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| Boeing Co.
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| The first 787 Dreamliner designated for flight test is in a paint hangar at Boeing’s Everett facility. On Wednesday, workers finished installing reinforcements on the airplane’s side-of-body section. |
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Published: Friday, November 13, 2009
Boeing says 787 fixes are done
By Michelle Dunlop Herald Writer
EVERETT — The Boeing Co. has finished installing a structural fix on its first 787 jet, which the company said will fly by year’s end.
Boeing postponed the first flight of its mostly composite 787 jet in June, after finding a structural weakness in the airplane’s side. Workers at the company’s Everett factory have been modifying the first 787 aircraft to strengthen the area. The modifications were finished Wednesday, the company said.
“Completing this work is a significant step toward first flight,” said Scott Fancher, vice president of the 787 program. Boeing remains “confident the first flight of the 787 Dreamliner will occur before the end of the year.”
Although Boeing’s 787 jet has garnered tremendous market interest with 850 orders, the Dreamliner’s first delivery has been delayed by more than two years.
The company racked up delays as its global suppliers, charged with designing and building major sections of the 787, struggled. Both customer confidence and Boeing’s stock price have suffered as a result of the delays.
Modification on the 787 entailed the installation of new fittings at 34 stringer locations within the joint where the wing is attached to the fuselage.
Boeing plans to finish installations on the static test airframe and the second flight-test airplane in the coming days. And Boeing continues modifications on the fatigue test airplane and other flight-test aircraft of which there are six.
“We will test the modification on the full-scale static test airframe later this month,” Fancher said. “As soon as we confirm the loads are being handled appropriately in the joint we will complete preflight activities on the airplane.”
Boeing also is restoring access doors, systems, seals and fasteners that were removed from the first 787. When that task is finished, the flight-test team will perform another set of gauntlet and taxi tests to ensure that all systems are ready for flight.
Fancher noted that with the exception of a single high-speed taxi test, all remaining flight-test activities have been completed on the first flight-test airplane. Boeing has less than seven weeks if it hopes to fly the first 787 by Dec. 31.
Also this week, Boeing announced that it will break ground Nov. 20 on its second 787 assembly line in South Carolina. Last month, the company selected Charleston over Everett for the new 787 factory, which it hopes to open in 2011.
Boeing’s shares closed Thursday at $50.28, down 40 cents.
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