SFGate: Boeing Delays First Flight for 787

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Wednesday, September 5, 2007 (AP)
Boeing Delays First Flight for 787



   (09-05) 07:45 PDT SEATTLE, (AP) --

   Boeing Co.'s new 787 jetliner will not begin flight testing until
mid-November or mid-December, months later than originally planned,
because it's taking longer than anticipated to get the first plane ready,
the head of the company's commercial airplanes unit said Wednesday.

   Boeing initially aimed to begin flight testing within a monthlong window
beginning in late August, but early last month acknowledged first flight
might not happen until October.

   The 787 is the first large commercial jetliner being made mostly from
composites, which Boeing has promised will make the plane more fuel
efficient and cheaper to maintain because carbon fiber-reinforced plastics
are lighter and more durable than aluminum.

   On Wednesday, Scott Carson, chief executive of Boeing Commercial
Airplanes, said the first flight will be pushed well into the fall because
of delays in completing assembly of the first plane and in finalizing
flight-control software.

   Even so, Carson said the 787 remains on track to be delivered to its fir=
st
customer, Japan's All Nippon Airways, next May.

   Boeing unveiled its first midsized, long-haul 787 amid much fanfare in
early July, but has spent the past several weeks working to get that plane
ready for its maiden flight.

   The 787's flight-test program will be much more condensed than that of
Boeing's last all-new jet, the 777, which went through about 11 months of
flight testing before airlines first started flying it in 1995.

   To get the airplane certified on time, Mike Bair, vice president and
general manager of the 787 program, has said the company plans to fly six
fight-test 787s at higher rates than it's done with previous planes. Two
other planes will undergo static and fatigue tests. -----------------------=
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Copyright 2007 AP

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