sexta-feira, 27 de agosto de 2010

Boeing delays Dreamliner delivery date


(FT) -- Rolls-Royce shares dipped in morning trading on Friday after Boeing announced its long overdue 787 Dreamliner passenger jet would be delayed by several more weeks because of a problem in getting an engine from the UK manufacturer.
The first 787, which is already more than two years late, was supposed to be delivered to its launch customer, All Nippon Airways of Japan, by the end of this year.
After a series of production problems, Boeing said some weeks ago that this deadline could slip to early 2011 but today it said it would not make the first delivery until the middle of the first quarter of 2011.
Boeing said the delay "follows an assessment of the availability of an engine needed for the final phases of flight test this fall".
The news follows reports that an engine being made by Rolls-Royce, whose Trent 1000 engines are powering the 787, suffered a test failure at the manufacturer's Derby headquarters in the first week of August.
However, the aero engine maker denied this was connected to today's delay announcement. "Rolls-Royce confirms that the engine availability issue is unrelated to the test bed event which occurred earlier this month," a spokesman said, while declining to explain the nature of the test failure.
"We have been informed by Boeing that the currently planned dates for Trent 1000 engine deliveries will not support their latest flight test programme requirements," he said. "We are working closely with Boeing to expedite delivery in support of their programme schedule".
ANA, which has ordered 55 of the aircraft, said the new delay was "extremely regrettable" and it was asking Boeing to clarify what impact the engine shortage would have on its longer-term delivery schedule. CNN