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OPINION: MRJ has certification hurdles ahead
For a while it almost felt like the Mitsubishi Regional Jetwould never make it to the USA. It is not often that a flight-test prototype aborts its mission twice in two days, but that was just what happened when Mitsubishi Aircraft attempted to ferry its first flight-test article to Moses Lake over the weekend of 27 August.
A month later and the Japanese manufacturer is no doubt breathing a belated sigh of relief after the MRJ landed safely at Grant County International airport after a 4,500nm (8,300km), multi-leg journey.
The real work, however, is only just starting.
Mitsubishi plans for the majority of flight testing to be performed in the USA, thanks to more predictable weather and a deep pool of certification specialists and engineering centres which are to be used to make up for its own inexperience.
It now has less than 20 months to secure approvals for the MRJ90 – a complicated process that will almost certainly encounter additional obstacles along the way.
It still aims to hand over the first example to launch customer All NipponAirways in mid-2018, and can ill afford any further programme slippage.
While Mitsubishi has never previously produced a commercial aircraft, it has a strong aerospace pedigree.
Getting FTA-1 to the USA is a major milestone, but what follows will put its manufacturer’s credentials as a would-be airframer to the ultimate test.
https://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/opinion-mrj-has-certification-hurdles-ahead-429896/
ANA faces risk of delay in delivery of Mitsubishi planes
October 2, 2016 | 5:42 PM
By Bloomberg News
#ANA faces risk of delay in delivery of Mitsubishi planes
Tokyo: Mitsubishi Aircraft, a unit of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, may delay the delivery of its MRJ regional jets to its first customer ANA Holdings due to the possibility of some technical modifications to the aircraft, the Japanese carrier said.
The builder of Japan’s first home-made passenger jet informed of the possibility of such a risk late September, ANA spokeswoman Maho Ito said, which may mean it won’t be able to meet the original schedule for mid-2018. Mitsubishi has not given any new date and ANA will decide on a response only to a confirmed delay, she said. Representatives of Mitsubishi didn’t respond to multiple calls to their cellphones outside business hours on Saturday.
The MRJ programme, aimed at challenging the dominance of Brazil’s Embraer and Canada’s Bombardier in the market for planes with less than 100 seats, had recently suffered some setbacks after two test flights to the United States were aborted following faulty air-conditioning. As recently as August, Mitsubishi said it was sticking to its delivery schedule for 2018, and said its third attempt to test-fly the aircraft to the U.S. was a success on Wednesday.
Total Orders
ANA, the operator of Japan’s biggest airline and the launch customer for the Mitsubishi Regional Jet, has ordered a total of 25 MRJs, which can seat as many as 92 people.
The MRJ, which made its first flight in November last year, won its first order from a European company in February. Mitsubishi had 427 orders for its new aircraft, including options and purchase rights, and its two biggest customers are based in the U.S.
Japan’s last domestically produced commercial aircraft was the YS-11, a turboprop made by Nihon Aircraft Manufacturing Corp., a consortium that included Mitsubishi Heavy, Kawasaki Heavy Industries Ltd. and Fuji Heavy Industries Ltd. Production was stopped in 1974 after 182 of the planes were sold.
Mitsubishi Heavy shares declined 2.7 percent to 419.10 yen in Tokyo on Friday, extending their losses this year to about 20 percent, versus a 14 percent drop in the benchmark Nikkei 225 index.
http://timesofoman.com/article/9338...isk-of-delay-in-delivery-of-Mitsubishi-planes
- 03 OCTOBER, 2016
- BY: FLIGHT INTERNATIONAL
For a while it almost felt like the Mitsubishi Regional Jetwould never make it to the USA. It is not often that a flight-test prototype aborts its mission twice in two days, but that was just what happened when Mitsubishi Aircraft attempted to ferry its first flight-test article to Moses Lake over the weekend of 27 August.
A month later and the Japanese manufacturer is no doubt breathing a belated sigh of relief after the MRJ landed safely at Grant County International airport after a 4,500nm (8,300km), multi-leg journey.
The real work, however, is only just starting.
Mitsubishi plans for the majority of flight testing to be performed in the USA, thanks to more predictable weather and a deep pool of certification specialists and engineering centres which are to be used to make up for its own inexperience.
It now has less than 20 months to secure approvals for the MRJ90 – a complicated process that will almost certainly encounter additional obstacles along the way.
It still aims to hand over the first example to launch customer All NipponAirways in mid-2018, and can ill afford any further programme slippage.
While Mitsubishi has never previously produced a commercial aircraft, it has a strong aerospace pedigree.
Getting FTA-1 to the USA is a major milestone, but what follows will put its manufacturer’s credentials as a would-be airframer to the ultimate test.
https://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/opinion-mrj-has-certification-hurdles-ahead-429896/
ANA faces risk of delay in delivery of Mitsubishi planes
October 2, 2016 | 5:42 PM
By Bloomberg News
#ANA faces risk of delay in delivery of Mitsubishi planes
Tokyo: Mitsubishi Aircraft, a unit of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, may delay the delivery of its MRJ regional jets to its first customer ANA Holdings due to the possibility of some technical modifications to the aircraft, the Japanese carrier said.
The builder of Japan’s first home-made passenger jet informed of the possibility of such a risk late September, ANA spokeswoman Maho Ito said, which may mean it won’t be able to meet the original schedule for mid-2018. Mitsubishi has not given any new date and ANA will decide on a response only to a confirmed delay, she said. Representatives of Mitsubishi didn’t respond to multiple calls to their cellphones outside business hours on Saturday.
The MRJ programme, aimed at challenging the dominance of Brazil’s Embraer and Canada’s Bombardier in the market for planes with less than 100 seats, had recently suffered some setbacks after two test flights to the United States were aborted following faulty air-conditioning. As recently as August, Mitsubishi said it was sticking to its delivery schedule for 2018, and said its third attempt to test-fly the aircraft to the U.S. was a success on Wednesday.
Total Orders
ANA, the operator of Japan’s biggest airline and the launch customer for the Mitsubishi Regional Jet, has ordered a total of 25 MRJs, which can seat as many as 92 people.
The MRJ, which made its first flight in November last year, won its first order from a European company in February. Mitsubishi had 427 orders for its new aircraft, including options and purchase rights, and its two biggest customers are based in the U.S.
Japan’s last domestically produced commercial aircraft was the YS-11, a turboprop made by Nihon Aircraft Manufacturing Corp., a consortium that included Mitsubishi Heavy, Kawasaki Heavy Industries Ltd. and Fuji Heavy Industries Ltd. Production was stopped in 1974 after 182 of the planes were sold.
Mitsubishi Heavy shares declined 2.7 percent to 419.10 yen in Tokyo on Friday, extending their losses this year to about 20 percent, versus a 14 percent drop in the benchmark Nikkei 225 index.
http://timesofoman.com/article/9338...isk-of-delay-in-delivery-of-Mitsubishi-planes