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Manufacturers:

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Autogyro
AutoGyro
Cierva
ELA
FD-Composites

Business jets
BAe
Beechcraft
Bombardier
Canadair
Cessna
Dassault
Dassault-Breguet
Embraer
Gulfstream
Hawker Beechcraft
IAI
Ilyushin
Learjet
Lockheed
Raytheon
Textron
Textron Aviation

Commercial aircraft
Airbus
BAC
Bombardier
Boeing
Concorde
Embraer
McDonnell Douglas
Sukhoi
Tupolev
Vickers-Armstrongs

Flying boat
Consolidated Catalina

Gliders
DFS
Margański & Mysłowski
Rolladen-Schneider
Schempp-Hirth
Schleicher
Slingsby

Helicopters
Aérospatiale
Agusta
AgustaWestland
Airbus Helicopters
Bell Helicopter
Boeing
Enstrom
Eurocopter
Guimbal
Hughes
Kaman
McDonnell Douglas
MBB
Mil Helicopters
NHIndustries
Nurtanio
Robinson
Schweizer
Sikorsky
SNIAS
Sud-Aviation
Westland

Historical aircraft
BAT
Blériot
Boeing
Boeing-Stearman
Concorde
Consolidated
Douglas
English Electric
Fairchild
Fokker
Folland
Grumman
HAL
Hawker
Nieuport
Spyker
Stampe & Vertongen
Supermarine
Van Berkel
Westland
Wright brothers

Hot air balloons
Cameron
Colt Balloons
Kubicek
Lindstrand
Schroeder Fire Balloons
Thunder & Colt Balloons

Light aircraft
Aero AT
Aeromere
Alpavia
Apex
Aquila
Aviat
BAT
Beechcraft
Cessna
Christen
Cirrus
Czech Sport
Diamond
ERCO
Europa
Extra
Fokker
Fuji
Glasair
HOAC
Jodel
Lancair
Liberty
Mooney
Mudry
NAL
Partenavia
Piaggio
Piper
Platzer
Raytheon
Reims Aviation
Remos
Robin
Rutan
SOCATA
Stolp
Tecnam
Van's
Zenair

Militairy aircraft
Alenia
Alenia Aermacchi
Aero Vodochody
Airbus
Boeing
Consolidated
CASA
Dassault/Dornier
English Electric
Eurofighter
Fairchild
Focke-Wulf
Folland
General Dynamics
Grumman
HAL
Hawker
Hispano
Hunting Aircraft
Lockheed
Lockheed Martin
McDonnell Douglas
Messerschmitt
MiG
Mil Helicopters
NHIndustries
North American
North American Rockwell
Northrop
Panavia
Percival Aircraft
Republic
Short
Sikorsky
Spyker
Sud-Aviation
Sukhoi
Supermarine
Transall
Van Berkel
Westland

Motor gliders
Alpavia
Eiri-Avion
Grob
Scheibe
Sportavia Pützer
Technoflug

Regional aircraft
ATR
BAe
Beechcraft
Bombardier
Dassault
Douglas
Embraer
Fairchild Dornier
Fokker
Piaggio
Saab
Xi'an
Yakovlev

Remanufacturing
Nextant Aerospace

Research
Honeywell Aerospace

Tiltrotor
Bell Boeing

Trainer/aerobatic aircraft
Aeronca
Aero Vodochody
Aerostar
Boeing-Stearman
Christen
Dassault/Dornier
de Havilland
de Havilland Canada
Fokker
Fouga
General Avia
Great Lakes
HAL
Hunting Aircraft
Lancair
Marchetti
Mudry
Noorduyn
North American
Partenavia
Percival Aircraft
Pilatus
Pitts
PZL Mielec
Saab
Sequoia
Short
SIAI-Marchetti
Stampe & Vertongen
Sukhoi
Tipsy
Van's
Vultee
XtremeAir
Zlin

Transport
Alenia
Antonov
Boeing
Ilyushin
Lockheed
McDonnell Douglas
Nurtanio
Partenavia
Transall

Ultralights, microlights
Aerospool
Blackshape
Comco Ikarus
Evektor
Oldřich Olšanský
Remos
TL-Ultralight

Utility aircraft
Antonov
Dornier
Gippsland/GippsAero

Airbus/EADS

Airbus SE (SE = Societas Europaea, a public company registered in accordance with the corporate law of the European Union) is a European multinational corporation, registered in the Netherlands and trading shares in France, Germany and Spain. It designs, manufactures, and sells civil and military aerospace products worldwide and manufactures in multiple countries both inside and outside the European Union. The company has three divisions: Airbus Commercial Aircraft, Airbus Defence and Space, and Airbus Helicopters.
The name "Airbus" was taken from a non-proprietary term used by the airline industry in the 1960s to refer to a commercial aircraft of a certain size and range, for this term was acceptable to the French linguistically.

Airbus's corporate headquarters is located in Leiden, Netherlands, and the main office is located in Toulouse, France. The main civil aeroplane business is based in Blagnac, France, a suburb of Toulouse, with production and manufacturing facilities mainly in France, Germany, Spain, China, United Kingdom and the United States. Final assembly production is based at Toulouse, France; Hamburg, Germany; Seville, Spain; Tianjin, China, and Mobile, Alabama, United States.

Airbus began in 1970 as a consortium of European aerospace manufacturers to manufacture civil aircraft to compete with American companies. It was formally established as Airbus Industrie GIE (GIE = Groupement d'Intérêt Economique avec un siège en Belgique) on 18 December 1970, formed by a government initiative between France, West Germany and the UK that originated in 1967. Since the UK withdrew support for the consortium in April 1969, its initial shareholders were the French company Aérospatiale and the West German company Deutsche Airbus, each owning a 50% share.
In October 1971 the Spanish company CASA acquired a 4.2% share of Airbus Industrie, with Aérospatiale and Deutsche Airbus reducing their stakes to 47.9%. In January 1979 British Aerospace (BAe), which had absorbed Hawker Siddeley in 1977, acquired a 20% share of Airbus Industrie. The majority shareholders reduced their shares to 37.9%, while CASA retained its 4.2%.
Aérospatiale and Deutsche Airbus each took a 36.5% share of production work, Hawker Siddeley 20% and the Dutch company Fokker 7%. Each company would deliver its sections as fully equipped, ready-to-fly items.
Deutsche Aerospace AG (DASA) and the Spanish aircraft company Construcciones Aeronáuticas SA (CASA) agreed to merge with the signature of a memorandum of understanding on 11 June 1999. On 14 October 1999 DASA agreed to merge with Aérospatiale-Matra to create the European Aeronautic Defence and Space Company (EADS). 10 July 2000 was "Day One" for the new company, which became the world's second-largest aerospace company after Boeing and the second-largest European arms manufacturer after BAE Systems.
In 2000 production assets of Airbus Industrie were transferred to a new company, Airbus SAS, in which France, Germany, Spain and the United Kingdom participate.
In January 2001 Airbus Industrie was transformed from an inherently inefficient consortium structure to a formal joint stock company, with legal and tax procedures being finalised on 11 July. Both EADS and BAE transferred ownership of their Airbus factories to the new Airbus SAS in return for 80 % and 20 % shares in the new company respectively. In April 2001 EADS agreed to merge its missile businesses with those of BAE Systems and Alenia Marconi Systems (BAE/Finmeccanica) to form MBDA (Matra BAE Dynamics Alenia). EADS took a 37.5 % share of the new company that was formally established in December 2001 and which thus became the world's second-largest missile manufacturer.
In 2006, EADS acquired BAE Systems's remaining 20% of Airbus. EADS NV was renamed Airbus Group NV and SE in 2014, and 2015, respectively. Due to the dominance of the Airbus SAS division within Airbus Group SE, these parent and subsidiary companies were merged in January 2017, keeping the name of the parent company. The company was given its present name (Airbus SE) in April 2017.

On 16 October 2017, Airbus and Bombardier Aerospace announced a partnership on the CSeries program, with Airbus acquiring a 50.01% majority stake, Bombardier keeping 31% and Investissement Québec 19%, to expand in an estimated market of more than 6,000 new 100-150 seat aircraft over 20 years. Airbus’s supply chain expertise should save production costs but headquarters and assembly remain in Québec while U.S. customers would benefit from a second assembly line in Mobile, Alabama. This transaction was subject to regulatory approvals and was expected to be completed in 2018. Airbus did not pay for its share in the program, nor did it assume any debt. Airbus insists that the company has no plan to buy out Bombardier's stake in the Cseries program and Bombardier would remain a strategic partner after 2025, however clauses allow it to buy out Quebec's share in 2023 and Bombardier's 7 years after the deal closes, though it also stipulates production is required to remain in Quebec until at least 2041.
On June 8, 2018, after regulatory approval, Airbus and Bombardier announced that Airbus will get a majority stake on July 1, 2018. The head office, leadership team and primary final assembly line will stay in Mirabel, with its workforce of 2,200. Bombardier will fund the cash shortfalls if required, up to US$610 million from the second half of 2018 to 2021. The FAL in Mobile will start deliveries in 2020 with a monthly production rate of four, rising to six for a capacity of eight while the main Mirabel FAL can go to ten.


Airbus Commercial Aircraft | Airbus Defence and Space | Airbus Helicopters


Airbus A220
Airbus A300
Airbus A310
Airbus A310 MRTT
Airbus A318
Airbus ACJ318
Airbus A319
Airbus ACJ319
Airbus A320
Airbus ACJ320
Airbus A320neo
Airbus A321
Airbus A321neo
Airbus A330
Airbus A330 MRTT
Airbus A340
Airbus A350
Airbus A380
Airbus Helicopters EC135
Airbus Helicopters H125
Airbus Helicopters H145
Airbus Helicopters H175