August 22, 2007

Boeing and Ariana sign agreement for fleet renewal

Boeing (NYSE: BA) and Ariana Afghan Airlines have finalised a fleet renewal plan that includes the lease of two 757-200s from Boeing Capital Corporation.

The fleet renewal plan also includes the direct purchase of four Next-Generation 737-700 aircraft, which will be delivered starting from 2009. In addition the agreement includes an advanced training package for Ariana’s flight and cabin crews and maintenance and engineering staff to begin training for the 757-200s that will be delivered later this month.

First American Airlines Boeing 737-800 with Blended Winglets enters service

Aviation Partners Boeing has said that the first American Airlines Boeing 737-800 aircraft retrofitted with Blended Winglet technology has entered service.

The company said that the winglets, developed by Aviation Partners Boeing, a Seattle-based joint venture of Aviation Partners Inc and the Boeing Company, are eight-foot vertical extensions of the aircraft’s wingtips that have proven to significantly reduce fuel consumption, improve payload/range capability, lower aircraft noise and emissions, and dramatically improve take-off performance from difficult airports.

American Airlines’ mechanics installed the winglets at their maintenance facility in Tulsa, and last week the airline began Blended Winglet installations on 20 of its Boeing 757-200s.

DBA to order aircraft from Boeing

DBA, a German airline, has said that it will be making an order with Boeing.

According to the airline the order will consist of a mix of 40 Boeing 737-700 and 737-800 aircraft due to be delivered between 2008 and 2010. Reuters reported that the airline is considering a share flotation as a way of paying for the acquisition.

Carolyn Corvi Honored: Improved Boeing’s Production Capabilities

Throughout her 32-year career with Boeing, Corvi has demonstrated creativity and innovation, and she has consistently achieved measurable results through the application of lean principles to Boeing’s operations. For instance, under her leadership, the 737/757 Programs incorporated industry-leading lean manufacturing principles, including a moving assembly line that reduced 737 final assembly flow time from 22 days when she took it over in 1999 to 11 days in 2005, just prior to her promotion to her current position. Earlier in her career, she was also responsible for a Move to the Lake project, which colocated most of the people who designed, built and supported the 737 inside one facility-a move that fostered increased teamwork and improved integration.

Corvi’s current assignment requires that she lead an unprecedented integration. She must bring together all facets of commercial airplane production, including design, fabrication, global procurement, final assembly, and delivery of all airplane models.

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Corvi’s success in the aerospace industry stems from her commitment to sound product development, customer relations, and supply-chain integration. She is considered a guru in applying lean practices and building the kinds of cultural changes necessary to sustain continuous organizational improvements.

Airbus Employees Work Really Fast

New Airbus chief to maintain course
Tom Enders who becomes chief executive officer of Airbus next week said Tuesday that there will be no upheaval at the world’s largest plane maker once he takes charge. Enders who previously shared leadership at Airbus’ parent company European Aeronautic Defense and Space Co. said that Toulouse France-based Airbus has been set on the right track by current chief Louis Gallois and that he backs the restructuring plan he will inherit.

Wed, 22 Aug 2007 00:00:00 EST
Boeing India appoints Daniel Gillian as Sourcing Director
Boeing India appoints Daniel Gillian as Sourcing DirectorBoeing India appoints Daniel Gillian as Sourcing Director….Read the full post from ASIA Travel Tips.com
via Blogdigger blog search for boeing.

Tue, 21 Aug 2007 20:23:39 EDT
RARE Lot 5 STARFLYER AIRLINE JAPAN AIRBUS A320-200 New
US $9.99 (1 Bid) End Date: Wednesday Aug-22-2007 6:42:00 PDTBid now | Add to watch list

Mon, 20 Aug 2007 17:47:05 PDT
China Air Boeing 747 Kowloon City Plaza Hong Kong Kai Tak
China Air Boeing 747 Kowloon City Plaza Hong Kong Kai Takairboyd1 min 18 sec - Feb 10, 2006Taken from the Kowloon City Mall under the approach into Kai Tak. He actually bounced the landing, but it’s obscured.

Fri, 10 Feb 2006 14:38:19 PST
Boeing’s Dreamliner still missing parts
San Diego Union-Tribune: SEATTLE  The first 787 Dreamliner, which Boeing rolled out with great fanfare July 8, is now sitting partially assembled with its first flight just over a month away.
The airplane on display in July appeared complete from the outside, but it was a partially empty shel

Boeing: New Jet, New Way of Doing Business

The design and production strategy employed by the $55 billion, Chicago-based aerospace giant to get the 787 built as quickly and economically as possible involves an unprecedented degree of collaboration between Boeing and its partners around the world—partners who are participating in the actual design of the plane. All of which marks a shift in the way Boeing defines itself: The company is no longer just a manufacturer, but also a high-end systems integrator. “We are a technology company,” says Scott Griffin, Boeing vice president and CIO.

The reasons Boeing is making the shift go beyond the savings it hopes to enjoy by making the planes faster and cheaper. The company is also spreading the costs of design and development throughout its partner network, and building global relationships that may, in turn, help the company sell its planes overseas.

The previous state of the art in aviation manufacturing was to have global partners work from a common blueprint to produce parts—actually, whole sections of the airplane—that were then physically shipped to a Boeing assembly plant near Seattle to see if they fit together. There, successive iterations of the planes were built and refined with onsite teams from around the world.

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On the 787, that process has gone the way of the biplane. Instead, parts are designed concurrently by partners, and virtually “assembled” in a computer model maintained by Boeing outside its corporate firewall. “We have different people building different pieces by creating data that is assembled and checked in real time,” says Griffin, who is responsible for the computer systems that make this process possible. Ultimately, completed sections of the plane will be picked up by three specially fitted 747s and carried to a Boeing facility in Everett, Wash. Thanks to the online modeling, Boeing can now trust its global partners with the process of creating entire sections of the plane, from concept to production.

“The design is occurring in Japan, Russia, Italy, the U.S.,” Griffin says. “This is not merely a PowerPoint or SharePoint collaboration, or looking at two-dimensional drawings to see if a company can bid on a contract. This is big companies like the Japanese heavies, and our Russian design center, and Boeing in Everett working together. This is something that creates competitive advantage.

“This kind of collaboration has taken a huge amount of time out of the process,” he adds. “It’s where the big savings are.”

The competitive advantage is critical to Boeing, which is locked in a global battle for market leadership with Airbus S.A.S., the Toulouse, France-based aerospace manufacturer that has emerged as its most potent competitor for civil aviation business in the modern era. Boeing has 291 firm orders, and 88 commitments, from 27 airlines for the new 787, nicknamed the “Dreamliner,” which will seat from 250 to 330 passengers in varying configurations. List price: around $150 million per plane.

A380 Handover In Singapore Scheduled For October 15

History of technology - Boeing touts feeble Hummer-mounted raygun
Boeing touts feeble Hummer-mounted raygun.

A Malév Boeing 767-es utasszállítója (2007.08.20.)

A Malév Boeing 767-es utasszállítója (2007.08.20.)

Author: nagycsillus
Keywords: A Malév Boeing 767-es utasszállítója (2007.08.20.)
Added: August 22, 2007

Wed, 22 Aug 2007 04:40:04 -0700