787 Dreamliner could take flight next week
SEATTLE -- After two years of delays, Boeing Co. said the long-anticipated first flight of its new 787 jetliner could come as early as Tuesday.
Boeing announced Thursday that its window for a first flight would open next week with the actual flight timing dependent on final internal reviews, taxi testing, Federal Aviation Administration documentation and the weather.
For the 787 to be cleared for takeoff, there must be good visibility, no standing water on the runway and little to no wind, said Yvonne Leach, spokeswoman for the 787 program.
The company said it has completed "final gauntlet" testing on the 787 and verified that fixes it made to address a structural problem worked.
Scott Fancher, vice president and general manager of the 787 program, said in two days of testing the company checked out all the airplane systems, such as avionics, hydraulics and electrical.
Boeing, based in Chicago, earlier reinforced weak points near the area where the wings attach to the fuselage, then conducted a so-called static test, essentially bending the wings , on the repairs.
Fancher said Boeing successfully completed its analysis of that static test.
Boeing said the 787, made mostly of lightweight composite materials, will be more efficient, quieter and have lower emissions than other airplanes. The midsize plane also will have wider seats and aisles and larger windows.
Depending on its configuration, the plane will hold as many as 330 passengers. Deliveries are estimated to begin in the fourth quarter of 2010.
Boeing recently picked North Charleston as the site of a new assembly plant for the Dreamliner. Right now, the plane is assembled only in Everett, Wash.
The company has taken a new approach to building airplanes with the 787, relying on suppliers around the world to build huge sections of the plane. But that approach so far has proven to be problematic, with ill-fitting parts and other problems hampering production.
Boeing identified the most recent problems when it postponed the 787's first test flight and deliveries for a fifth time in June.
The plane is more than two years behind schedule, and repeated delays have cost the company money, credibility and sales.
Some airlines have been forced to cancel or postpone plans to buy new 787s, partly due to weak travel demand amid the global economic downturn. Yet the 787 remains Boeing's best-selling new plane to date.
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