Boeing's Dreamliner is dream deferred
The Boeing 787 Dreamliner was supposed to have taken off by now, but will remain grounded due to a problem predicting how the lightweight plane will respond to flight stress. Steve Henn reports.
The Boeing 787 Dreamliner is unveiled in Everett, Wash. (Tangi Quemener/AFP/Getty Images)
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BOB MOON: The first flight of Boeings' new 787 Dreamliner was supposed to take off today. But a problem predicting how the lightweight plane will respond to stress of flight means the new plan will stay grounded. Marketplace's Steve Henn reports.
STEVE HENN: Boeing introduced the 787 Dreamliner to the public with an over-the-top PR blitz.
As it turns out this is one trip that will have to wait. Even before the latest snafu production was running more than 2 years behind schedule.BOEING 787 DREAMLINER AD: Prepare yourself for the future of aviation -- the Boeing 787 Dreamliner. How will you travel through life?
RICHARD ABOULAFIA: I think there are good reasons for concern.
Richard Aboulafia is an air-industry analyst at the Teal Group. He says Boeing's using lightweight composites, like carbon fiber, for the plane, and ultimately they will make the plane incredibly fuel efficient, but...
ABOULAFIA: The problem is that we are still in uncharted turf in terms of using them for major chunks of the aircraft.
And Boeing's own computer models have repeatedly failed to predict how these materials react under stress. Right now the company's not saying when the plane will get airborne, and some analysts are predicting Boeing won't be able to deliver the Dreamliner until 2011.
In Washington, I'm Steve Henn for Marketplace.






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