Number | |
Testing Complete | 3 |
To be assembled in Everett | 172 |
To be assembled in Charleston | 121 |
Parts Arriving | 6 |
Undergoing final assembly | 10 |
Storage | 0 |
Storage/Change Incorporation and Re-Work | 0 |
Change Incorporation and Re-Work | 5 |
Pre-Flight Prep | 12 |
Production Testing | 8 |
Non Customer Flight Tests | 1 |
Ready for Delivery | 0 |
Donation | 3 |
Delivered | 446 |
TOTAL | 787 |
Near term deliveries of the 787 look to slow down due to
unspecified issues with the thrust reversers affecting both GE and Rolls Royce
powered aircraft. A source has indicated that this is not a fleet wide
problem but concerns a batch of thrust reversers that are installed on current
787s that are on the flightline or that are currently being assembled.
New thrust reversers without the issue have been manufactured and are
being installed on several aircraft on the flightline including ones for Hainan,
JAL and Scoot as those aircraft have their engines removed. I do expect
that these aircraft should deliver before the end of the year and that this
issue should not affect final delivery numbers though it could push deliveries
to the fourth quarter.
Just when followers of the 787 program
thought that the program was just starting to emerge from the financial black
hole that was created, it was sucked right back in with Boeing's announcement
of an incredibly high charge of $847 mm against 2Q16 earnings. The charge
is due to inability by Boeing to sell the last two original 787-8 flight test
aircraft, namely LN 004 (ZA004, N7874) and LN 005 (ZA005, N787FT). The
cost of refurbishing them to certification standards is too high compared to
where they can sell them. This charge was in addition to the charges that
Boeing has taken on the 747-8 program ($814 mm) and the KC-46A program ($393
mm). Boeing will be reclassifying the unit costs associated for these two
airplanes from inventory to R&D expense
So what is to become of the two flight
test airplanes? Well ZA004 is currently performing certification testing
for the Rolls Royce Trent 1000 TEN. Once that is complete I expect that
this airplane will be donated to a museum. ZA005 flew back to Everett in 2013
and appeared to have some re-work and change incorporation performed on it.
Many of the movable flight surfaces were taken off as were the engines.
However, the aircraft has remained in that stripped down state for the more
than 2 years. Now that Boeing is taking this charge I expect that the
aircraft will be further stripped for usable spare parts that will probably
have to refurbished. The airframe will probably be destroyed, perhaps
Boeing use this airframe as a demonstration on how to dispose of a carbon
composite fuselage in a way that is environmentally friendly as recycling CRFP
aircraft parts on a large scale has never been done. This could give
Boeing an opportunity to develop proper disposal techniques.
Getting back to the 787 production story, Boeing delivered 14 787s (3 787-8 and 11 787-9) in July including one early build 787-8 (ZD006, LN 14, ET-ATK) for Ethiopian Airlines. Boeing has been making very good progress in getting these airplanes ready for delivery though it's taken the better part of 5 to 6 years for each. Boeing is slated to deliver 3 more early build 787s (one each in August, September and November) this year with one already in paint and a second one being prepped for its first flight. Other notable deliveries include the first 2 787-9s that were directly purchased by Hainan (still listed as unidentified on Boeing's order and delivery website) and Qatar's 30th and final 787-8 that they have on order. I'm still waiting for them to exercise their options. Any day now U-Turn Al.
With the 14 deliveries in July, Boeing has delivered 82 787s this
year through the end of July and 445 since program deliveries began.
There are 309 787-8s in operation and 136 787-9s flying. With one
additional delivery made this month, Boeing is 54 deliveries away from
achieving 500 customer deliveries. This is something they can achieve by
the middle to end of December as long as there aren't any delays in current
delivery schedule. This equates to roughly 11 deliveries per month for
the next 5 months. Boeing has been doing well on that account for the
past 3 months.
In terms of production, the two production
facilities are still turning out the aircraft as the planned rate of 12 per
month. The efficiency ratio last month was at 0.79 which was driven
mainly by higher deliveries from Everett which had a pretty good efficiency
ratio of 0.67. Charleston had a respectable ratio of 1.0. It should
be noted that the one early build 787-8 is included in the calculation of
Everett's efficiency ratio.
Looking forward, Boeing was planning for
only 9 787 deliveries in August but with the thrust reverser issue it will
probably be lower, around 5-6. One of those deliveries with, ZA155
(LN4457, CN-RGT) for Royal Air Maroc, has already been made. ZB368 (LN
396, G-ZBKG) a 787-9 for British Airways is finally set to be delivered at the
end of this month after being grounded due to issues with Zodiac in delivering
the interiors to Everett for installation. Another early build 787-8,
ZD005, (LN 13, ET-ATJ) should also be delivered by the end of this month.
I can only attribute the lower delivery number to the typical August slow
down for the summer as well as the aforementioned issue with the thrust
reversers. I do see the delivery rate picking back up in September to
catch up to the needed 11/month delivery rate that Boeing needs to make for the
remainder of the year.
I'll be following this post with another
one reviewing Boeing's comments on the 787 during the 2nd quarter as well as
prospects for a rate increase by the end of this decade.
787 Full Production Table
For those two 787 frames that are unmarketable, I'd suggest they be donated to the NTSB and FAA for training of emergency crews. Equip one of them to fly unpiloted but controlled from a chase plane and then crash it on a runway that is no longer in use. Firefighters have not yet had to deal with a carbonfiber airframe on fire...with its attendant dangers of toxic fumes and miniscule carbon fibers being released into the air. Key questions would be how to suppress the flames quickly at such a crash site and how to properly outfit the firefighters. Full body hazmat suits? Special masks and air filters? What precautions need to be taken in terms of the spread of toxic fumes and fibrils into the surrounding community? (etc.)
ReplyDeleteSuch training has not yet been done. Are major airports properly equipped and firecrews adequately trained for this new situation?
Hey Uresh, what about the other 27 planes?
ReplyDeleteIn your numbers you say that there are 309 -8's operating, and 109 -9's. there are the two that aren't going anywhere, but 25 of them are delivered but not operational.
My bad, there are 136 787-9s operating (delivered) not 109.
ReplyDeleteWhy are you not more excited about any "efficiency ratio" that's <1? A 0.67 ratio is phenomenal, and an ER of 1.00000 indicates perfect sustainability. Right now, with 26 frames past "Undergoing Final Assembly" and not yet "Delivered", they could only have, at a maximum, 26 months that are <1.0 ER, and that assumes that an aircraft could actually go from Undergoing Final Assembly to Delivered immediately. Cross out the 7 early-builds plus the delayed British Airways frame, and it's only 18 planes, or ~1.5 months of production. If they can get it down to 3 weeks of Pre-Flight Prep plus Production Testing plus time spent Ready for Delivery, that'd only be 9 frames to shove out the door to be 100% caught up and back to a point where 1.0 ER is perfect.
ReplyDeleteChecking on text in the first paragraph.
ReplyDeleteShouldn't:"should deliver before the end of the year and" actually be "should deliver before the end of the month and"
year to month
You may delete this message, no need to publish.
LN 440 is noted on the "Delivered" spreadsheet as the 30th for Qatar, delivered on 7/18/16. The table on Wikipedia that you have a link to also reports that Qatar have 30 units delivered. However, the graph on Wikipedia shows only 29. So, . . .?
ReplyDeleteWikipedia is wrong.
ReplyDeleteJohn,nope, I meant end of year. I don't know how long this issue is going to last and what knock on effects it may have, if any.
ReplyDeleteGasp!! Wikipedia is wrong!?!? Who knew? :-) However, my first sentence is about an entry in your spreadsheet of "Delivered" units. Now, I am not being critical (at all!) about your excellent blog and the value of the tracking data you publish. Many thanks for doing this.
ReplyDeleteThe incident with ET-AOP (emergency locator beacon fire) was sufficiently serious. In addition to proving that the particular carbon fibre used in the 787 fuselage is not prone to spreading fire.
ReplyDeleteOFG
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With ANA now determining ALL their RR engines are to be replaced / rebuilt, what are the rest of the RR customers doing? This is a huge hit on RR - has anyone tried to determine the financial and sales impact?
ReplyDeleteI would imagine there are customers who are at least considering changing over to the GE.
Let us know Uresh.