|
The results
of a recent test on a Boeing 787 Dreamliner fuselage section that was dropped
from a height of about 15 feet have validated the computer modelling Boeing used
to gauge how its futuristic carbon-fibre composites will hold up on impact, the
company announced on Thursday 6 September. Since
the test results broadly matched the parameters Boeing''s engineers had predicted
on the basis of a computer analysis, it will not need to perform more physical
tests on actual pieces of the plane, a Boeing representative said. Rather, the
company can model various crash scenarios using computer simulation modelling. The
test was conducted late last month. Boeing dropped a 10-foot-long fuselage section
at its Apache helicopter manufacturing plant in Mesa, Arizona. The test simulates
the vertical impact of an emergency landing on mostly flat terrain, not a full
crash. But the company hasn''t released detailed test results, as it considers
the information proprietary and confidential. The
787 Dreamliner is the world''s first large commercial jetliner to be made mostly
from carbon fibre-reinforced plastics. These advanced composites are lighter and
sturdier than the aluminum alloys normally used to make aircraft fuselages, but
also more brittle and less shock absorbent. The
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) had ordered Boeing to prove the all-composite
787 fuselage is as crashworthy as any normal aircraft with an aluminum fuselage.
Last week''s test was the final in a series of three. Two others, one performed
late last year and the other a few months ago, also confirmed Boeing''s computational
analysis, the company said. Boeing
rolled out its first 787 in early July, but is still working to get the plane
ready for its maiden flight. It had hoped to begin flight tests in late August
or early September, but announced on Wednesday that the first 787 won''t fly until
mid-November or mid-December, owing to delays in assembling the first plane and
integrating flight-control software. (See: Now
Boeing faces possible delays in its B787 Dreamliner programme) Boeing
officials still maintain that the 787 will be delivered to its first customer,
Japan''s All Nippon Airways, next May. But they now have little or no room for
error, because the flight-test program will have to be completed in about six
months. It took nearly 11 months to certify the 777, Boeing''s last new plane.
|