The American aircraft manufacturer Boeing has once more suspended the delivery of its long-haul 787 aircraft in order to analyze a part of the fuselage, the American agency supervising aviation, the FAA, said on Thursday.
“Deliveries will not resume until the FAA is satisfied that the issue has been resolved,” the agency said in a message reported by news outlets.
Boeing discovered, while reviewing certification records, that one of its suppliers had made an analysis error on the pressurization bulkhead at the front of the aircraft, the company said. The group took the decision to suspend deliveries while redoing the analysis and the related documents.
The FAA says it is working with Boeing “to determine what actions may be necessary for recently delivered aircraft.”
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The company ensures for its part that there is no “immediate danger” for the 787 in service and that the last problem detected “should not increase” the modifications already planned on the produced aircraft. The 787 Dreamliner has indeed faced several pitfalls in recent years.
Manufacturing defects were discovered at the end of summer 2020. The device being examined closely, other problems then appeared.
Boeing had to suspend deliveries, from November 2020 to March 2021 initially, then between May 2021 and August 2022. And reduce production rates.
But following deliveries resumed last summer, Boeing was able to deliver 31 in 2022, including 22 in the fourth quarter. And in December, United Airlines announced plans to order 100 787 aircraft while optioning an additional 100. In January, however, the manufacturer delivered only three.
It still planned, when publishing its results at the end of January, to deliver between 70 and 80 devices by the end of the year and maintained this objective on Thursday.
With MAP