Combi Aircraft
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Combi Aircraft
Definition
Aircraft configured to carry both passengers and main-deck cargo simultaneously
A combi aircraft is a commercial airplane configured to carry both fare-paying passengers in an aft cabin section and main-deck cargo in a forward cargo section simultaneously, with the two areas separated by a Class E cargo barrier. The combi represents a deliberate compromise between the people-carrying efficiency of a pure passenger aircraft and the freight capacity of a dedicated freighter.
What Is a Combi Aircraft?
In a combi configuration, the main deck — the primary passenger cabin — is partitioned. A certified cargo barrier wall separates a forward cargo section, where ULD pallets sit on main-deck roller systems, from a smaller aft passenger cabin. The lower holds carry additional belly freight and passenger baggage as normal. The net effect is dramatically increased cargo capacity compared to a passenger-only aircraft while retaining revenue-generating passenger seats. Combis have been certified on several wide-body types, most notably the Boeing 747 Combi variants (747-200C, 747-300M, 747-400M), the Airbus A300C4, and the Boeing 767-200ER Combi.
How It Works in Practice
Airlines operating combis typically serve routes where cargo demand is strong but local passenger demand is insufficient to justify a pure freighter. Historically, the 747 Combi was the backbone of services to West Africa, Central Africa, and isolated Pacific island communities where freight — construction equipment, food supplies, medical goods — was as commercially important as passengers. KLM operated one of the largest combi fleets in history, serving destinations across Africa, Asia, and the Pacific. The cargo section is loaded through the main-deck cargo door before passengers board; the aft cabin is then boarded normally. Load planning is complex, as the cargo and passenger sections have interacting weight limits and center-of-gravity constraints.
Why It Matters
Combis allowed airlines to serve economically marginal or geographically isolated routes by combining passenger and cargo revenue streams on a single aircraft. They were particularly valuable in the era before ubiquitous freighter capacity and before e-commerce drove dedicated freight infrastructure to remote markets. As the Boeing 747-400 passenger fleet ages and retires, many aircraft are converted to pure freighters rather than combis, and new combi orders have been essentially nonexistent since the 1990s. However, some operators continue flying legacy combi fleets on specific thin-market routes where the economics remain favorable.
Key Facts and Figures
- The Boeing 747-400M Combi could carry up to 7 main-deck freight pallets alongside approximately 266 passengers in a mixed configuration
- KLM Royal Dutch Airlines operated the largest combi fleet at its peak, with over 20 Boeing 747 Combis serving destinations in Africa and Asia
- The Class E cargo barrier required on all combi aircraft is a certified fire-resistant wall with no active fire suppression behind it — a regulatory distinction from the Class A and B holds used in pure freighters
- Combi operations require additional crew training for cargo barrier inspection and main-deck cargo emergency procedures
- The design is largely out of production; current industry preference runs to either fully optimized passenger aircraft or dedicated freighter conversions
Related Concepts
Freighter Aircraft, Belly Freight, Unit Load Device, Cargo Revenue, Cargo Load Factor
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Combi Aircraft?
Why is Combi Aircraft important in aviation?
Cargo & Logistics
- Belly Freight
- Freighter Aircraft
- Unit Load Device (ULD)
- Air Waybill (AWB)
- Electronic Air Waybill (e-AWB)
- Dangerous Goods by Air (DGR)
- Cargo Revenue
- Cargo Load Factor (CLF)
- Temperature-Controlled Shipping
- Cargo Hub
- Integrator (Express Carrier)
- Cargo Ground Handler
- Cargo Charter
- IATA Cargo Standards
- Cargo Screening
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