Boeing and United Airlines rolled out the first 787 (ZA288, LN 53, N20904) for United Airlines in a webcast early this morning. The aircraft is due to be delivered by the end of September and placed into service sometime in the fall flying domestic routes at first then expanding into international routes starting with Houston - Tokyo.
Today the NTSB said that they are investigating the GEnx engine incident along with Boeign and GE at GE's plant in Oho. The engine will be trucked there in the next few days where it will be disassembled to examine each part. Prelionarily, GE is saying that there is no safety issue but they will contiue to work with the NTSB to figure out what happened. Now there is now word on if ZA238 (LN 54, VT-ANJ) is to receive a new engine or not but Boeing did fly ZA461 (LN 58, A7-BCB) today without incident. It does look like that this icident is a one off issue as Boeing, GE and the FAA would have grounded all airplanes flying the GEnx engine which includes 20+ 747 and 4 787s.
Here's the test of the NTSB statement:
NTSB investigating Boeing 787 engine
failure
July 31, 2012
WASHINGTON - The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating an
engine failure that occurred on a Boeing 787 Dreamliner during a taxi test in
Charleston, South Carolina.
On Saturday, July 28, 2012, Boeing and General Electric, the engine
manufacturer, notified the NTSB that a Boeing 787 experienced an engine failure
during a pre-delivery taxi test. As a result of the failure, it has been
reported that the engine left debris on the active runway at Charleston
International Airport and caused a brush fire. There were no passengers aboard
the aircraft nor were there any fatalities or injuries.
Upon the notification of the incident, the NTSB sent an aviation investigator
with extensive expertise in aircraft powerplants, to the scene on Sunday to
gather information to better understand the circumstances of the event.
As a result, the NTSB decided to conduct an investigation and has named David
Helson as the Investigator in Charge. In the next few days, an NTSB aircraft
powerplants expert and a metallurgist from the NTSB Materials Lab will travel to
a General Electric facility in Cincinnati, OH, to lead and coordinate the
disassembly and examination of the engine in question.
The Federal Aviation Administration, Boeing and General Electric are parties
to the investigation.
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
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5 comments:
Was this a B2 flight on the Qatar? Often there is a C1 if the B1/B2 flight is ok. And this frame preformed very well at the airshow already.
Looks like LN7 will fly today as well, a second flight, a B2? Looks like flights are back at least :)
Many frames wont have much else left than flights now I guess.
Uresh,
Boeing has delivered 25 747-8s today: 2 74-8Is to Lufthansa, 4 747-8I BBJ, and 19 747-8Fs.
At the Boeing conference call, did they say anything about 747 deliveries? The 35 to 42 787s seems like a restatement of 70 - 85 787 and 747s total in 2012 split down the middle, which didn't make much sense as 747s can't get above about 35 in any likely scenario.
A milestone of sorts: 40 percent — 22 of 55 — of Everett-built 787s that will need to go through the EMC have now completed work there.
Thaks for the color Michael. I don't think Boeing addressed 747 specifically only to reiterate thae 70-85 787/747 delivery outlook and that the numbers would be 50% for each model.
Indian Government final approval has just been granted...
http://pib.nic.in/newsite/erelease.aspx?relid=85697
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