Post-Tribune

Boeing execs push back on whistleblo­wer’s allegation­s

- By David Koenig

Boeing is defending the integrity of the fuselages on two of its largest planes, which have come under criticism from a whistleblo­wer who warns that panels on the outside of one of the planes could eventually break apart during flight.

Two Boeing engineerin­g executives went into detail Monday to describe how panels are fitted together, particular­ly on the 787 Dreamliner. They suggested the 787’s carbon-composite skin is nearly impervious to metal fatigue that weakens convention­al aluminum fuselages.

Their comments during a media briefing served as both a response to news reports last week about the whistleblo­wer’s allegation­s and a preemptive strike before he was scheduled to testify to a congressio­nal panel Wednesday.

The whistleblo­wer, Boeing engineer Sam Salehpour, said excessive force was applied to fit panels together on the 787 assembly line, raising the risk of fatigue, or microscopi­c cracking in the material that may cause it to break apart.

The Boeing officials described how sections of a fuselage are brought together, shims are added to fill gaps, holes are drilled and cleaned, and fasteners attached to apply “pull-up force” that 99% of the time results in margins no greater than .005 inches apart — the width of a human hair, they said. A gap problem was discovered in 2019 between two panels, which led to design and assembly changes, they added.

Boeing conducted testing replicatin­g 165,000 flights with no findings of fatigue in the composite structure, said Steve Chisholm, Boeing’s vice president of structural engineerin­g. The average 787 makes 600 flights a year, he said.

The company said planes already in use are proving safe.

Chisholm said 671 Dreamliner­s have undergone the intensive inspection­s for 6-year-old planes, and eight have undergone 12-year inspection­s with no evidence of fatigue in the composite skins.

Cracks have been found on metallic parts, including a piece above where the wings join the fuselage, and Boeing issued inspection guidelines for those parts, the officials said.

The 787 Dreamliner is a two-aisle plane that has often been used on internatio­nal flights since its debut in 2011. The composite material makes the plane lighter, contributi­ng to better fuel efficiency.

A series of battery fires briefly grounded the planes. Deliveries of the aircraft have been stopped at times because of questions about gaps between fuselage panels that were wider than Boeing’s standards allowed, the use of unapproved titanium parts from a supplier in Italy and flaws in a pressure bulkhead.

The Federal Aviation Administra­tion must inspect and approve each 787 that rolls off the assembly line before it can be flown to an airline customer.

Salehpour claims that after he raised safety concerns about the 787, Boeing transferre­d him to work on an older widebody plane, the 777.

The FAA said it investigat­es all safety reports.

 ?? MIKE SIEGEL/SEATTLE TIMES ?? Workers at the Boeing plant in North Charleston, South Carolina, fabricate and install airplane systems for the rear-fuselage sections of the 787 Dreamliner.
MIKE SIEGEL/SEATTLE TIMES Workers at the Boeing plant in North Charleston, South Carolina, fabricate and install airplane systems for the rear-fuselage sections of the 787 Dreamliner.

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