Boeing has established two world records with
the 787 Dreamliner, setting new marks for both speed and distance
for the airplane’s weight class.
“Speed and distance capabilities are fundamental
to the value the 787 brings to the market,” said Scott Fancher,
vice president and general manager of the 787 program. “These
records are a great way to demonstrate that this airplane is the
game-changer we have promised.”
The Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner provides both long
distance capabilities with mid-size capacity (210-250 passengers
in a three-class seating), allowing airlines to open new, non-stop
routes preferred by the traveling public.
The sixth 787, ZA006, powered by General
Electric GEnx engines, departed from Boeing Field in Seattle at
11:02 a.m. on 6 December 2011 and set the distance record for its
class (440,000-550,000 lbs.) with a 10,710 nmi (19,835 km) flight
to Dhaka, Bangladesh, with credit for 10,337 nmi (19,144 km). This
record had previously been held by the Airbus A330 based on a
9,127 nmi (16,903 km) flight in 2002.
Following an approximately two-hour stop for
refueling in Dhaka, the airplane returned to Seattle on a 9,734
nmi (18,027 km) flight. The airplane landed at 5:29 a.m. on 8
December, setting a new record for speed around the world
(eastbound) with a total trip time of 42 hours and 27 minutes.
There was no previous around-the-world speed record for this
weight class.
The 787 carried six pilots, an observer for the
National Aeronautic Association (NAA), and operations and other
Boeing employees – 13 people in total.
Flight routing on the first segment of the
journey took the airplane from Seattle across the U.S. to
Nantucket. After crossing the Atlantic Ocean, the airplane entered
European air space at Santiago, Spain, and proceeded down the
Mediterranean, across Egypt to Luxor, across the Middle East and
over India to Bangladesh. On the second segment, the Dreamliner
flew over Singapore, the Philippines and Guam before entering U.S.
airspace over Honolulu and returning to Seattle.
Boeing holds world records for longest distance
flights in five weight classes with records set by the KC-135,
767-200ER (extended range), 777-200 and 777-200LR (longer range).
The 777-200 also holds the speed record for its weight class.
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