SINGAPORE: Initial E-Jet
E2s to require engine update
05 FEBRUARY, 2018 - SOURCE:
FLIGHT DASHBOARD - BY: DOMINIC PERRY - SINGAPORE
Embraer has
confirmed that several of the first E-Jet E2s to be delivered will require an
upgrade due to durability issues with their Pratt & Whitney PW1900G
engines.
Speaking at a pre-Singapore air
show briefing, Rodrigo Silva e Souza, marketing vice-president Embraer
commercial aviation, said that a number of the E190-E2s due to be handed over
in 2018 will have the "combustor configuration B" which "has a
shorter life".
The airframer has not specified
the total number of E2s it will deliver this year, but has said that 10% of the
around 90 commercial aircraft it will produce in 2018 will be the re-engined
variant.
When asked whether as many as
seven or eight aircraft were affected, Souza says that "maybe less"
will have PW1900Gs that require a later upgrade to the package C standard to
address combustor liner longevity issues. Embraer stresses that a minority of
E2 deliveries in 2018 will be affected.
However, Souza says that any
aircraft delivered with the problematic engines will be retrofitted by
year-end.
Embraer is not alone in
struggling with the durability of P&W's GTF line: Airbus and Bombardier
having already seen production disrupted by the issue on the PW1100G and
PW1500G engines powering their respective A320neo and CSeries twinjets.
The Brazilian airframer will
hand over the initial E190-E2 to launch operator Widerøe in April, ahead of a
first commercial flight scheduled for the 24th of that month. Type
certification from Brazil's regulator ANAC is "very close", says
Souza.
Two further examples of the
re-engined twinjet, configured in a 114-seat single-class layout, will
delivered to the Norwegian carrier in May and June. Additional customers
receiving aircraft this year include Air Astana and China's GX Airlines.
Embraer is also developing a
business-class layout for the E2 which features a unique 2+2 staggered seat
layout offering a seat pitch of up to 54in (137in).
Souza says that the in-house
built configuration will be available from mid-2019. Although no customer has
committed to the layout, he says airlines are showing considerable interest in
the product.
Embraer's E2 family comprises
three models spanning 90-146 seats. The E190-E2 and E195-E2 are both in flight
testing, with service entry planned for 2018 and 2019, respectively.
The third and smallest variant,
the E175-E2, is on track to make its first flight in 2019, says Souza, ahead of
service entry in 2021. Its PW1700G engines are currently being tested by
P&W, he adds.
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