this post was submitted on 07 Jul 2023
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Does someone know why Cathay Pacific and other airlines use different codes for airplanes than what Boeing has listed? For example they list a 777-367 which seems to be a variant of the 777-300 but I can't find any information on what makes it a 367 vs a 300. Is that just the code that CX uses for the 777-300s they own? I also notice they have odd ones like A321-251NX, A330-343X and such. So what do those non-normal model numbers mean?

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[–] ClutchCargo 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

It denotes the variation to the specific fin when it was ordered from the manufacturer. For example, if an airlines wants to use its 777-300 type for a domestic market and needs a smaller center fuel tank to make room for baggage and cargo, that configuration would have a different model subtype number, such as 777-3xx.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

So two companies could technically have 367s, but it probably wouldn't happen? Also a company could have a 367 but still call it a 300? Is there a list of what those subtypes are anywhere?

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

In the case of Boeing, the last 2 numbers are the customer code and it indicates the airline that placed the original order for that particular aircraft. This number does not change and follows the aircraft even after it is sold. Cathay Pacific’s Boeing customer code is 67, so that explains the 777-367 designation. So for example if Cathay Pacific bought a 777-300 from American Airlines, and American had bought that aircraft directly from Boeing…it would be a 777-323 after Cathay acquired it, because that “23” is American’s Boeing customer code.

Regardless of the customer code, it is still referred to in the industry as a 777-300.

Newer Boeing planes like the 777X, 787, 747-8, 737 MAX series do not use the customer code system on their designation. This article may help.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Boeing_customer_codes

As for Airbus, I believe the number behind the series represents the engine option installed for that aircraft, i’m not 100% sure however.

[–] ClutchCargo 1 points 1 year ago

Not sure where a list of all variations would be, but there may be something out there. Lots of companies can have similar subtypes, as fins change airlines frequently, be it by lease or sale. I flew the 767 for 4 years, and my company flight summary has about 6 different 767-300 variations broken down. We got our fins from all over the place, we had fins from Hawaiian to Ethiopian.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

The numbers denote the specific variant, like the engine type and max take-off weight. Airbus has the NEO series (new engines) so they add the N. They're just all model identifiers, like your car may be a GT or XLT or SE.

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