![]() |
Boeing's Nightmareliner strikes again
German media have started to report - by reference to Indian newspapers - that the 787 again made healdines, a plane of this type lost panels on its belly and flew 2000 km with an open mainframe that way. Neither passengers nor the cockpit noted it. The affected airline was Air India. A replacement was flown to Bangalore, where the plane was grounded, and was build in. The passengers then continued the trip with 9 hours of delay.
http://www.welt.de/wirtschaft/articl...-im-Rumpf.html English news will follow, I'm sure. Maybe no major issue this time, still: another blow to the already massively degraded reputation of the 787. Japanese airlines have just started a revolution against Boeing by giving the biggest sales order ever in Japanese history - to Airbus Industries, who before were almost excluded from the Japanese market for airliners and could only share 5% of the market with their A320 models. The sales order is about the direct Airbus rival to Boeing's dreamliner. |
Where does it say that it "flew 2000 km with an open mainframe"? And how does a single 2-ft square panel missing become "panels"?
It is clearly a maintenance hatch in the unpressurised underwing fairing. Not good to lose it, obviously, but unlikely to be safety critical. As for the cause, I see no reason to assume any sort of design fault at this stage - and people can fail to close hatches etc properly on any manufacturers aircraft. |
This incident has little to do with the 787 itself. Most likely a maintenance issue that happens countless times all over the world. It's in the papers because of the trend of 787 stories.
The aircraft certainly isn't without it's (large) share of problems, but this story (original Indian news item) neither illuminates or explains. While the JAL A350 order is still significant, bear in mind they have more 787s ordered than A350. The aircraft complement each other rather than directly compete. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Panels instead of panel I think is just a typo by Sky, as rare as they are. |
Sky....I'm convinced you've got shares in one of Boeing's competitors :)
|
Quote:
Quote:
|
Its not unusual for a large number of boeings to fly over Germany with parts missing and still manage to land at their final destination safely.
|
Quote:
And one thing nobody can deny: this latest in a long chain of bad news about the 787 again adds to the tremendous image disaster Boeing is suffering from this airplane. Considering losses in orders for 787s that go to Airbus now, it costs them probably already billions, and that is not including the costs of the added development work and the improvisations they needed and need to do with the battery system. In comparison, the micro-cracks in the hull of the A380 seem to have not such a big fallout for Airbus so far. |
Quote:
I'm worried about those parts landing somewhere, on someone :o |
Quote:
Your talking about WWII, right? |
:har: Nice one GR.
|
See what happens when you close down your Washington state plants, and export the work to China?
You get what you pay for Boeing, you get the quality you pay for. Wanna pay a tenth for labor? , reap what you sow. Boeing used to be the pride of the world, now look, nightmareliner, what a horrid name. Boeing made the best bombers in the world, most reliable planes ever,...Now they make aluminum deathboxes. Thanks China. (edit: I hope AIRBUS kicks your ass) |
Apologies to Skybird for trusting a machine translation. "zwei Quadratmeter" = "two-square-foot"? :o
|
Boeing stocks are at all time high
I think the 787 Dreamliner will become a great airplane someday a plane you can trust and a plane passengers will enjoy flying on. Boeing will fix the problems ... they will overcome the negative publicity :yep: |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 11:59 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 1995- 2025 Subsim®
"Subsim" is a registered trademark, all rights reserved.