Boeing KC-46A tanker to make first flight
on Sept. 25: U.S. Air Force
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[September 16, 2015]
NATIONAL HARBOR, Md. (Reuters) -
Boeing Co's first fully equipped KC-46A refueling plane is scheduled to
complete its first flight on Sept. 25, the Air Force general in charge
of tanker programs said Tuesday.
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Brigadier General Duke Richardson, executive officer for Air Force
tanker programs, said the tanker program was doing well overall,
despite earlier schedule delays.
"We are definitely struggling with schedule. We are not struggling
with performance," he told the annual Air Force Association
conference.
Richardson said it was remarkable that the first flight was still
set to take place within the target range first set in April,
despite two technical issues that arose afterwards. He said Boeing
had devoted significant resources to ensuring the program stayed on
track.
Sources familiar with the program had predicted that a chemical
mix-up involving the plane's fuel tank could delay the first flight
by up to a month.
Richardson said he was "cautiously confident" that Boeing would meet
its commitment to deliver 18 tankers to the Air Force by August
2017, despite a series of issues that have eroded any margin in the
program's schedule.
He said the program was working through testing required for a key
milestone review to be completed around April that would pave the
way for an initial production contract for seven jets.
A second deal for 12 planes should follow shortly thereafter, but
could get held up if Congress fails to pass a budget for fiscal
2016, which begins Oct. 1, and imposes a resolution limiting funding
to fiscal 2015 levels, Richardson said.
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That could cause "a very large problem" for the program, given the
terms of the Air Force's contract with Boeing, which set stringent
requirements for funding stability.
Air Force officials have repeatedly said they cannot afford to
breach the fixed-price Boeing contract, since any renegotiation of
the deal would likely result in far less positive terms for the
government.
Boeing in July announced a second charge on the tanker program,
bringing its total pre-tax charges to nearly $1.3 billion.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Leslie Adler and SImon
Cameron-Moore)
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