Boeing Delays 1st Flight of Dreamliner
Published: June 23, 2009 nytimes.com
The Boeing Company said Tuesday that it would delay the first flight of its new jet, the 787, the latest setback in a program what is consider crucial to the plane maker’s future.
“First flight and first delivery will be rescheduled following the final determination of the required modification and testing plan,” Boeing said in a statement. “It will be several weeks before the new schedule is available.”
Boeing had said in December that the first flight of the jet, the Dreamliner, would take place in the second quarter of 2009, in time for delivers to be made in the first quarter of next year. It had initially hoped the plane would fly before the end of 2008 and had expected to make its first deliveries in late 2009.
At that time, Boeing attributed the delay to a strike by the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers and also said it had encountered problems with fasteners used on early production airplanes.
But on Tuesday, the company said the flight needed to be delayed in order to need to reinforce an area within the side-of-body section of the aircraft. The aircraft’s airframe made from lightweight composite material instead of aluminum.
“Structural modifications like these are not uncommon in the development of new airplanes, and this is not an issue related to our choice of materials or the assembly and installation work of our team,” said Scott Carson, the president of Boeing Commercial Airplanes.
The 787, a wide-bodied, long-range aircraft, is expected to be 20 percent more fuel efficient than other planes used on long trips.
Boeing, which has worked on the plane since the late 1990s, announced its first order for the 787 in 2004, from All Nippon Airways. Since then, it has received nearly 900 orders from many of the world’s biggest airlines, making it the most popular new plane in the company’s history.
American customers for the Dreamliner include Delta Air Lines, which inherited orders placed by Northwest Airlines when the two companies merged this year, as well as Continental Airlines and American Airlines.
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