Jump to content
MalaysianWings - Malaysia's Premier Aviation Portal
Sign in to follow this  
alberttky

55 Boeing Dreamliners ‘have potential’ problem

Recommended Posts

SINGAPORE - Boeing said Wednesday around 55 of its flagship 787 Dreamliners “have the potential” to develop a fuselage shimming problem, but reiterated that the fault was being fixed.

 

Shims are used to fill in space between parts and industry publication Flightglobal has reported that improperly joined pieces had caused “parts of the aircraft’s carbon fibre structure to delaminate”.

 

The discovery of the issue in early February is the latest snag to hit the showpiece but troubled jet, which suffered extensive production delays.

 

“In all the airplanes that we built, up to airplane 55 in round numbers have the potential for the shimming issue,” said the aviation giant’s vice president Jim Albaugh at a media roundtable in Singapore.

 

“It’s very fixable and we are in the process of fixing the airplanes that are in flow, there is not a safety or flight issue on the airplanes that we’ve delivered and this is a long term issue that has to be addressed,” he added.

 

Boeing has previously said the problem arose because “incorrect shimming was performed on support structure on the aft fuselage” of some 787s.

 

Albaugh – who is concurrently the chief executive of Boeing Commercial Airplanes – stated the problem would not impact total Dreamliner deliveries scheduled for this year.

 

“It’s something that we can address in a short period of time. It will impact some short-term deliveries but in terms of the number of deliveries for the year, it shouldn’t have any impact at all,” he said.

 

Albaugh also said Boeing did not agree with European Union’s imposition of its Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS), effectively charging airlines a carbon tax on travel within the region.

 

“I don’t think the ETS approach is the right one,” he said, describing it as “a carbon tax where you don’t know where the money is going and you don’t know if the money is going to be used in an efficient way”.

 

“I really believe that the right approach is for the governments to tell us what the emissions standards are and we will use our money and we will spend that money wisely to come up with a way of addressing what those new requirements are,” Albaugh added.

 

Boeing joins a growing chorus of airlines as well as countries including China, India, Russia and the US in decrying Europe’s carbon tax scheme, saying it violates international law.

 

Albaugh said any softening in airplane demand if the global economy tanks as a result of European and US economic woes, would be an opportunity for Boeing to clear their backlog of orders, rather than a severe financial setback.

 

“We’ve got a backlog of 4,000 airplanes right now, we got a backlog of US$300 billion (S$377.4 billion). If there’s a softening I really see it as an opportunity for us to burn that backlog down,” he said.

 

http://www.relax.com...al_problem.html

Edited by alberttky

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I think all new aircrafts have teething problems, not just those in the 00's. The only difference is that the internet was not as it is today where anything that happened, people will know about it instantly.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Sign in to follow this  

×
×
  • Create New...