There are two types of commercial aircraft. Narrowbody and Widebody, with a particular difference; how many asiles they have. A narrowdoy has one asile, and a widebody has two. But could there one day be an aircraft with three asiles?
Why do aircraft have asiles?
The design of an aircraft with doors at each end of the airframe necessitates an asile running throughout, otherwise passengers would have to climb over each other during boarding (or access their seat through the window).
Therefore airlines have found that the best configuration is an asile running through the middle of the plane and seats fanning out on each row.
When planes got bigger, airlines started to use two asiles (or twin-asiles) to create a new middle collection of seats. While widebody aircraft can technically carry more passengers with a single asile, those sitting there would find it incredibly uncomfortable. Thus, two asiles for long-haul widebody aircraft.
An advantage of this twin-asile design means that no passengers are more than two seats away from an asile at any time, to access food, bathrooms and to disembark. But could we ever see an aircraft with three asiles?
Why would an aircraft have three asiles?
First, we need to justify the reason why an aircraft would need three asiles. Most certainly it would come down to whether or not the aircraft was wide enough. This plane would need to be so wide that any passengers would be split into four distinct seating areas.
A realistic example might a 2-3-3-2 configuration. Some planes can have 10 or 11 seats but would facilitate more privacy for passengers to sit alone or with just one other passenger. It can’t however fit inside a typical plane today as the extra asile would add too much width.
However, if the plane was even wider, but only factions wider than today’s aircraft, it could possibly fit 3-3-3-3 passengers.
Other questions might ask what the point is for this third asile (food delivery or movement around the cabin) , and if the airline can get away with just two asiles and keep the extra room for seats.
Is it possible it could be built?
Interestingly, at one point Lockheed had a design for an aircraft with not three asiles, but four! It would have sat passengers in a 3-4-3-4-3 configuration, and allowed them plenty of common space to get up and move about the cabin.
The plane could carry around 900 passengers on two decks, but serious questions were raised by the FAA how passengers could escape in an emergency.
Although while we can’t say for sure if we would have liked to fly onboard these proposed aircraft, it certainly makes modern ‘wide-bodies’ look awfully narrow indeed.
What do you think? How many asiles should a plane have? Let us know your thoughts in the comments.