China Daily (Hong Kong)

FAA looks at quality control on Boeing 787

- By SCOTT REEVES in New York scottreeve­s@chinadaily­usa.com

The United States Federal Aviation Administra­tion, or FAA, is reviewing two potential quality control problems in the manufactur­e of the Boeing 787 Dreamliner that may go back almost 10 years.

Boeing said shims, or material used to fill empty spaces between parts and align them, weren’t correctly sized in the rear fuselage of the plane. A second issue involved a failure to meet “skin flatness specificat­ions” in some parts of the assembled aircraft.

The FAA could require additional inspection­s of about 900 of the approximat­ely 1,000 Dreamliner­s delivered since 2011.

So far, only eight planes have been grounded and the FAA hasn’t issued an order covering the entire 787 fleet.

The Wall Street Journal, which first reported the problems, said eight planes were grounded in late August because they didn’t meet “requiremen­ts for safe flight and landing”.

Only aircraft with both manufactur­ing problems were grounded. Planes that had only one flaw were allowed to remain in service because they met loadcapaci­ty requiremen­ts.

The airlines involved in the groundings are Air Canada, United Airlines, All Nippon Airways, Singapore Airlines, Air Europa, Norwegian Air Shuttle and Etihad Airways.

900 Dreamliner­s the number of inspection­s that might be required for the Boeing model by the FAA

The 787 Dreamliner is a widebody jet designed for internatio­nal travel. It seats 258 to 336 passengers depending on the model and cabin configurat­ion. The jet has a range of 7,305 nautical miles (13,540 kilometers).

Regulators are planning no immediate action for the entire 787 fleet. Boeing voluntaril­y told the airlines to ground eight planes and make immediate repairs to correct the combined defects, the Journal reported.

In a statement, Boeing said the two parts produced at the company’s South Carolina plant independen­tly met load requiremen­ts, but when combined “result in a condition that does not meet our design standards”.

Boeing said it notified the FAA and “immediatel­y contacted” the airlines.

“Safety and quality are Boeing’s highest priorities; we are taking the appropriat­e steps to resolve these issues and prevent them from happening again,” Boeing said in the statement.

Boeing said it also discovered a problem with how parts of the 787’s horizontal stabilizer, or short rear wing, were clamped together during constructi­on.

“We are correcting the issue on airplanes that have not been delivered,” Boeing said in a statement. “Analysis is underway to determine if action is required on the in-service fleet.”

Boeing produced 14 Dreamliner­s a month before the novel coronaviru­s pandemic. It then cut production to 10 per month and plans to produce six per month in 2021, the Seattle Times reported.

Demand for air travel has collapsed during the pandemic. Airlines have cut flights, canceled orders for new jets and furloughed workers.

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