Boeing 787 Dreamliners are shown in final production at widebody factory in North Charleston, South Carolina, U.S., January 17, 2019. / REUTERS/Eric Johnson
Boeing expects to begin delivering improved 787-9 and 787-10 Dreamliners to airlines in the first half of this year, enabling longer flights or greater cargo capability, a senior executive said on Feb. 4.
Improvements to the maximum takeoff weight of the wide-body planes will let airlines fly a further 400 miles (643 km) or five to six tons of additional cargo, said Darren Hulst, Boeing's vice president of commercial marketing.
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"Those aircraft are actually already in the production system, moving through towards certification, and we anticipate deliveries of those aircraft beginning the first half of this year," he told reporters on the sidelines of the Singapore Airshow.
Hulst also said the planemaker expected the larger 777X to be certified in the second half of the year, though it might not enter service until next year.
"When we think about the difference between certification and entry into service, it's really up to our customers when they take delivery of the aircraft and the processes and steps they need to go through between certification and ultimately revenue service for that aircraft," he said.
Reuters reported on Feb. 3 that Boeing planned the first flight of a production 777X in April, in an important sign of progress for its long-delayed new jet.
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