Boeing's new '797' has taken a big leap toward becoming a
reality.
The aerospace giant has named one of its top engineers
to a leadership team responsible for the formation of what is likely to become
its first all-new airliner since the 787 Dreamliner.
Boeing has moved
company veteran and 777X chief project engineer Terry Beezhold to the new '797'
team, the company confirmed. Boeing has not yet assigned roles for members of
the team.
Boeing (BA) hasn't yet given the green light to build the small
twin-aisle airplane, which will seat between 225 and 270, though the company in
September formally created a program office to oversee the possible development.
Beezhold is the second executive Boeing has publicly named to the team. The
other is the program office's vice president. The jet is dryly called the New
Mid-Market Airplane, but has already been dubbed the Boeing '797' by prospective
customers.
The airplane would be larger than Boeing's biggest
single-aisle 737 Max jets, but would not have the flying endurance of its 787
Dreamliner. Airlines want to relieve congestion on busy routes currently flown
with smaller jets.
At the Paris Air Show in June 2017, Boeing gave a
small peek in at what it's new 797 might look like.
Analysts
estimate the '797' project will cost between $10 billion and $15 billion to
develop and the plane wouldn't be ready until 2024 or 2025.
Beezhold is a
long-time company veteran who in 2011 was in charge of developing new tools and
processes to significantly reduce the cost of designing and manufacturing
airliners. That work was put into action developing the 777X, which is
manufactured using significantly more automation than previous Boeing
airliners.
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