Saturday, September 8, 2012

The world's No. 1 jumbo jet languishes, looking for a savior | from the seattletimes.com


IT'S JUST an airplane.
That's what I was telling myself, climbing toward a piece of history I had admired since kindergarten.
My brain was grasping this, but my gut was having none of it. Just seconds before, taking the last few steps to one of the world's most famous jetliners, a flutter had gone through me, and I had to catch my breath.
It was embarrassing, in a hard-proof-of-your-airplane-geekdom way. But in hindsight, it's probably the very reaction many other Boeing brats would have if given the chance to poke around inside 747 RA001, or as a lot of us around Seattle have always known it, simply "No. 1."
It's just an airplane.
Except, of course, it isn't. And wasn't. And never will be.
It is a local treasure. Aside from the Space Needle, this jet, which revolutionized modern, long-distance air travel, is the most-iconic thing ever created in Seattle (yes, Everett and Renton, too), by Seattleites. Nothing says Seattle like a 747. Especially this big, once-beautiful, red, white and silver one.
This jumbo jet and its "second generation" of commercial flight dragged Seattle out from beneath the old growth and into the spotlight, leaving a lot of us squinting to this day. The plane has carried everything from the Space Shuttle (piggyback) to the president of the United States. And every day around the globe, hundreds of its hulking progeny touch down with a small puff of tire smoke and a big message: Hello, world. This is us.
And it really is "us," I thought, scanning the fuselage and wincing at the sight of paint worn to bare aluminum. Or at least was us. While driving Interstate 5 above Boeing Field, many locals who crane to catch a glimpse of the plane aren't just looking at some relic.
They're remembering life as we once knew it in a company town brought to you by the "old Boeing." Long hours and short vacations. Hard times and good times. All reflected in a massive machine which, at the time, seemed unthinkably complex — yet was designed and assembled, piece by a million pieces, by blue-collar people like my dad, your dad and someone else's mom.
To outsiders, this probably sounds like goopy nostalgia, and it is. It's very possible that if you never ripped through the front door of your house as a little kid, ran out onto the lawn to point skyward at a passing jetliner, and screamed, "My daddy built that one!" none of this is going to make any sense.
That's OK. Take our word for it: Of all the gleaming creations to roll off the assembly lines at the Lazy B, this airplane, for anyone with a familial connection to Boeing from the early 1960s through today, took plenty of hearts up with it every time it left the ground. It meant something profound, and still does.
All of which made it that much more painful as I stepped onboard, drank in some of the musty air and realized, in an instant, that No. 1 is dying.
THE FAINT LIGHT filtering through the long rows of little windows does not reveal a glorious picture. Plane double-ought-one was built as a test machine — a sacrificial lamb, if you will, for a coming fleet of birds now numbering more than 1,400. This plane made 12,000 test-flight cycles, and it shows.
Save for a klatch of ballast barrels in the aft section, No. 1 is an empty shell. The industrial look is accentuated by the lack of a plane's normal false ceiling or side panels. Walking its full, 231 feet gives you an X-ray view into the immensity of its structure — and engineering history.
"It's mostly intact," says tour guide Dan Hagedorn, the Museum of Flight's senior curator, over the hum of a large dehumidifier.
The floor, simple plywood in sections, is worn and creaky. An aluminum air duct runs along the plane's spine. Seemingly everywhere overhead, an array of steel flight-control cables winds through mazes of pulleys. Some parts bear numbers on old-fashioned black-and-white label-maker tape.
We climb the narrow, trademark spiral staircase and in "the hump" find the plane's lone creature-comfort space — a workers lounge resplendent with ashtray-equipped sofas upholstered in faded burnt-orange fabric that could be straight off the set of "Mad Men." Steps away is the surprisingly cramped cockpit, with its bewildering banks of analog gauges and dials, manual flight controls, heavy-duty metal switches and full-on engineering station — all now aeronautical relics.
The instruments bear the same settings as the last time the plane landed at Boeing Field in 1993, when No. 1 finished serving as a test bed for a new 777 engine. With pilot headsets slung casually aside next to tattered sheepskin-covered seats, it looks like the original flight crew might have just walked off the bridge for a smoke.
The rest of the interior is what the museum hopes will make a nice "before" picture. Blankets of fiberglass batting throughout the fuselage bear streaky signs of moisture damage.
"This is what keeps me awake at night," Hagedorn says.
The dehumidifier keeps things fairly dry. But it's sort of a losing battle, and much damage was done during the decade or more the plane sat, unused, across Marginal Way at Boeing Field.
An aluminum aircraft like this one is basically a 77-yard-long metal shed with tens of thousands of rivets and small openings for rain, birds, insects and other invaders. Including humans. Some Boeing employees sheepishly report that as the plane languished, a homeless person or persons broke into it for shelter, designating the tail section as a latrine.
Nobody at the museum is happy about this; restoring it to flight-test configuration has been a goal for years. It's a matter of money. Fixing the plane's interior alone could cost $1.2 million. The price tag for a complete overhaul is squishier.
"No museum, anywhere, has ever faced a restoration project of this magnitude," says Hagedorn, whose résumé includes two decades at the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum.
After that comes the really hard — and costly — part: To prevent No. 1 and other historic planes here from reverting to leaky-metal-shed status, all of them need to come in from the incessant Seattle rain.
RIGHT ABOUT the time I was born at Overlake Hospital Medical Center in Bellevue, No. 1 was being hatched in decidedly nonglamorous quarters in Renton.
The plane has a purely Puget Sound pedigree. Its distinctive humpback design was sketched out (on paper) in 75,000 drawings by a team of engineers led by Seattle native Joe Sutter, who grew up daydreaming about the magic of flight, and earned a University of Washington engineering degree to put some of that imagination to use.
The mammoth project Sutter, then a 737 engineer, was handed in 1965 had begun as a pipe dream of Pan American Airlines magnate Juan Trippe, who famously told Boeing Chairman William Allen that if the company could build the world's largest jetliner, Pan Am would buy it.
The plane went from handshake to first flight in only four years — unthinkable even by today's computer-design standards. It's impossible not to admire the sheer audacity of that.
The plane was a monster leap into the future, not so much for its technology, but scale. In a world of 200-passenger long-range jets, Trippe wanted room for 400, plus cargo. Boeing committed, even though it was pouring much of its efforts into a Supersonic Transport prototype widely seen as the future of the company. Because of this, the 747 was designed for a short life as an intercontinental passenger carrier and then cargo hauler.
Sutter and fellow design engineer Rowland Brown quickly rejected what everyone expected they would build: a plane somewhat wider than current models, with a full-length, double-deck interior. Instead, they conceived a super-wide, single-level fuselage broad enough to hold rows of 8-by-8-foot shipping containers or spacious rows of seats separated by twin aisles. To make all this fit, the cockpit was kicked up into the rafters. Hence the now-famous hump.
The dimensions were staggering: 2 ½ times larger than any commercial plane ever built. But Sutter and his team plunged ahead.
Early on, legend has it, more than one airline executive given a peek inside a mock-up of the plane muttered the same testament to its biblical dimensions: "Jesus Christ!"
From Day One, the plane's taller, straighter sidewalls created a sense of security for passengers, Sutter noted in his 2005 memoir, "747: Creating the World's First Jumbo Jet and Other Adventures from a Life in Aviation." "It felt like a place, not a conveyance," he said.
So large was the 747 that Boeing had no plant big enough to build it. In a marathon project that would make modern environmentalists blanch, 4 million cubic yards of earth were hastily graded in a forested area near Paine Field in South Everett. When No. 1 inched off the line for its rollout on Sept. 30, 1968, the Everett assembly plant literally was being closed in around it.
THE RUSHED status only added to the plane's underdog persona. Not that it needed help: Until the day it actually did, many people insisted the thing was so huge, it would never fly.
Doubts were so strong, Sutter recalls, that even his wife, Nancy, needed reassurance. On the frosty first-flight morning of Feb. 9, 1969, Sutter drove her to a spot near the runway where he was confident No. 1 would slip the surly bonds of Earth. Stay here, he said, and watch her go.
Not long after that, the world's first jumbo jet — which always appears as if it's moving entirely too slowly to fly — lumbered down the runway and, at 164 mph, lifted gently into the sky — exactly where Joe Sutter said it would. The plane, piloted by Jack Waddell and Brien Wygle, with engineer Jesse Wallick, flew over Puget Sound for just less than two hours, cutting the flight short because of a wing-flap malfunction. Boeing, and Seattle, celebrated.
"It's a pilot's airplane," Wygle said, beaming, afterward. "This is a flying arrow."
Launched in the depths of a recession, at the dawn of an oil crisis, the 747 program literally mortgaged Boeing's future. It easily could have failed, and almost did.
No. 1 was born slightly overweight and underpowered by prototype Pratt & Whitney JT9D turbofan engines. Only months later were the engines tweaked to bring the plane up to its full (600 miles-an-hour) speed — and full potential.
When the SST project died in 1971, Sutter's 747 went from short-term fill-in to Project One. Over time, the plane that competitors had called Boeing's "Dumbo Jet" rose to Queen of the Skies.
It is no small coincidence that the delayed-success story of the 747 largely mirrors that of the economy in the place, and among the people, who still build its latest successor, the 747-8, in Everett.
But beyond its massive economic impact, the 747 is our best local testament to what ordinary people can do when they think big and plow forward. This airplane was Seattle's moon shot.
"It showed," Sutter says, "what we human beings can achieve when we collaborate."
ANY GLIMPSE OF the plane makes me think of my dad, Ronald L. Judd, who proudly carted me, at age 5, to its first flight, and those of other Boeing jetliners that followed.
A color photo of a gleaming No. 1 soaring over Puget Sound — a handout to all employees — hung on the wall above Dad's basement workshop for most of his adult life. I looked up at it a million times, looked down at his tools, and saw not just an airplane but possibilities.
My father began working for the company in 1959, barely out of high school, painting B-52s in Moses Lake. Like many of his lifelong machinist co-workers, he eventually worked on most of Boeing's missile systems and airplane lines. He took great pride in all that work, but especially in the 747, which he helped produce but never set foot on as a fare-paying civilian.
After he died last spring, I pulled that yellowed photo down from the wall and brought it home, where it will hang in my own garage workshop. I treasure it, and my dad's tools, as a reminder of his unabashed occupational pride — something that seems rare in an era when fewer and fewer of us produce things with our hands.
When I look up at that picture, I still see possibilities. One I hope others share is ensuring that this big lug of an airplane is restored to its first-flight glory. And kept that way.
It wouldn't be cheap. If the plane is restored, the museum needs to preserve it for good by moving it into a new structure that would house all the museum's iconic aircraft now decaying outside. Ballpark estimate: $125 million.
"We're looking at this point for seed money," Hagedorn says.
So far, no sowers.
I mulled all this later, walking beneath the aging plane. Five of these first-generation 747s underwent grueling flight tests to gain FAA certification. Four others were delivered to Pan Am and TWA and, like those airlines, are long gone.
No. 1, alone, represents the genre. The flight crew's names, hand-painted below the cockpit, are fading, as is the "City of Everett" designation on its side. The plane is washed occasionally, but paint this old never really comes clean.
With every passing day, the job gets that much larger. Peering skyward at the six-story-high tail, I feel a wave of sadness and a touch of shame.
For many local people, this is the plane that paid our mortgages, straightened our teeth, bought our football cleats and put us through college. It is a testament to the genius and sweat equity of our parents' generation. But I wonder if ours can even muster the ability to preserve their handiwork.
When we needed it most, the 747 put a roof over Seattle's head. Surely it is not asking too much to return the favor.

Thursday, September 6, 2012

ANA 787 Dreamliner Aborts Flight Due to Hydraulic Issue



ANA Boeing 787
ANA Boeing 787
An ANA Boeing 787 Dreamliner aborted its flight Thursday at Okayama Airport due to probable hydraulic issue.
White smoke could be seen coming out of one of the engines as it taxxied for takeoff headed to Tokyo. There were 88 people aboard and there were no injuries reported.
‘The 787 has been taken out of service, but ANA suspects a glitch in the hydraulic system to be the cause of the problem. While it may have looked like smoke, ANA has determined that nothing was actually burning. Rather, the white fumes were vapor caused by oil leaking onto the hot engine, creating a mist. Those inspecting don’t believe there is any problems with the engine itself, and that it could be limited to leaking pumps.’
ANA is one of the first customers to fly the Dreamliner, which has been delayed by over 3 years.

Saturday, September 1, 2012

Air NZ plane transmits emergency code, lands safely


Air New Zealand aircraft ZK-OKP has landed at Heathrow Airport in London after transmitting an emergency code while over the Atlantic Ocean.
The Boeing 777-300 aircraft (shown above), was operating flight NZ2 to London from Auckland via Los Angeles.
A 7700 squawk code was sent from the aircraft which indicates to controllers on the ground that the pilots are dealing with an emergency situation.
Twitter user, Jon Wornham who works in air traffic control tweeted that the emergency may have been due to an hydraulic issue with the aircraft.
Website Heathrowcam.net captured this image of ZK-OKP moments before it touched down.
Air New Zealand has said NZ2 landed following a minor incident, some loss of hydraulic pressure. No emergency was declared.

Thursday, August 30, 2012

United Airlines Announces Boeing 787 Dreamliner Domestic Routes



United Airlines Boeing 787 at Seattle
United Airlines Boeing 787 at Seattle (photo courtesy of United)
United Airlines today announced plans to fly its new Boeing 787 Dreamliner aircraft on domestic routes starting in November as it prepares to begin previously-announced international service in December and January.
United expects to take delivery of the first five new Dreamliners this year from its total order for 50 of these aircraft. As the initial aircraft are inducted into the fleet, they will be based at United’s Houston hub and will enter into service according to the following schedule:
Late September: 1st 787 delivery
October: Proving/validation flights and training activities that allow United to meet FAA certification requirements and prepare United to become the first North American operator for this new aircraft type. 2nd 787 delivery.
November: Scheduled commercial flights from Houston to other U.S. hubs. 3rd and 4th 787 deliveries expected.
December: Scheduled commercial flights from Houston to other U.S. hubs. 5th 787 delivery expected. First international service Dec. 4.
January: Commencement of scheduled commercial flights on additional international routes as announced on Aug. 23.
United will phase in scheduled 787 service between Houston and each of its other domestic hubs beginning Nov, 4, 2012 as shown below. This schedule allows United’s 787s to operate more than 470 flight segments in the U.S. in the last two months of 2012 in addition to international flights beginning in early December:
Route
Flight times
Effective Date
End Date
Frequency
IAH-SFO-IAH
5:45 p.m. westbound
12:15 a.m. eastbound
Nov. 4, 2012
Dec. 2, 2012
5 x weekly
IAH-LAX-IAH
3:30 p.m. westbound
6:25 p.m. eastbound
Nov. 4, 2012
Dec. 3, 2012
6 x weekly
IAH-ORD-IAH
7:25 a.m. northbound
11:15 a.m. southbound
Nov. 4, 2012
Dec. 3, 2012
6 x weekly
IAH-EWR-IAH
8 a.m. northbound
3:30 p.m. southbound
Nov. 4, 2012
Jan. 3, 2013
Daily, except Nov. 18
IAH-CLE-IAH
7 a.m. northbound
4 p.m. southbound
Nov. 10, 2012
Nov. 10, 2012
One-day service
IAH-IAD-IAH
7 a.m. northbound
3:50 p.m. southbound
Nov. 17, 2012
Nov. 17, 2012
One-day service
IAH-SFO-IAH
5:45 p.m. westbound
12:15 a.m. eastbound
Dec. 3, 2012
Jan. 3, 2013
Daily
IAH-LAX-IAH
3:30 p.m. westbound
6:25 p.m. eastbound
Dec. 4, 2012
Jan. 3, 2013
Daily
IAH-DEN-IAH
7:20 a.m. westbound
10:15 a.m. eastbound
Dec. 5, 2012
Jan. 2, 2013
Daily
IAH-LAX-IAH
7:35 a.m. westbound
12:30 p.m. eastbound
Jan. 3, 2013
March 31, 2013
Daily
IAH-ORD-IAH
7:25 a.m. northbound
11:15 a.m. southbound
Jan. 4, 2013
March 29, 2013
Daily
IAH-DEN-IAH
9:15 a.m. westbound
2:15 p.m. eastbound
March 31, 2013
Open
Daily
The 787 aircraft will display for sale for these domestic routes on united.com and other distribution channels beginning Sept. 1. In October, United will announce plans for the official first commercial 787 flights, which are expected to occur prior to Nov. 4 but only after proving/validation flights and training are complete.
“While the Dreamliner’s superior operating economics make it ideally suited for international routes, we’re pleased to have this opportunity to introduce it on domestic flights between many of our hub cities allowing both customers and employees to experience this revolutionary aircraft and its many unique benefits,” says United’s Managing Director of Scheduling, Grant Whitney. “United customers and employees can take part in welcoming the newest member of our fleet.”
United

Boeing Moves to Speed 787 Deliveries


EVERETT, Wash.—The average Boeing Co. jetliner gets a few test flights after it leaves production before being delivered. But for each new 787 Dreamliner, Boeing has conducted as many as eight test flights—a time-consuming and expensive process for the already much-delayed jet.

image
Now Boeing is starting to make progress at compressing that test-flight procedure, hoping to speed deliveries. Production and design problems left the Dreamliner program more than three years behind schedule, and the extra test flights have created a bottleneck for customers eager to get their planes.
Boeing jets such as the 737 and 777 typically get flown once or twice after rolling off the production line and once more by the airline before starting commercial flights.
"It should be just like the 737," said Pat Shanahan, Boeing's senior vice president of airplane production. "It rolls out [of the factory], take it for a spin, let the customer have a flight, then go."
A new Dreamliner delivered last week to Ethiopian Airlines required just three test flights, including one by the carrier. Replicating that process is crucial to Boeing's quest to deliver between 35 and 42 Dreamliners this year, having handed over just 13 so far.
As is typical with new aircraft, the Dreamliner still has its share of bugs, such as producing erroneous software messages and components that have failed prematurely. Tweaking each new plane to solve problems created the need for the additional test flights. In time, Boeing hopes to solve the problems permanently or at least be able to make fixes without having to test the plane in flight each time.
"We're having to refly the airplane just because we're getting familiar with its behavior and characteristics," Mr. Shanahan said. Boeing declined to say how many test flights it has conducted, which were determined by tracking independent reports on flights.
Each test flight uses thousands of gallons of fuel and ties up mechanics and other staff, driving up costs as Boeing looks to deliver more than $23.5 billion in Dreamliners crowded into nearly every available corner of its facility here near Seattle.
Ethiopian is just the third airline to receive a Dreamliner, but as many as seven more new customers are lined up to take delivery this year, according to Boeing production personnel. Each customer creates a challenge with its own choice of seating arrangement and entertainment system. Additionally, Boeing has had to store dozens of aircraft in various stages of completion, awaiting newer components, including some that failed as a result of the long delay.
Boeing lists the price of the Dreamliner, the first commercial jetliner to be made mostly from carbon-fiber composites, at $206.8 million. But discounts of at least 50% are common in the industry, and the early customers slated to get their jets placed their orders when the list price was lower.
"You need to see the [delivery] pace pick up here fairly significantly in the next few months," said Ken Herbert, senior vice president of equity research for Imperial Capital, who projected that the company would hit the lower end of its Dreamliner delivery forecast for this year.

Monday, August 27, 2012

Airlines Start to Cancel Flights Along Gulf Coast Due to Hurricane Isaac | from AirNation


Hurricane Isaac
Hurricane Isaac
Multiple airlines are starting to cancel flights along the Gulf Coast of the United States as Hurricane Isaac bears down on the region (NOTE: Isaac is not classified at hurricane status yet but expect it TO be in the next 12 hours).
NOTE: If you know of any airline/airport closures post them in the comments below to help others who might need the information.
Below will be an updated page on airlines and airports that will cancel flights, close and change flights.
You can also go to our ‘Current Airport Delays’ map to see airport conditions HERE.
Note that this list is not 100% accurate as information changes constantly. Always check with your airline and airport for the latest information.

Southwest Airlines:
As of 1pm CDT today, Southwest Airlines canceled 13 flights and AirTran canceled 22 flights due to Tropical Storm Isaac.
The Florida airports affected by cancelations are Ft. Lauderdale, Ft. Myers, West Palm Beach, and Key West. Key West Airport made the decision to close until tomorrow. Ft. Lauderdale, Ft. Myers, and West Palm Beach reopened late this morning after closing yesterday.
Both Southwest and AirTran have suspended Tuesday, August 28, operations in New Orleans, which means approximately 40 flight cancelations inbound and 40 flight cancelations outbound. To accommodate extra Customers who are electing to fly today, Southwest has added three additional flights this evening from New Orleans.
We will continue to monitor the storm and make decisions regarding other airports and Wednesday’s schedule as needed.

United Airlines:
Flights on United will be suspended to New Orleans until the morning of Aug. 30. No other information is available on other Gulf area airports at this time.

Frontier Airlines:
Frontier Airlines today enacted a flexible policy for travel to, from or through New Orleans, La. This policy applies to customers scheduled to travel Aug. 27 – 29, 2012, who purchased their tickets on or before Aug. 26, 2012.
Customers who have already started their travel may make one itinerary change. Rules and restrictions regarding standard change fees, advance purchase, day or time applications, blackouts, and minimum or maximum stay requirements have been waived. Changes must be made by Midnight, August 29, 2012 and travel completed by September 7, 2012.
Frontier has not released an official cancellation statement at New Orleans but it is likely.

Delta Airlines:
Delta canceled two flights from its Atlanta hub to New Orleans tonight, said Morgan Durrant, an airline spokesman. The carrier is dropping 24 flights tomorrow to airports in Isaac’s path, including New Orleans; Mobile, Alabama; and Pensacola, Florida.

JetBlue
JetBlue is suspending five round-trip flights to New Orleans starting tonight.

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Qantas Cancels Order for 35 Boeing 787 Dreamliners


ARTICLE FROM AIRNATION.COM
Qantas Boeing 787
QA Boeing 787
Qantas Airways (QA) announced Wednesday that they have cancelled their order for 35 Boeing 787-9 Dreamliners.
The announcement comes on the heels of the airlines’ announcement that they posted a $256 million loss for the year ended June 30.
“The B787 is an excellent aircraft and remains an important part of our future,” Qantas Chief Executive Alan Joyce said in a statement. “However, circumstances have changed significantly since our order several years ago.”
The airline said they will still retain purchase rights to 50 787s in the future. That would see the Australian airline start taking delivery of the jets in 2016.
Qantas still has an order for 15 of the original Dreamliner model, the 787-8. Those planes are slated to go to Jetstar, which is Qantas’ subsidiary carrier that will fly Asian regional routes.
QA also deferred delivery of two Airbus A380 Superjumbo jets by three and four years.