Aircraft Maintenance

   

eNewsletter Sign Up

Sign up for our free Industry Newsletters and Product Information from Industry Partners.

AMT FAA Alerts
AMT Third Party Mailings
AMT Webcast Registration eBlast
AMT Weekly E-Newsletter
e-Military Product News
E-Mail Address:

Top News

Updated: July 8th, 2008 05:26 PM GMT-05:00

Boeing 747 Large Cargo Freighter Completes First Flight


Boeing
TAIPEI, Sept. 9, 2006 -- The first 747-400 Large Cargo Freighter, a specially modified fleet of airplanes that will transport the major components of the 787 Dreamliner, gracefully takes to the skies on its first flight. The 747 Large Cargo Freighter will complete initial flight tests in Taiwan before flying to Seattle.

via PRNewswire

TAIPEI, Taiwan, Sept. 9 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- The Boeing (NYSE: BA)747-400 Large Cargo Freighter took to the skies for the first time at 10:3a.m. (UTC /GMT +8 hours) today, initiating the flight test program that will culminate in U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) certification.

The two-hour, four-minute flight was the first of 250 expected flight test hours for the unique freighter, a specially modified 747-400 that will transport major composite structures of the all-new 787 Dreamliner.

The enormous jet -- with its enlarged upper fuselage that can accommodate three times the cargo by volume of a standard 747-400 freighter -- gracefully took off under rainy skies from Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport (formerly Chiang Kai-Shek International Airport). Boeing flight test pilots, Capts. JoeMacDonald and Randy Wyatt, took the airplane north, and then flew roughly 150 miles south following along the east side of the island before heading north again.

"It went beautifully," MacDonald said after the flight ended. In fact, the airplane handled so well, "quite often during the flight, it was easy to forget you were in an LCF rather than a regular 747-400," he said.

Evergreen Aviation Technologies Corp., part of Taiwan's Evergreen Group, is modifying the fleet of three airplanes at its facility at the airport.

"This is a key moment in the Dreamliner program," said Scott Strode, 787 vice president of Airplane Development and Production. "The LCF fleet is the foundation of our lean, global production system and enables us to meet the unprecedented customer demand for the 787. I congratulate the global LCF team, our design and production partners, our modification partner EGAT, and ourincredible Boeing team, for this remarkable achievement."

The flight test program is expected to last through the end of the year. The LCF also will complete more than 500 hours of ground testing in Taipei and Seattle combined. This comprehensive test program will ensure the LCF's reliability and ability to fly its intended mission.

1 2 next