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Boeing inspecting 787 fuselages for previously disclosed defects – Metro US

Boeing inspecting 787 fuselages for previously disclosed defects

Boeing 787 Dreamliners are shown in final production at widebody
Boeing 787 Dreamliners are shown in final production at widebody factory in North Charleston

SEATTLE (Reuters) -Boeing Co quality inspections related to previously disclosed production flaws in its 787 Dreamliner found the same issue in other parts of the jet, the company said on Monday.

Boeing said earlier this month that inspections for 787 production flaws were taking longer than expected, hampering the U.S. planemaker’s ability to deliver jets to customers through December.

On Monday, Boeing added that inspections of assembled 787 aircraft found that some areas where fuselage segments are joined were potentially not as smooth as required. The engineering specifications at issue are roughly equivalent to the width of a human hair, the company noted.

Boeing also said the problem does not pose an imminent safety hazard.

The specific reason behind the broader quality-control checks, and the fact that they now cover areas where large sections of the fuselage come together rather than just certain sections around the jet’s tail, was earlier reported by the Wall Street Journal.

The Federal Aviation Administration said in a statement on Monday that it “continuously engages with Boeing through established Continued Operational Safety and manufacturing oversight processes to appropriately address any issues that might arise.”

An FAA official told Reuters “none of the issues raised recently are considered to be immediate safety concerns, adding that it “takes these quality concerns seriously and continues to be involved in the discussions about any mitigations.”

(Reporting by Uday Sampath in Bengaluru and Eric M. Johnson in Seattle and David Shepardson in Washington; Editing by Anil D’Silva and Dan Grebler)