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Boeing permitted to test fix for grounded 787

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Both LaHood and FAA chief Michael Huerta indicated Tuesday that the testing regime will be stringent.

LaHood said regulators “won’t allow the plane to return to service unless we’re satisfied that the new design ensures the safety of the aircraft and its passengers.”

Boeing’s Dreamliners have been grounded since mid-January after battery failures caused a battery fire in a jet on the ground in Boston and then a smoldering battery on a flight in Japan. The grounding has halted deliveries of new planes as well as flights by the 50 already delivered to customers.

A Boeing team led by Boeing Commercial Airplanes President Ray Conner on Feb. 22 presented the company’s planned fix to Huerta and other FAA officials.

Boeing’s proposed improvements include “a redesign of the internal battery components to minimize initiation of a short circuit within the battery, better insulation of the cells and the addition of a new containment and venting system,” according to the FAA.

The agency said its certification plan requires a series of tests that must be passed before the 787 could return to service, with specific pass/fail criteria and testing methodology. FAA engineers will be present for the testing and will be closely involved in all aspects of the process, the agency said.

The testing regime will meet a strict standard — stricter than that used by Boeing in originally certifying the Dreamliner.

The more stringent standard was devised by the Radio Technical Commission on Aeronautics, an advisory committee that included senior Boeing engineers, which in 2008 recommended a series of tests to ensure that lithium-ion batteries met FAA regulatory requirements.

One key test requires engineers to turn off the overcharge protections in the battery and induce a thermal runaway — an unstoppable, self-reinforcing process of overheating — to prove that the battery’s reinforced box completely contains the resultant explosion.

That test was not performed during the original certification process. By 2008, Boeing’s Dreamliner had already gone down a different test path toward satisfying the FAA.

Now, to meet the FAA’s newly raised expectations, Boeing will adopt the RTCA standard.

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

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