Recently in Boeing Category
May 23 (Bloomberg) -- Airbus SAS, the world's largest commercial aircraft maker, is valued at ``less than zero'' after this year's 32 percent drop in the shares of parent European Aeronautic, Defence & Space Co., according to Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. analyst Joe Campbell.``The market is viewing Airbus as a liability, rather than an asset,'' said Campbell, 62, who is based in New York and has ranked among the top five aerospace analysts for six consecutive years in an Institutional Investor magazine poll.
Normally, I tend to root for Boeing, being an American company and Airbus' biggest competitor, but I can't take any pleasure in this. I prefer for Airbus to be a healthy company, as it makes our aerospace industry players in the U.S. better.
An arrest was announced this morning:
A Boeing Co. assembly line worker from Trevose has been arrested on charges of hacking wires on a $30 million Chinook helicopter being assembled at a Ridley Township plant last week.U.S. Attorney Patrick Meehan announced the arrest today, about a week after damage was discovered on two of the new model Chinook CH-47F helicopters. The dual-rotor aircraft were still on the assembly line, and no damage was found to other models in production or already deployed.
Meehan's office identified the arrested man as Matthew K. Montgomery, 32, an employee for 18 months at the Boeing plant. Montgomery admitted that he damaged one of the aircraft he was working on, Meehan said. Montgomery was arrested last night while being interviewed by Defense Department investigators.
Apparently, I was right about the motive - the sabotage was caused by a disgruntled employee:
Meehan said he would not speculate on a motive in the Montgomery case. According to an affidavit filed in the case, Montgomery was told on May 10 - two days before the severed wires were detected on one of the Chinooks - that he was being transferred to another assembly line at Boeing.Montgomery told investigators yesterday that he cut the wires the day he was told of the transfer, the affidavit said.
There may have been "some sense of lack of appreciation for the job he may have been doing," Meehan told reporters at a news conference.
Well, he certainly got his wish - there's no way he'll get transferred to another assembly line now.
He appeared before a judge today, and was released on own recognizance. He also agreed to undergo psychiatric evaluation.
Both Boeing and the feds quickly settled on referring to this as "vandalism", rather than calling it sabotage. To me that suggested that they had an idea early on as to who and why.
They're still treating the second aircraft as a separate incident, and the investigation is ongoing.
This isn't politics, but really cool anyway:
A Boeing jetliner has set a new world record:
LONDON - A Boeing Co. jet arrived in London on Thursday at the end of an attempt to break the record for the longest nonstop flight by a commercial jet.
The 777-200LR Worldliner — one of Boeing's newest planes — touched down shortly after 1 p.m. (8 a.m. EST) at London's Heathrow Airport after an almost 23-hour journey of more than 12,586 miles from Hong Kong.
The flight traversed the Pacific Ocean and North America before landing in London.
Boeing said that Guinness World Records representatives would monitor the flight and attend the landing at London's Heathrow Airport.
The plane has four pilots and was carrying 35 passengers and crew, including Boeing representatives, journalists and customers.
Boeing wanted to fly the jet farther than a Boeing 747-400 that flew 10,500 miles from London to Sydney in 1989.
The record-breaking attempt is part of Boeing's fierce competition with its European rival Airbus. The Boeing 777-200LR Worldliner was designed to compete directly with the popular Airbus 340-500, which has a flight range of 10,380 miles.
After leaving Hong Kong, the Boeing jet was flying to the northern Pacific Ocean, crossing North America and cruising over the Atlantic Ocean to London, said Boeing spokesman Chuck Cadena. Hong Kong-London flights usually fly over Russia.
Having been in aviation my entire adult life, I get a charge out of new achievements. And it's rare nowadays to see any large company engage in this kind of risky showboating. But in an earlier age, this was the norm in aviation. Companies routinely engaged in one-up-manship excerises such as this that drove innovation in the industry. Most products were designed and built on speculation - something that today's bean-counter mentality won't allow.
Boeing's achievement today shows us that some of that "barnstorming" spirit is still alive.
P.S. Here's a link to the really nice website Boeing set up for the flight.


