With its distinctive new Boeing livery, the
newest member of the efficient 787 family completed
a 5-hour, 16-minute flight, taking off from Paine
Field in Everett, Wash., at 11:02 a.m. local time
and landing at 4:18 p.m. at Seattles Boeing
Field.
Todays first flight marks a significant
milestone for our team, including our partners,
said Boeing Commercial Airplanes President and
Chief Executive Officer Ray Conner. We are
tremendously proud to have our customers fly the
787-9 and look forward to delivery of the first
airplane to Air New Zealand next year.
During todays flight, 787-9 Senior Project
Pilot Mike Bryan and 787 Chief Pilot Randy Neville
departed to the north, reaching an altitude of
20,400 feet (6,218 meters) and an airspeed of
250 knots, or about 288 miles (463 kilometers)
per hour, customary for a first flight. While
Capts. Bryan and Neville tested the airplanes
systems and structures, onboard equipment transmitted
real-time data to a flight-test team on the ground
in Seattle.
We accomplished a lot in this flight,
and it went really well, said Bryan. The
787-9 is a great jet and we wanted to just keep
on flying.
Powered by two Rolls-Royce Trent 1000 engines,
the first 787-9 will be joined in flight test
by two additional airplanes, one of which will
feature General Electric GEnx engines. Those airplanes
are in the final stages of assembly in Boeings
Everett factory. Over the coming months, the fleet
will be subjected to a variety of tests and conditions
to demonstrate the safety and reliability of the
airplanes design.
The 787-9 will complement and extend the 787
family, offering airlines the ability to grow
routes first opened with the 787-8. With the fuselage
stretched by 20 feet (6 meters) over the 787-8,
the 787-9 will carry 40 more passengers an additional
300 nautical miles (555 kilometers), with the
same exceptional environmental performance
20 percent less fuel use and 20 percent fewer
emissions than similarly sized airplanes. The
787-9 leverages the visionary design of the 787-8,
offering the features passengers prefer such as
large, dimmable windows, large stow bins, modern
LED lighting, higher humidity, a lower cabin altitude,
cleaner air and a smoother ride.
Boeing is on track to deliver the 787-9 to launch
customer Air New Zealand in mid-2014. Twenty-five
customers from around the world have ordered 388
787-9s, accounting for 40 percent of all 787 orders.
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