Boeing 737-7, -10 Certification Timelines
Continue To Grow
Sean Broderick March 22, 2023
Credit: Paul Christian
Gordon / Alamy Stock Photo
FAA approval
of the last two Boeing 737 MAX variants is “progressing,” a top Boeing official
said, but ongoing challenges related to the agency’s more stringent approach to
certification continue to lengthen the timelines.
“We do
expect certification and delivery this year” of the 737-7, Boeing CFO Brian
West said at a Bank of America investor event March 22. “We are working very,
very closely with Southwest to make sure that we could help them with their
fleet management and how that’s all going to play out for the course of this year.
So, no specifics, but it’s progressing.”
Southwest,
the largest 737-7 customer with 186 on order, once expected deliveries to start
in early 2022. But the prolonged
certification process has forced it to shift gears, removing the
737-7 from its 2023 network plan and keeping some older 737-700s once tagged
for retirement in the process.
Southwest
expects to need about six months following first deliveries to get the new
aircraft into revenue service, citing required FAA approvals as the primary
schedule driver.
Boeing,
which steers clear of predicting when FAA approvals for any of its projects
will come, wrapped up 737-7 certification flight testing in late 2021. The
remaining issues focus on validating pilot-reaction assumptions Boeing has made
as part of system safety assessments (SSAs), industry sources with knowledge of
the situation told Aviation Week. Boeing has been working on the SSAs for
months, in some cases following FAA’s
direction to provide more information or revisions.
“They have
to validate their assumptions about pilot responses,” one source with
certification experience told Aviation Week, pointing to internal shortcomings
as part of Boeing’s issues. “When they were developing the 777 [in the early
1990s], they were the gold standard. You asked for documentation of anything,
and they had it for you in a heartbeat. Everything was organized and well
documented. That’s no longer true, and that’s part of why they’re struggling
right now.”
The 737-10,
meanwhile, has not begun flight testing under FAA-granted type inspection
authorization. Design changes, including
some prompted by the 737 MAX’s grounding and global regulatory review, mean the
737-10’s certification is more complex than the smaller MAX versions.
At the
company’s November 2022 investor day, Boeing Commercial Airplanes President
Stan Deal said 737-10 certification would
come “in late 2023 or early 2024.”
West’s
updated outlook has 737-10 certification and first delivery “likely next year,”
he told BoA event attendees, seemingly taking 2023 off the table for both
milestones.
Boeing’s
recently filed 2022 annual report said the 737-10 will “begin FAA certification
flight testing in 2023 with first delivery in 2024,” while the company expects
737-7 certification and first deliveries in 2023.
“We are
working hand-in-hand with the FAA to get this done,” West said. “The lesson
learned is that there is a difference of expectations as it pertains to
certification of airplanes. It is the new reality.”
Meanwhile,
Boeing’s 737 deliveries will climb in March compared to February’s 25, which
included 24 737 MAXs.
“March will
be higher,” West said. “Overall, our guidance of 400 to 450 737s for this year,
we’re still committed to.” Boeing delivered 35 737s in January—all 737 MAXs.
In China,
operators continue to re-activate 737 MAXs grounded since March 2019 due to two
fatal accidents and, more recently, a lack of demand on the heels of the
coronavirus pandemic. While the in-service fleet is coming back online—about 28
of 97 are flying, West said—the timing of new deliveries remains unclear.
“We stand
ready to help our customers in China return those like 70 airplanes to service
as traffic continues to grow in that market. That’s our first responsibility,”
he said. “You could envision where as things play out ... You could see an
event where at a point in time, there’s a return to delivery discussion.”
Boeing has
about 140 737 MAXs in its inventory earmarked for Chinese customers.
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