Nigelinoz
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- Dec 14, 2008
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That's probably the best news that the CEO of Airbus has had for ages.
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Scott Fancher, the head of the Dreamliner program, explained the structural problem in a conference call early Tuesday morning. He said that late in May engineers, performing wing bend tests on the airplane that is set aside inside the factory specifically for ground testing, found that strain gauges showed higher stress than predicted by the computer models at multiple points along the upper part of the wing-to-body join.
So anyone want to bet on whether it will actually fly this year?
Maybe the real reason for the delay is that Qantas and other customers have asked Boeing to redesign the 787 with two extra exit rows so they can charge customers extra for the premium seating locations to achieve their financial goal.
I am sure there will be lots of media reports in the coming weeks as Boeing readies the 787 for its first flight.
Weak.... what about 'For enhanced safety, the Boeing 787 will have emergency exits for every single passenger'![]()
With the airline industry, nothing surprises me anymore!That there was. Perhaps not the media reports you had in mind though!
More detail on the problem here
Understanding the 787 structural reinforcement (Update1) - FlightBlogger - Aviation News, Commentary and Analysis
About 20% short. A significant issue one would think. I guess that's why they do the tests and don't just believe the computers :!:Is it just me or is failing at 120% of load, rather than 150%, a long way short of design.
About 20% short. A significant issue one would think. I guess that's why they do the tests and don't just believe the computers :!:
Yesterday brought the first taxi tests for ZA001, the latest major step on its way to the sky. Chief project pilot Mike Carriker (left seat) and test pilot Randy Neville (right seat) took N787BA out of Stall 105 starting around 10:00 AM PT and had the first 787 back by 4:30 PM PT.
The wing damage that grounded Boeing's new composite 787 Dreamliner occurred under less stress than previously reported — and is more extensive.
An engineer familiar with the details said the damage happened when the stress on the wings was well below the load the wings must bear to be federally certified to carry passengers.
In addition, information obtained independently and confirmed by a second engineer familiar with the problem shows the damage occurred on both sides of the wing-body join — that is, on the outer wing as well as inside the fuselage.
...
Estimates by the two engineers of the minimum time needed to fix the problem suggest the plane is now unlikely to fly until next year.