Boeing may do 787 certification flight on Friday: Source
Washington:
Boeing Co.
may carry out a certification test flight of its grounded 787
Dreamliner with a revamped battery system on Friday, a key step toward
returning the state-of-the-art aircraft to flight, a US government
official said on Thursday.
The official, who was not authorized to speak on the
record, said the certification test could be carried out on Friday if
all remaining ground-based tests were completed on Thursday.
“They’re not quite there yet,” said the official, adding
that it might not be clear until early Friday if the certification
flight could take place.
Boeing declined to confirm the timing of the flight. “As a
matter of long-standing policy Boeing does not provide advance notice
of flight test activities until we have filed flight test plans,” Boeing
spokesman Marc Birtel told Reuters when asked about a possible test flight on Friday. Boeing typically files a flight plan a few hours before the plane takes off.
All 50 787s in service worldwide were grounded in January
after the airplane’s lithium-ion batteries overheated on two separate
aircraft, one on the ground in Boston and a second during a flight in
Japan.
The certification flight is part of a series of tests to
show whether measures Boeing has devised to fix the battery problems
work as intended. A preparation flight on 25 March “went according to
plan,” Boeing said.
It’s still unknown what caused the two batteries to
overheat, and the National Transportation Safety Boad is investigating.
But Boeing came up with measures it says make the battery safe. It
encased the battery in a steel box, changed the circuitry of the battery
charger and added a titanium venting tube to expel heat and fumes
outside the plane.
Once Boeing completes its testing, the Federal Aviation
Administration will review the test data and decide whether to certify
the fix and return the plane to service.
Airlines have been barred from using the plane since it
was grounded in January, and Boeing has been barred from delivering
787s, though it continues to build the plane.
PRIYA SINGH
PGDM 2nd. sem
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