufacturing is that they love the idea of a committee, no one wants to be calling the shot, so it has to be a committee decision.

  • @mrrolandlawrence
    @mrrolandlawrence Год назад +3

    indeed the embraer Ejet E2 family pretty much have this plane covered. As its pretty similar, japan could licence build some for their domestic market.

  • @jessiegimeno8892
    @jessiegimeno8892 2 месяца назад

    thank you MRJ beautiful aircraft one and most comfortable design

  • @I-am-awayTOM
    @I-am-awayTOM Год назад +5

    Competition... is great for the consumers but a bitch for the manufacturers.

  • @bhumiriady
    @bhumiriady Год назад +10

    Great video on the Mitsubishi SpaceJet, Sky!
    I have to admit, this is without doubt, one big "what could have been" in the regional jet market. Had it entered service, it could have given the Airbus A220 and Embraer E-Jet E2 a run for their money.

    • @DaveSCameron
      @DaveSCameron Год назад

      Pyarr coppy of #TSR-2

    • @SkyshipsEng
      @SkyshipsEng  Год назад +13

      I think that the A220 is not exactly a competitor to it, it is noticeably larger, but the E-jet, yes, maybe

    • @bhumiriady
      @bhumiriady Год назад +1

      @@SkyshipsEng Thank you for the quick reply and explanation, Sky!^^

    • @oco8783
      @oco8783 Год назад +1

      ​@@DaveSCameron?

    • @4evertrue830
      @4evertrue830 Год назад +1

      The problem is, the tendency for all aircraft manufacturers to focus on the american market. If the americans don't buy, they will not build. Why? Is the world avaition market not bigger than the US avaition market?

  • @najmicreativetv9491
    @najmicreativetv9491 Год назад +3

    quite sad that it ended up scrapped, and not a single prototype was preserved

  • @maestromecanico597
    @maestromecanico597 Год назад +1

    That is too bad. But now they have experience in new technologies. Something should come from that.

  • @CinemaDemocratica
    @CinemaDemocratica Год назад +1

    I love this channel and I was typically highly entertained -- but there's one thing about the cold open that confuses me now that I've seen the whole thing: We were to understand that the failure of the MRJ hinged on one improbably insignificant misstep, but then the missteps documented in the body of the video seemed much bigger. Which one was the supposedly small error that ultimately brought the project down, the composites, the union deal in the US, the pandemic?

  • @USNveteran
    @USNveteran Год назад +4

    Personally I always liked the look of it to me it seemed like a little 757. Then again the YS was a good aircraft in it's time. I think Mitsubishi will probably be able to learn from this and come up with an updated version of the MRJ. FLY NAVY!!!

    • @awuma
      @awuma Год назад +2

      Mitsubishi wants to get out of the civilian aircraft market.

  • @blackmamba3427
    @blackmamba3427 Год назад +2

    Beautiful jet❤

  • @Epic_Routes
    @Epic_Routes Год назад +45

    Japan mistake was allowing America in to industry. Japan used to be big in most industries then they became American corporation in to their industries.

    • @FirstLast_Nba
      @FirstLast_Nba Год назад +14

      Having America as an occupying master is such a drag.

    • @kaloschke
      @kaloschke Год назад +12

      Same in germany...

    • @Bac4-qu6qg7sk4v
      @Bac4-qu6qg7sk4v Год назад +18

      Actually, Japan would have never had anywhere near the industry they had if not for US keeping the red plague (russians) out, giving aid/subsidizing, transferring technology, securing the oceans and allowing access to it's market. A lot of this applies to Germany as well.

    • @FirstLast_Nba
      @FirstLast_Nba Год назад +6

      @@Bac4-qu6qg7sk4v Shalom....???

    • @daseinzigwahrem
      @daseinzigwahrem Год назад +2

      ​@@Bac4-qu6qg7sk4vYes, the comments here are pretty dumb.

  • @Darryl6636
    @Darryl6636 Год назад +2

    What a beauty

  • @Persian-Immortal
    @Persian-Immortal Год назад +2

    now thats a beauty!

  • @awuma
    @awuma Год назад +5

    Mitsubishi bought the CRJ program from Bombardier in 2020. A week ago or so I flew in an Air Canada Jazz CRJ-900 already renamed as the Mistubishi 900. It was quite nice, with modern-sized overhead luggage bins. However, the future of Mitsubishi Aircraft Corporation is uncertain, with MHI planning to liquidate it.

    • @johniii8147
      @johniii8147 Год назад +1

      It didn't really make sense buying the CRJ program. It was already dead itself and no longer produced and operating aircraft are being phased out pretty quickly.

    • @mandonov21
      @mandonov21 Год назад

      @@johniii8147 They bought the CRJ so that they could have manufacturing, support, and supply bases in North America, which would have helped the SpaceJet to enter the market there.

    • @johniii8147
      @johniii8147 Год назад +1

      @@mandonov21 That didn't prove a wise move as the entire program didn't. The plane didn't meet scope clauses anyway so it wasn't really going to a factor in NA

    • @sosochio4374
      @sosochio4374 Год назад

      You should be worried if Mitsubishi took over CRJ because Mistbushi has a bad record of falsifying its product safety records. The products ranged from steel, electronics, rolling stocks, cars, and maybe CRJ in the future.

    • @johniii8147
      @johniii8147 Год назад

      @@sosochio4374 The CRJ isn't being made. Program shut down. They bought the program for the support of exiting the existing service infastuce for the CRJ.

  • @arthurp-er1yz
    @arthurp-er1yz 7 месяцев назад

    I'm glad we're Allies with Japan now. I love the cultural back bone. Notice, :"they msnufactured our designs under licence". It's what an honorable person/ nation, would do. I look forward to Japans tech input, for our military.

  • @leisamaggard113
    @leisamaggard113 Год назад +2

    its a shame! such a beautiful aircraft!

  • @jacobzimmermann59
    @jacobzimmermann59 Год назад +3

    There are a few things I don't understand here. How come they lacked competence in the area of composites? Isn't the 787's composite fuselage manufactured by the Japanese? Moreover, it seems to defy logic that they estimated the cost of the program to be ~ $1.5B. How could they expect to develop and build a whole new aircraft with so little investment, when the A330 Neo - a simple modernisation of an already existing aircraft - cost more than $4B?

    • @Bac4-qu6qg7sk4v
      @Bac4-qu6qg7sk4v Год назад

      IIRC it wasn't a whole new aircraft but a development of the CRJ they had aquired

    • @4evertrue830
      @4evertrue830 Год назад +1

      ​@@Bac4-qu6qg7sk4v It was a whole new aircraft. Most changes they had planned for the aircraft qualifies it as such; e.g designing a rear cargo compartment rather than placing cargo beneath the fuselage which is common for commercial aircrafts, using composites and not aluminium throughout the manufacturing stage.

    • @Bac4-qu6qg7sk4v
      @Bac4-qu6qg7sk4v Год назад

      @@4evertrue830 True but what did they pay 0.75B $ for if they started everything from scratch?

    • @awuma
      @awuma Год назад

      @@Bac4-qu6qg7sk4v The CRJ is rear-engined and is a long line of many decades of development and new versions. MAC aquired it in 2020 when Bombardier divested. However, the era of the rear-engined regional jets is almost over.

    • @Bac4-qu6qg7sk4v
      @Bac4-qu6qg7sk4v Год назад

      @@awuma Ok so basically they somehow bought the CRJ as a good will gesture and proceeded to start their own project from scratch.

  • @arthurmuller671
    @arthurmuller671 Год назад +1

    Well done with no lack of sufficient humor

  • @angelarch5352
    @angelarch5352 Год назад +2

    aww, that was a cool looking plane. I hope they can make another plane in the future using that knowledge the gained.

    • @johniii8147
      @johniii8147 Год назад

      If they were smart, they learned their lesson and won't go there again. It's entirely different being a supplier vs handing the design and program management of new plane start to finish.

  • @ipattison
    @ipattison Год назад +1

    If there was no point in having carbon fuselage because the small size meant inconsequential weight savings, why bother with the relatively miniscule carbon control surfaces?

  • @pizzagogo6151
    @pizzagogo6151 Год назад +1

    Splitting hairs - but the Mitsubishi F2 is not strictly just building licensed aircraft. Yes heavily derived from F16 but technically a native-ish design😊....I was a tiny bit disappointed as thought we were going to get through a discussion on Mitsubishi aircraft without mentioning the A6M...but it was a minimal mention so well done on that😅

    • @ronjon7942
      @ronjon7942 Год назад +1

      Coulda been worse - he could’ve brought up the Proudia!

  • @rtjahyadi7868
    @rtjahyadi7868 9 месяцев назад +1

    Mitsubishi used to produce aircrafts during WW II, why did they stop making planes ✈️?

    • @KlaunFuhrer-du7fr
      @KlaunFuhrer-du7fr 7 месяцев назад

      they are under US occupation since end ww2

  • @ronjon7942
    @ronjon7942 Год назад +1

    SpaceJet? That’s what Sales came up with? I guess they managed to book hundreds of orders, but, SpaceJet? 😊. Was that as in ‘outer space’ or ‘a lot of available passenger space?’
    Such a beautiful design and aircraft, though. It’s too bad Japan didn’t make it to market, because I bet it eventually would have been a world class RJ, and a huge boost for Japan’s indigenous aircraft industry. The experience, especially in the realm of composite technologies, could have been a crucial asset for Japan’s 5th and 6th gen combat aircraft plans.
    It’s too bad Mitsubishi couldn’t transfer their T-2 and F-1 military and the MU-2 general aviation aircraft successes and experience to the SpaceJet. But perhaps the technology gap between those successes and the MRJ, along w the span of time, were just too great and long to transfer - heck, the SpaceJet design team probably weren’t even born yet at the heyday of the MU-2, T-2, and F-1.

  • @jessebrook1688
    @jessebrook1688 Год назад

    Maybe Mitsubishi's purchase of Bombardier's CRJ plans and plane maintenance can be used to their advantage if they try again.

  • @genxpilot69
    @genxpilot69 2 месяца назад

    So sad! Love the MRJ!

  • @mikeletaurus4728
    @mikeletaurus4728 10 месяцев назад

    Another excellent upload. I would appreciate it if you were to recount dimensions and distances in feet and miles (not just meters and kilometers), weights in pounds or tons (not just kilograms), and pounds of thrust in addition to kilonewtons.

  • @28ebdh3udnav
    @28ebdh3udnav Год назад +2

    I think its the right plane at the wrong time. Just like the Tu 204

  • @leonelson8834
    @leonelson8834 Год назад +1

    Instead trying in Japan they should have come to India where they can get labor cost at a cheaper rate. Just get main Japanese designers and some engineers who play key roles

  • @miketeeveedub5779
    @miketeeveedub5779 Год назад +5

    It's a cruel twist of fate where the Japanese failed to compete in the airliner industry when they dominated the vehicle industry during the same time period. Goes to show that you can be a great doctor, but a lousy dentist! 😉

  • @luchito1968oo
    @luchito1968oo Год назад +1

    La competencia no deja surgir un nuevo competidor!!! no les conviene.

  • @ghoziazmyrakhman9479
    @ghoziazmyrakhman9479 Год назад +1

    Please do Fokker 27/28/100 next

  • @rafaelwilks
    @rafaelwilks Год назад

    What a sad irony - Mitsubishi was developing this rival to the CRJ, and it would have had a cabin wider than even the E-Jet.
    Now all they have is the narrow CRJ 😐
    6:16 if the SpaceJet succeeded, it would most likely face issues with its Geared Turbofans, but the airframe would have been awesome!

  • @elcheapo5302
    @elcheapo5302 Год назад +5

    Nice airplane, 20 years too late.

  • @ianendangan7462
    @ianendangan7462 Год назад +2

    We in the Philippines used to operate Nakajima YS11 and I rode with them several times as a kid

  • @Patrick-eieio
    @Patrick-eieio Год назад +2

    Too bad. It looked promising. It kind of reminds me of Lockheed's struggles with the L1011.

  • @jkardez4794
    @jkardez4794 Год назад

    AirIndia doesn't have the Pratt&Whitney engine for its A320 fleet .

  • @DJAYPAZ
    @DJAYPAZ Год назад +1

    Given the delivery wait times major airlines are enduring for new aircraft, is there an opportunity here for this Mitsubishi aircraft ?

    • @jackroutledge352
      @jackroutledge352 Год назад +1

      Nah, they were still a long way from certification when it was cancelled. Also, tooling up for production would have cost a fortune, and more delays. The cancellation was well overdue when it was announced. The writing had been on the wall since about 2015.

    • @4evertrue830
      @4evertrue830 Год назад

      My opinion; it was a scam to make money from the govt, japanese style. 😅😊

    • @DJAYPAZ
      @DJAYPAZ Год назад +1

      @@jackroutledge352 Thanks for replying.

  • @HappyRescues
    @HappyRescues Год назад +3

    Its a damn shame.. all those resources and all that energy wasted for nothing

  • @ArjunSingh-fv4cb
    @ArjunSingh-fv4cb Год назад

    In my humble understanding of the tech-economic genre, a particular vantage may claim that any new category of service technology, especially in the aviation sector, derives a course of market predictability by applying a concert of three driving vectors, one is the industry's own aspiration to create sustainable proliferations at various price levels of its deliverances; second, the growth and expectation buildups of a specified economic group that they tag as their potential patrons; and the third, the organic industrial environment and the changes and reforms and texturing that emerges via populist socio economic factors, which can be scaled and more or less mitigated for if the first two vectors are precisely mapped and their formative organicity remains sovereign. So, from this humble perspective, I consider that the patron group which was to create the air-traveler genre for the mentioned airliner and the other airliners of its class, was in a migratory zone, and thus that particular aviation class perhaps couldn't invent a populist market concept or a self appreciating lifestyle trend to bracket this patron group's commutation style or requirements, and thus they organically remained gravitated towards institutional private jets or bigger airliners operated by established operators, more numerically and service logic capacitated to serve the existing large format aviation infrastructure.

  • @spacecooookie
    @spacecooookie Год назад

    Hi Sky, can you do the British Handley Page Vector Bomber pleeeeeeease? 🙏

  • @constantinegiotopoulos3033
    @constantinegiotopoulos3033 Год назад +1

    I would have bought one if I could afford it

  • @largezo7567
    @largezo7567 Год назад +1

    Oslo is not in north-eastern Finland!

  • @Blank00
    @Blank00 5 месяцев назад

    What’s the latest with the Kawasaki YPX?

  • @rambo410
    @rambo410 Год назад

    If I the country of Brazil I would be pissed. This sure looks like the Ebraer 195 family

  • @SiVlog1989
    @SiVlog1989 Год назад

    When you talked about the phrase "made in Japan," it made me think of a line from the third Back to the Future film:
    "...no wonder the circuit fails, it says 'made in Japan',"
    "What do you mean Doc, all the best stuff is made in Japan,"
    "Unbelievable,"

  • @murattatlloglu219
    @murattatlloglu219 14 дней назад

    Çok iyi projeymiş

  • @TJHofNZ
    @TJHofNZ Год назад

    Mitsubishi motors is owned by Nissan/Renault - completely separate from MHI these days

  • @stalag14
    @stalag14 Год назад

    I'd buy one

  • @rapidthrash1964
    @rapidthrash1964 Год назад +3

    I wish this program will be resurrected

    • @4evertrue830
      @4evertrue830 Год назад

      Only if they are willing to partner and share technology with China or Russia, both have the money to invest, but you know how much Japan hates China and also dislikes Russia. I don't see it going anywhere. 😕

  • @stephenfazekas5054
    @stephenfazekas5054 10 месяцев назад +1

    They made it too big to be a regional jet but too small to compete with the 318, e-jet and a220.

  • @Sacto1654
    @Sacto1654 Год назад +3

    The MRJ failed because that very market was taken by the Bombardier CS100, and even more so once Airbus took over the Bombardier C-Series program in October 2017 and used its resources to support the now-A220 program.

    • @4evertrue830
      @4evertrue830 Год назад +1

      Maybe, but in the last decade there has been a shortage of new aircrafts in the business corporate avaition industry, as well as not much competition in the larger turbo-prop area too. If they really cared, they could have modified it to fit into these two fields of avaition easily.

    • @johniii8147
      @johniii8147 Год назад +2

      No the MRJ failed because they lacked the expertise to properly develop it.

  • @syedputra5955
    @syedputra5955 Год назад

    They should have just work with BAE and modify RJX from 4 to 2 engines.

  • @bOZONee
    @bOZONee Год назад +9

    It's just like Lexus LFA of Airliner, over ambitious, over budget, and failed miserably

    • @burntnougat5341
      @burntnougat5341 Год назад +1

      Except unlike the LFA, it was never sold commercially

  • @terryterry1655
    @terryterry1655 Год назад

    Similar size as embraer e195-e2

  • @worawatli8952
    @worawatli8952 Год назад +2

    It was a bummer this didn't get into production, they tried to innovate a lot and came out at the worst time in pandemic, Japanese take times to do things, to do it best. Just like Japanese mobile phones, if you ever had one, I have few until I can't get them anymore, you would wonder how the heck they made profit making such quality products, none, they made zero profit. lol It was why they are gone from market. Fewer Japanese brands are on the global market now because despite their quality, their prices can't compete, and their products release are very slow. But I'll buy Japanese whenever I see its value, they still make many things that better than Chinese and Korean.

    • @johniii8147
      @johniii8147 Год назад

      Doesn't really have much to do with the pandemic. It has already failed long before that.

  • @watershed44
    @watershed44 Год назад +1

    "Lost opportunities and over confidence*

  • @joellamoureux7914
    @joellamoureux7914 Год назад +1

    As an auto mechanic, I would be very apathetic to fly in a Mitsubishi plane. Their vehicles (autos) are assembled well, but designed poorly. I cannot understand why they suffer from such catastrophic timing belt failures. I feel they used far too weak belts for their very springy valve assemblies. Toyotas belts last 200k+ miles sometimes 400k! I see mitsus breaking at 80k. I don't believe it's the belt at fault. Engineering faults like that in a plane would be really unfortunate. Luckily cars don't have to fly, or I'm afraid there would be lots of Mitsubishi rain storms.

  • @realLsf
    @realLsf Год назад +1

    A beautiful aircraft. What a crying shame

  • @Ramesh-ef8ev
    @Ramesh-ef8ev Год назад

    IT'S RIGHT TIME FOR JAPAN 🇯🇵 TO ENTER AIR LINES INDUSTRY WITH OUT WASTING A MINUTE WITH PARTNERING WITH INDIA . ALMOST ALL THEIR AIRCRAFT'S CAN BE USED BY INDIA 🇮🇳 ALONE 25, 50 ,100 , 150 SEATS AIRCRAFT'S VERY IDEAL FOR INDIA DOMESTIC AIRLINE INDUSTRY .

  • @DJ99777
    @DJ99777 Год назад

    I hope to one day fly the Mitsubishi.

  • @timbaskett6299
    @timbaskett6299 Год назад

    With all of the "high volume" BBJ (Boeing Business Jets models), I could see an MBM (Mitsubushi Business Model) version. Mitsubishi should look to make a regional version of the DC-8.....fast, small and with a short take off and landing model. Call it the MRQT (Mitsubishi Regional Quiet Transsonic).

    • @4evertrue830
      @4evertrue830 Год назад +1

      Are you trying to encourage them to waste more tax payers money? They don't have the technical knowhow from the beginning.

  • @slypear
    @slypear Год назад +1

    Astute quote @ 11:11
    That said, such a pity this machine was never realised~

  • @nicolek4076
    @nicolek4076 Год назад +12

    When I was very young, over 65 years ago, "Made in Japan" was a mark of cheap and nasty manufacture, poor quality and pretty useless products.

  • @freeworld88888
    @freeworld88888 Год назад +1

    china Arj21 series are winning in Asia

  • @bricefleckenstein9666
    @bricefleckenstein9666 Год назад

    0:06
    Looks like Grant County International, where a lot of the US flight testing for the MRJ was done.
    I'd see it flying overhead about once a week during that time (I lived in the general area at the time).
    The COVID hit, and appears to have killed the project for a long time if not totally.

  • @vtwinbreed
    @vtwinbreed Год назад +2

    It's really unfortunate, it looked like it could have been a nice contender.

  • @malcolmdean6899
    @malcolmdean6899 Год назад

    I read that Mitsubishi cancelled the spacejet

  • @supa3ek
    @supa3ek Год назад

    Mitsubishi itself is under pressure financially. Its auto division is almost dead as well !!
    They surely overestimated themselves !!

  • @johnal-kel9063
    @johnal-kel9063 2 месяца назад +1

    The Plane Only Had A Planned Range Of 800 NM..............That's a Joke(For Its Size)?

  • @EuropeanRailfanAlt
    @EuropeanRailfanAlt 9 месяцев назад

    The newest regional jets aren't doing very well. The A220, albeit not entirely a regional jet, is only doing well because Airbus took over it.

  • @Atricapilla
    @Atricapilla Год назад +1

    Such a shame. Would have been great to have the MRJ available to airlines and passengers.

  • @burntnougat5341
    @burntnougat5341 Год назад +1

    Lmao 1:00 you used a bit from the Fast and Furious movie. The actor is Korean not Japanese

  • @slatkismedenjak
    @slatkismedenjak Год назад +1

    ISTI KAO EMBRAER ....

  • @gmh2050
    @gmh2050 8 месяцев назад

    Where are the sources of your words..!!?

  • @waterunderthefridge6058
    @waterunderthefridge6058 Год назад +1

    it was quite sad to see the test aircraft being broken up a few months ago with so little sentimentality. A commercial failure but a chapter in the history of aviation for Japan and the world nonetheless

    • @johniii8147
      @johniii8147 Год назад

      One they would rather forget and get all that money back.

  • @Foxx607
    @Foxx607 Год назад +2

    Such a shame 😢 would have being a good aircraft

  • @cuckoonut1208
    @cuckoonut1208 Год назад

    Better luck next time MR. J.

  • @Sciolist
    @Sciolist Год назад +1

    Making civil airliners is relatively easy, making profitable and successful civil airliners not so much.
    MHI killed it when they realise that field it was entering was crowded and it'll never profitable. I personally thought design could have had a successful 2nd career as a military platform, but here again domestic demand was already being met by other airframes and Japan does not want to become mass market defence exporter.

  • @watershed44
    @watershed44 Год назад

    *I wonder why another company didn't buy the license to build this aircraft?*
    Essentially all the hard work was done, only thing left was to put it into production

    • @awuma
      @awuma Год назад +3

      Hard to compete with the A220 and E-Jet E2 series. The A220 is doing well in the market, the E2 poorly (despite Embraer's well-established market presence).

  • @mejestic124
    @mejestic124 Год назад

    They should first had to make a indigenous military transport aircraft.

    • @FirstDagger
      @FirstDagger Год назад +3

      Kawasaki does their large indigenous military transport aircraft with their own indigenous airframes. The issue was Mitsubishi.

  • @michaelsamuel9917
    @michaelsamuel9917 Год назад

    They should've done a partnership with Bombardier !

    • @johniii8147
      @johniii8147 Год назад

      Two weak players don't make a strong one. Just gets into a bigger mess.

  • @sosochio4374
    @sosochio4374 Год назад +1

    Made in Japan? The decision to make a jet by Mitsubishi is bad karma because Mitsubishi is known to falsify the safety records of its products ranging from electronics, steels, cars, etc. Actually, the company lied many times regarding the design and progress of the MRJ. The MRJ project was doomed for reasons.