Rolls-Royce outlines
progress in addressing Trent 1000 disruption
06 AUGUST, 2019 -SOURCE:
FLIGHT DASHBOARD - BY: MICHAEL GUBISCH - LONDON
Rolls-Royce chief
executive Warren East has acknowledged that premature blade deterioration on
Trent 1000s continues to cause Boeing 787 operators "significant
disruption" as aircraft are parked so that the engines can be serviced.
But he said during a financial results briefing today that the issues
relating to compressor and turbine blades across different engine variants were
now causing "an awful lot less disruption" than in the 2018.
The UK engine maker foresees that the number of aircraft on the ground
will be reduced to a single-digit figure by year-end.
Earlier this year, R-R disclosed that blades in the high-pressure
turbine of the Trent 1000 TEN – the latest variant of the engine family, an
option on the 787 – deteriorate at a faster-than-expected rate, even though the
component had already been subject to a reduced life limit of 1,000 cycles.
Some blades need replacement "a couple of hundred cycles"
before reaching the 1,000 mark. East describes this as "completely
unacceptable" in itself.
In April, the European Union Aviation Safety Agency directed operators
to start repetitive inspections before the 650-cycle point and not to pair
engines with more than 1,400 cycles combined.
R-R estimates that about a third of Trent 1000 TENs are affected by
premature HPT blade deterioration.
East notes that the issue is creating additional pressure on overhaul
facilities as the blades' replacement causes increased shop visit time. This in
turn will extend "little bit longer" the time required to service
earlier-generation Pack B and C Trent 1000s, he says.
R-R is in the process of testing a redesigned HPT blade for the Trent
1000 TEN.
Meanwhile, the manufacturer is progressing with the installation of a
modified intermediate-pressure compressor blade for Pack C engines, which
represent about half the Trent 1000 family's installed base.
As a number of Pack C engines operate with original IPC blades without
issues, and don't need immediate replacement of the component, East foresees
that the fleet-wide implementation of the new IPC blades will take "some
time".
A redesign for the IPC blades for Pack B and TEN engines is meanwhile
under way. East expects that the new IPC blade for the Trent 1000-TEN will
become available for installation by year-end. The Pack B blade will follow
"soon thereafter".
R-R says the Trent 1000 in-service issues brought a cash cost of £219
million ($268 million) in the first half of 2019, versus £107 million in the
same period last year.
The cash cost will incrementally increase to a total of £450-500
million for the full year but then decrease by £50-100 million in 2020 and
"materially thereafter", the manufacturer predicts.
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