En kan uten videre si at dersom ikke Boeing lykkes og en ny hendelse inntreffer, så vil det få uanede konsekvenser....
ANA to put pilots through Dreamliner resumption training: sources
Four All Nippon Airways' (ANA)
Boeing Co's 787 Dreamliner planes are seen behind another ANA plane at Haneda
airport in Tokyo January 29, 2013.
TOKYO (Reuters)
- All Nippon Airways, the biggest customer for Boeing Co's grounded 787
Dreamliner, will put its pilots through training to resume flights in June,
sources told Reuters, after Boeing completed more than half of its tests to get
its new battery system certified.
The Japanese
carrier, known as ANA, is also likely to use the Dreamliner initially for cargo
flights once the new battery system is installed, to reassure the public about
safety before restarting passenger flights, one of the sources said.
Regulators
grounded all 50 Dreamliners in use by airlines worldwide in mid-January after
lithium-ion batteries overheated on two separate aircraft, on a Japan Airlines
jet parked at Boston's Logan airport and on an ANA flight in Japan. ANA operates
17 of the carbon-composite jets and has canceled more than 3,600 flights through
the end of May.
Anticipating
regulatory clearance, ANA will put its roughly 200 Dreamliner pilots through
flight resumption simulator training so that they will be ready to fly the jets
again in June, the sources with knowledge of ANA's operations said.
Since the
Dreamliner was grounded, the pilots have been undergoing simulator training
every month, but their next training will be specifically for flight resumption,
the sources said. The training will start around mid-April, one of the sources
said.
"The company is
making as many assumptions as it can and is preparing based on them. In order to
resume flights from June, it needs all 200 of the pilots ready to be flying by
then," a source said.
The sources
declined to be identified because they were not authorized to speak publicly
about the matter.
Without having
found what caused the battery incidents in January, Boeing last month unveiled a
new battery system and predicted the 787 could be back in the air within weeks,
which drew skepticism from some experts and regulators.
ANA said last
week that it was including Dreamliner jets in its June flight schedules.
"It's not that
we have decided to resume flights, but rather that we have not decided on
cancelling flights," spokesman Ryosei Nomura told Reuters.
He added that he
had not heard anything about the flight resumption simulator training.
BOEING TESTS
Boeing is
conducting ground and flight tests to check the new lithium-ion battery system
that it plans to install in the Dreamliner jets. The results will be submitted
to the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration, which will decide whether to
certify the fix.
"More than half
of the testing is complete with the remaining ground and flight tests set to
occur within the next several days," Marc Birtel, a spokesman for Boeing, told
Reuters by email.
Boeing is
planning to conduct one more test flight, and the data collected from the flight
will be submitted to the FAA. Once the FAA certifies the fix, Boeing will have
its engineers install the new battery system in the grounded jets.
"Our baseline
plan is to deliver the new battery systems in roughly the same order as initial
deliveries," Birtel said.
ANA, as the
launch customer, will be the first to have its jets fixed.
It is still
unclear how long the FAA will take to approve Boeing's battery fix. After the
FAA's certification, Japan's Civil Aviation Bureau is likely to certify the fix
around the same time.
The U.S.
National Transportation Safety Board, which is investigating the Dreamliner's
battery trouble, is conducting a two-day forum on April 11-12 to examine the
design and performance of lithium-ion batteries in transportation, as well as a
separate hearing on April 23-24 on the 787 battery.
The NTSB is
likely to make non-binding recommendations to the FAA at the end of an
investigation. The two agencies work closely together.
CARGO
FLIGHTS
A few dozen
Boeing engineers are already in Japan so that they can start work on the battery
fix as soon as approval is received, the sources said. ANA estimates it may take
a month to install the new battery system for its 787 fleet.
Once the new
systems are installed, ANA is likely to bring the Dreamliner back into the air
first by flying a domestic cargo route between Tokyo and Naha, in the southern
islands of Okinawa, one of the sources said.
"By making a
track record, the company wants to provide a sense of security to passengers.
What it is concerned about is whether passengers will fly the Dreamliner like
they did before," the source said.
ANA spokesman
Nomura said that initially flying the Dreamliner to carry cargo was among the
carrier's options.
Before the
grounding, ANA used the Dreamliner about twice a week to carry cargo between
Tokyo and Naha.
"We will
probably conduct test flights before carrying passengers onboard. Some, though
not all, of the pilots will have to fly in order to keep their pilot's
qualifications," Nomura said. He declined to comment on details of the possible
test flights.
Other airlines
have so far kept the Dreamliner out of their flight schedules. United
Continental Holdings has removed its six Dreamliner aircraft from its flying
plans through June 5. Poland's LOT, which has received two of the jets, said it
does not plan to fly its Dreamliners until late October.
The president of
Japan Airlines, which owns seven Dreamliner jets, said last month that he was
not thinking of exactly when flights would resume.
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