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Boeing permitted to test fix for grounded 787

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(MCT) — The Federal Aviation Administration on Tuesday approved Boeing’s certification and testing plan for the redesigned 787 Dreamliner battery system, which Chief Executive Jim McNerney called “a critical and welcome milestone toward getting the fleet flying again.”

But Boeing acknowledged it’s just the first step in a process of “extensive testing and analysis,” including flight tests by two designated 787s.

And leading industry figures, while they expressed confidence in Boeing’s fix, said that even once the FAA clears the planes for service, getting the 50 grounded Dreamliners operational again and resuming the delayed deliveries could take months.

Philip Scruggs, executive vice president for International Lease Finance Corp., the 787’s largest customer with 74 jets on order, said Tuesday that though the lessor’s first Dreamliner was due in April, “it’ll be the summer” before they can get it.

The fix includes a completely redesigned battery.

“There isn’t a date yet,” Scruggs said. “The date will depend on the ability of the battery manufacturer to ramp up production of those batteries.

“It’ll depend on getting the airplanes that need the batteries as replacements — the airplanes that are in service — up in the air first, then getting the airplanes on the production line retrofitted and out the door.”

Scruggs added that he has “100 percent confidence in Boeing’s solution” and praised the manufacturer for keeping him and other near-term customers informed of the latest developments “on a daily basis.”

Scruggs spoke on the sidelines of the International Society of Transport Aircraft Trading airplane finance conference in Orlando, Fla.

Also at the conference, Steven Udvar-Hazy, chief executive of Air Lease Corp and the industry’s leading authority on the airplane market, praised the FAA’s “constructive role” in approving Boeing’s plan, calling it “a good step forward.”

But Udvar-Hazy too indicated that Boeing still has a way to go, including convincing Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood, who has said he wants to be “1,000 percent sure” the 787 is safe before it’s allowed back in service.

“Boeing will have to do an extensive flight testing program, will have to do validation, and I still don’t know where we are with the Secretary of Transportation and the Japanese civil aviation authorities,” Udvar-Hazy said.

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