Those lucky dogs. Instead of being lunch, they'll be dinner.Whew! Came to a stop in the perfect spot.
One more foot and it would have hit those dogs.
Saw it on Trade a plane.....said, " needs props. Call for details"
A $100M botched go-round. Did you read the accident report. Argh.
Some say they only rebuilt it to save face ie "never lost one" T or F?
Field built jigs and rigging. Field tooling and personall? It probably flew hands off on the test flight.
Would love to know how many man hours and days that took.
Are you sure we need a 337 or will a logbook entry for a minor repair be OK???
Jim
Are you sure we need a 337 or will a logbook entry for a minor repair be OK???
Jim
Jim I think those parts painted with rollers were the discarded parts (?)
To lessen the PR impact of showing all the repaired parts, they were painted in the hangar, using paint rollers, before being flown out for a full repaint
While some speculated that Boeing might have to replace the entire fuselage barrel, company engineers decided against that, as first reported last week on aviation blog Airchive.com.
To begin the repair, the jet maker several weeks ago fabricated a full rear fuselage barrel in its North Charleston, S.C., factory.
It then cut out the crown section to supply a skin patch for the repair of the jet in London, said a Boeing engineer, one of the two people with knowledge of the details.
Several other pieces of composite skin were cut from the same barrel section to provide an inventory of repair patches for future use.
It's Qantas.