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SMALL BUSINESS
Boeing Sets Schedule for First 787 Flight
By DANIEL LOVERING
, AP
AP
(Aug. 27) - After repeated delays, Boeing Co. said Thursday its 787 aircraft
will be ready for its first test flight by year-end and its first
delivery in the fourth quarter next year.
The maiden flight of the next-generation aircraft, built for
fuel efficiency with lightweight carbon composite parts, has been
delayed five times already. The inaugural flight was originally
slated for the fall of 2007.
The delays have cost Boeing credibility and billions of dollars
in anticipated expenses and penalties. With the date of the flight
more certain now, shares of Boeing rose $2.72, or 5.7 percent, to
$50.54 in premarket trading.
The Chicago company also says it will book a third-quarter
charge of $2.5 billion pretax, or $2.21 per share, related to the
787 program. When it reported its second-quarter earnings last
month, the aircraft manufacturer said it was still assessing the
financial impact of the latest delay.
The eagerly anticipated long-range passenger jet has been
delayed mostly because of production problems. With the 787, Boeing
has taken a new approach to building airplanes, relying on overseas
suppliers to build huge sections of the plane that are later
assembled at the company's commercial aircraft plant near Seattle.
Ill-fitting parts and other problems have hampered production,
but Boeing and some analysts say the plane - Boeing's first all-new
jetliner since the 777, which airlines began flying in 1995 -
eventually will prove a financial and technological success.
The latest delay came in June, when the company said earlier
that it needed to reinforce an area in the side of the aircraft.
"This new schedule provides us the time needed to complete the
remaining work necessary to put the 787's game-changing capability
in the hands of our customers," Boeing Chairman, President and CEO
Jim McNerney, said in a statement.
Boeing expects it will produce 10 airplanes per month in late
2013.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2009-08-27 08:54:39
COMMENTS ( 26 )
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All of these new planes will only be as good as the service the airline provides.... which is getting lower every day.