How modern jets handle the ground differently: Boeing vs. Airbus landing gear
Boeing 787-10Airbus A350-900Sun May 24 2026
Modern airliners like the Boeing 787-10 and Airbus A350-900 may look similar in flight, but their undercarriages tell different engineering stories. Both jets use the standard three-leg setup—two main gears and a nose gear—but how those parts work together reveals a fascinating split between American and European design philosophies.
The Boeing 787-10 keeps things simple by letting one company handle the whole nose gear system. This approach ensures every part talks to the same control unit, reducing software hiccups and making maintenance logs easier to track. Airbus, on the other hand, mixes suppliers: one firm builds the nose leg, another the main gear legs, and a third handles the steering. This might sound messy, but it lets Airbus pick the best specialist for each job, shaving off weight without sacrificing strength.
When it comes to stopping power, Boeing bets on electricity. Instead of messy hydraulic pipes, its carbon brakes clamp shut with electric motors. Fewer fluids mean less risk of leaks and a lighter overall aircraft—good news for fuel bills. Airbus sticks with hydraulics but upgrades the brains behind it. The system is heavier and more complex, yet pilot and mechanic teams already know it inside out, so airlines already have the tools to keep it running.
Weight distribution is another quiet battleground. The 787-10’s extra length demands four-wheel bogies on each main gear leg to spread the load evenly across the tarmac. Airbus goes wider instead: its main legs sit farther apart, lowering runway pressure even on older airports. Tire pressures also vary—about 220 psi for the Dreamliner versus Airbus values that shift with each specific model and load.
Materials matter too. Boeing loads up on titanium to fight rust and save weight over time. Airbus mixes high-strength steel for stiffness with titanium only where it counts, balancing cost and durability. Both strategies cut down on inspections and repairs, a real advantage when global fleets face rising fuel prices and economic uncertainty.
Final differences show up during takeoff. The 787-10’s semi-levered nose gear lifts the rear wheels slightly, giving the nose more room to rise before the tail clears the ground. Airbus relies on a simpler bogie tilt but doesn’t need the extra clearance because its fuselage is shorter. For pilots, this means Boeing’s setup can help lift heavier loads off shorter runways, while Airbus keeps operations predictable and proven.
https://localnews.ai/article/how-modern-jets-handle-the-ground-differently-boeing-vs-airbus-landing-gear-69622dda
actions
flag content