03 May, 2020

Second Boeing 777X completes first flight

 Second Boeing 777X completes first flight

The US planemaker Boeing has conducted a productive and successful first flight of the second 777X aeroplane. Capt. Ted Grady, 777X project pilot, and Capt. Van Chaney, 777/777X chief pilot, flew for 2 hours and 58 minutes over Washington state before landing at Seattle's Boeing Field at 2:02 p.m. Pacific.

Designated WH002, this aeroplane is the second of four in a dedicated flight test fleet and will test handling characteristics and other aspects of aeroplane performance. An array of equipment, sensors and monitoring devices throughout the cabin allows the onboard team to document and evaluate the aeroplane's response to test conditions in real-time.


The 777X test plan lays out a comprehensive series of tests and conditions on the ground and in the air to demonstrate the safety and reliability of the design. To date, crews have flown the first aeroplane nearly 100 hours at a variety of flap settings, speeds, altitudes and system settings as part of the initial evaluation of the flight envelope. With initial airworthiness now demonstrated, the team can safely add personnel to monitor testing onboard instead of relying solely on a ground-based telemetry station, unlocking testing at greater distances.

About the Boeing 777X Family
The 777X includes the 777-8 and the 777-9, the newest members of Boeing's market-leading widebody family.
Seat Count
(Typical 2-class)
777-8: 384 passengers
777-9: 426 passengers
Engine
GE9X, supplied by GE Aviation
Range
777-8: 8,730 nautical miles (16,170 km)
777-9: 7,285 nautical miles (13,500 km)
Wingspan
Extended: 235 ft, 5 in (71.8 m)
On ground: 212 ft, 8 in (64.8 m)
Length
777-8: 229 ft (69.8 m)
777-9: 251 ft, 9 in (76.7 m)   
Program Launch
2013
Production Start
2017
Ground Testing
2019
First Flight
January 25, 2020
First Delivery
2021





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