Advancing UK Aerospace, Defence, Security & Space Solutions Worldwide
  • Home
  • /
  • Aerospace
  • /
  • Airbus founding father Roger Béteille passes away

Aerospace

Airbus founding father Roger Béteille passes away

One of Airbus' founding fathers, Roger Béteille, who not only shaped Airbus’ first commercial aircraft – the A300B – but also Airbus Industrie, passed away on 14th June at the age of 97.

Born in Aveyron, France, in 1921, Roger Béteille studied at Supaéro in Toulouse before joining France’s SNCASE, which later became Sud Aviation, in 1943. He received his pilot’s licence in 1945, becoming thereafter flight test engineer in 1952. He was part of the flight test team on the Caravelle’s first flight.

Advertisement
Marshall RT 2

In July 1967, the idea to develop a 300-seater all new wide-body twinjet was progressing and Mr Béteille was appointed chief engineer for the A300 programme at Sud Aviation. It soon became clear that launch customers Air France and Lufthansa wanted a smaller product.

So, in early 1968 Mr Béteille started work in secret on what would become the A300B, a 250 seater with a hold large enough to accommodate two standard containers side by side. The innovative fuselage cross-section he designed is still in use today on the A330.

Known as ‘the man with the white tie’, it was Béteille, along with Airbus’ first production director Felix Kracht, who drew up the workshare which forms the basis of Airbus’ European production system that still defines the company today. “I wanted to use all the available talents and capacities to their utmost without worrying about the colour of the flag or what language was spoken,” he said at the time. He extended this approach to creating a multinational flight test team. The A300B was formally lauched in 1969.

When the Airbus Industrie grouping of economic interests (GIE) was created in 1970, Roger Béteille, now senior vice president of engineering, pushed for its headquarters to be close to the final assembly line in Toulouse, so potential customers could see the product under construction.
 
By the time the A300B made its first flight on 28 October 1972, Béteille had gained a strong understanding of airlines’ needs, something he put to good use during a decade-long campaign to gain customers. Despite the lean years that followed the OPEC oil crisis, his efforts culminated in the A300’s first US customer - Eastern Airlines - in 1977.
 
Eastern was led by the former Commander of Apollo 8, Frank Borman, with whom Roger Béteille built a strong relationship.

Advertisement
ODU RT

From the very start, Roger Béteille nurtured a dream: to found an aircraft family: “I was convinced that Airbus would never take off with a single aircraft,” he explained. “Potential customers would wonder if we’d still be around in ten or 20 years’ time.”

His dream truly came to fruition towards the end of his career, when in March 1984 he managed the formal launch of the A320.

Roger Béteille was instrumental in developing its fly-by-wire (FBW) controls, with increased flight safety and wider fuselage, all of which were key to its huge commercial success. Fly-by-wire also enabled the start of cockpit commonality and cross-crew qualification for pilots across Airbus aircraft.

 
 

Advertisement
Advanced Navigation LB 1
EasyJet in drive to recruit 1,000 new pilots

Aerospace

EasyJet in drive to recruit 1,000 new pilots

26 April 2024

Earlier this week easyJet opened its renowned Generation easyJet Pilot Training programme, which takes aspiring pilots with little or no experience to the cockpit of an Airbus A320 commercial airliner in around two years as qualified co-pilot.

NATS tops list of Europe

Aerospace

NATS tops list of Europe's Climate Leaders

26 April 2024

NATS has been awarded first place in the European Climate Leaders list, a survey of two thousand companies across Europe.

Cranfield commits to sustainable research practices

Aerospace

Cranfield commits to sustainable research practices

26 April 2024

Committing to reduce the environmental impacts of its research activities, Cranfield University has joined organisations in the UK research and innovation sector as a founding signatory to a new agreement on research and innovation practices.

Artemis Aerospace adds hub in Singapore

Aerospace

Artemis Aerospace adds hub in Singapore

26 April 2024

West Sussex based Artemis Aerospace has announced the addition of a hub in Singapore following the launch of two similar sites in the US earlier this year.

Advertisement
Marshall RT 2
Jet Zero Council advance hydrogen aviation discussions at Cranfield

Aerospace Events

Jet Zero Council advance hydrogen aviation discussions at Cranfield

26 April 2024

The Jet Zero Council met at Cranfield University last week to discuss steps towards sustainable aviation with a special focus on hydrogen.

Most dangerous electronic items passengers take on planes revealed

Aerospace Security

Most dangerous electronic items passengers take on planes revealed

26 April 2024

The number of lithium battery fires on planes continues to rise but the personal electronic items which cause the most problems can now be revealed.

Advertisement
Advanced Engineering RT