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Boeing has 200 engineers working on a battery fix and has proposed a solution to U.S. and Japanese aviation regulators who are currently reviewing it. Boeing, regulators, and the airlines that fly the 787 haven't said when they expect the plane to return to the skies. But Knittel's comments show that at least some airlines don't think it will be soon. "This isn't about whether this will be resolved but when it will be resolved," Knittel said. Knittel still stands behind the 787. His company has 10 of them on order and is expected to get its first at the end of 2014. "I'd love to be in a position where we could accelerate orders," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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