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Saturday, April 30, 2016

Boeing 787 Month Ending April 2016 Progressions.

April is ending today with Boeing meeting its projected guidance. The new significant addition is the China Eastern order for 15 787-9's as it now stands with net totals consisting of forty 787 delivered YTD and a Net of 12 787 ordered during 2016 YTD. 

See below Fig 1



Fig 1:


The Ninety Day Moving average includes a partial period of 10 a month rate while a later month rate moves to Twelve 787 a month. However, Boeing achieved a lumpy build rate during this period where March jumped to thirteen units and April dropped to ten units during April. The overall result is an eleven unit a month pace during the last Ninety days, which is spot on for this period of time and Boeing guidance.

Fig. 2


A quick look at the program recap demonstrates a stable backlog and 403 787's in the marketplace. This bodes well for both Boeing cash flows and market position for its customers, as the backlog position becomes equally critical for the customer's wait time priority as with its competitive pricing priority. 
Fig.3

The strength of 787-9 deliveries and the smaller 787-8 backlog (138) are the key numbers below. The 787-9 has taken over the program during this period of time and should become known as, "The Era of the 787-9".

Fig. 4


The program WIP and Delivery metric for the 787, below, illustrates a similar WIP inventory (47) than the prior month (45). This is an indicator of better space available in the process as fewer 787's remain parked outdoors after initial assembly, and more production efficiency is gained as units flow smoother  through the factory flow. The current percentage of 787-8's WIP is 43% of the inventory, and where the 787-9's equals about 57% of the WIP inventory.

Fig.5


Wednesday, April 27, 2016

And the 400th Dreamliner goes to... (updated)

Boeing opens the envelope please and announces its 400th Dreamliner. A 787-9 to Etihad Scoot from Everett, WA Charleston,SC delivery center on April 26, 2016.  It all started in September 2011, and five years later the 787 has flooded the airways. Giving a clear perspective with the Airbus A350, it has only delivered about 20 in over 15 months of production. Problems though harassing Airbus have slowed its delivery pace. It’s a supplier problem.

Boeing had supplier problems as well as technical issues almost stopping the 787 during its initial first two years of production. I am certain Airbus can resolve its issues as it does not indicate any technical problems. However, Qatar is upset over the Airbus A350 production woes stemming from suppliers and they may be all that is wrong as Qatar did not delve deeper into its displeasure of Airbus. It remains about 72 more A350's to go before it completes its order with Airbus. Qatar had 80 A350 ordered to start with as its largest A350 order holder.

Back to the 400th, it is a significant mid-term capstone for the 787 program where the 787 in numbers are flying everyday stealing a march into the marketplace with its advanced aircraft. The follow on effect could advance the MAX program with its customers as the 787 and 737 are a family of aircraft, which can progress an airlines staffing with the Boeing equipment. 

If the Max does perform as advertised when it enters into market, it will close the gap has over Boeing in the single aisle market. Boeing got to four hundred 787 delivered, and it will go to five hundred in play shortly after the first of 2017. Where Airbus may have only fifty in service by 2017.


Monday, April 25, 2016

The 787 GE Pip II Engine Ices.

Waiting until the press storm ceases on the GE engine icing found on half the flying 787 flying has been a tedious read. I found one article that articulated the problem where the other 99% of the articles were touting the FAA pronouncement. 

Ainonline photo 2012  GEnex 1B-Pip II


However, the fix was in before the FAA declared the urgency to fix. Boeing had already pushed GE towards making the engine flaw safe. As is understood by Winging IT, engine icing occurs with the PIP II GE 787 engines, because of fan blade clearance from its engine housing by about a 1/10th of an inch around its circumference. The fix already started before FAA issued its latest engine demand had been installed on about fifty aircraft. 


Photo by Aviexmax:  Note the black and silver fan blade almost touches inside diameter wall. FAA directive increases housing diameter by fractions of an inch, allowing a larger blade tip to wall gap which will prevent any known icing.

It is presumed, this fix is for widening the tolerance by greater than 1/10th of an inch, mitigates any future icing situations. The current internal procedure is for the pilot to administer thrust increases every five minutes and blasting out any ice build up until the "Blade Gap" is open. The technical fix is for making a larger gap which would diminish performance somewhat, but eliminate the occurrence of ice buildup entirely.

The fear is an obvious potential for a two engine shutdown placing a real and imminent danger under certain conditions. Even one occurrence of a two engine 787 shutdown from icing, is catastrophic for everyone, so the FAA has pushed out an "all hands on deck" call (bulletin)  for fixing this problem. Everyone is now aware, and every aviation 787 customer with PIPII engines is demanded by the FAA for making a remedial fix by expanding the blade gap from the engine wall at a prescribed safe distance. The time slot for this level of urgency is about 120 days from now. This time allotment for a fix suggests the 787/GE engine is sound, but has a critical weakness under random conditions which raises the risk bar too high for the flying public.

The solution can be completed by two methods. 

·      The ready solution is mounting at least one PIP I engine type out of two engines on a 787.
·      The second solution requires grinding down the engine opening casement to recommended "fix" diameter, giving the blade clearance and ample space for not allowing any ice build-up.


The "fix" will affect overall fuel performance by a small margin. The problem could have not been prevented from the usual testing regimen, but any future engine development will of course test specifically for this condition when finding the optimal performance package for this type of design. The FAA's due diligence after an incidence is what matters for all the people using, building and designing aviation as it advances. Thank you FAA!!

Thursday, April 21, 2016

The F-22 and F-35 Currency

First there was the F-22 Rapture and then came the F-35 Lightning II. Sounds like a plan G-man. However, as often as G-man plans don't hold together, the F-22 (the world's most advanced fighter at the time and some say it’s far better than expected) have too few flying in number. The total comes too only 186 in service. Each has a cost of a troubled Littoral combat ship. The sentiment is not to send the F-22 into conflict unless absolutely necessary and only upon the survival of this nation.

However, a funny thing happened. A few of the F-22 did get away to a combat zone (Iraq/Syria), and surgically lay waste to battlefields. With a few in airshows and military exercises, a honing of the pilot's skills was mastered for what the F-22 offered. The pilots had just to learn what and how the fighter fit its role. The engineers at home had to "adjust" its systems. The maintainers crafted its F-22 skill set. The F-22 became an aircraft the US could not live without. It is stealthy, it is fast and it is powerful!

Then came the F-35 as it was scheduled to fill all the military's roles in all fields. Army, Navy and Marines had skin in the game. There were not enough F-22, but there certainly would be enough F-35's. The government woke up to the fact that a much slower F-35 and a less maneuverable fighter may have to fight in a war while not playing stand-off duty from a hundred miles out. It may have to get in there and go dirty with somebody in the near future. Some nations may have the F-35's number. Add 3 and 5 together and it's an 8, and it is somebody's lucky number.

Now we come to the main point of this opinion. The government didn't destroy the F-22 tooling, its production capacity or its internal ability for making the F-22. It kept everything F-22 as an insurance policy. At the end of the F-22 production run, the G-men and women sought preserving program viability in the file case. They got it all and guess what? The F-22 review has come out of the file and is now up for assignment like an Air Reserve Force. The US government has learned many lessons since F-22 production ceased. New weapons, systems, and a lean build technique are available that were not available at the close of the F-22 production run. The always improving bug has bit the F-22 program. Congress is looking at building 197 more F-22's in the next decade. The study is a cash based feasibility report. How much would it cost if the US Government opens the F-22 production and what could be enhanced coming from the F-35 program transferred the F-22 capability?

Important currency questions. The F-22 plowed the way for the F-35 and now the F-35 can give back to the F-22 if it reopens its production. The F-22 could do all the best of the F-35 capability in an F-22 shell. The R&D is almost complete enough through the F-35 and by the time the F-22 starts a production rerun, technology transfer back to the F-22 would be a great currency move. The F-22 was scheduled for a 750 fleet of aircraft, but money constraints had reduced it to only 186 fighters. That is a mere shadow of the original vision. Military forces around the world have made strides towards the level of the F-22 as the F-35 stumbles along. The confidence for F-35 fighters slumps to inferiority fighter rather than superiority fighter. Money has run out long ago for the F-35 vision and now congress is calling for an F-22 lifeline on its question. Can the military show this nation it has air superiority chops in close combat with the F-35? 

The problem arises when the assumption for air battles will be all stand-off battles. What if the adversary does not achieve a high level of stand-off capability or does not have satellites in space. It will fight with what it has. A very capable close-in dog fighter where the F-35 lacks and the F-22 exceeds. It now comes to the mind of many a planner the US needs the two layers of capabilities. A fighter for close encounters better the F-16 and a miracle worker coordinating the battle air space. The US needs a left hook (F-22) and a hard right Jab (F-22). The only problem at this time is money.

The budget builders of the military need to convene on how important is the F-22 since it started service and how long can it wait for the F-35 to reach Initial Operational Capability (IOC) maturation? Every talking head says the Marines have IOC and the Air Force will have IOC by years end, and the Navy is coming along just fine.

The problems for the F-35 are legion at this time. The program is moving forward at a rate where for every solution accomplished within the program is overcome by new advancing problems coming from the next block of R&D phases when it has identified a new set of problems. This will continue to infinity and beyond. The F-35 needs to demonstrate a block point eliminating all open issues and not straggle the program like a Napoleonic Retreat from Russia.

If Congress does decide on the F-22, for two hundred more for production, as it was always planned from the file cabinet, then it will take 300 F-35's out from 2,400 it now plans. The question for all strategist is... Do you want 300 more F-35's or two hundred more F-22's? A second question for the producers... can you deliver the F-35 up to its initial vision when the project was first initiated?

My own answers are steeped in a bitter bias for the F-22. It needs about 400 in supply to use often in theater. Having a 186 unit fleet of F-22’s suggest it should only be used as a last result because of the few numbers available. Every frame counts. IF those frames are lost in combat, then the nation is in grave risk. Having double the number with upgraded technology will keep this country at an advantage for defending itself. Many may say the F-35 could do it all but the F-22 can do it at this time at a fast and stealthy pace.


Wednesday, April 20, 2016

Merrill Lynch's Pit Party

Holly Batman, it's a cow, Robin. Merrill Lynch proclaimed Boeing's $29 billion money pit, a pit too deep for its 787 program. The analyst have decided a little money here, and a little money there has become real money. Its analysis of a pit too deep will be impossible for Boeing to climb out of during the current block of 1300 787's going to market. Hence, it gives a downgrade. All this means is Boeing is at risk for achieving a goal of profitability within its 787 program. The limited scope view has consumed many bullet points leading too few remaining bullet points to do otherwise but downgrade Boeing's 787 program results. Thus making Boeing stock a "Bear" risk predicated on things not unforeseen, but only on things foreseen.

Things Foreseen comes from The 787 Money Pit:

·      Not enough sales for overcoming the 787 Money Pit remain on the book. 
·      The 1300 787's is a profit no go.
·      Boeing expansion programs for other aircraft types does tie Boeing's financial hands.
·      Boeing sales for the 787 program has permanently flattened. 
·      Airbus has absorbed the remaining wide body market before Boeing achieved its 787 sales goals.

Things unforeseen may yet to occur:

·      The market's natural expansion expands Boeing's 787 sales portfolio by 500-787's in ten years.
·      Boeing will manufacture its way out of the 787 Money Pit by upping monthly production.
·      There will be no show stopping glitches on its succession of programs (737 Max, 777X).
·      The A350 is way overrated and it loses more orders.
·      Boeing pricing is allowed to increase over the A350 order slowdown. 

The truth is somewhere in between the foreseen and unforeseen. A stock market strategy may exist for first waiting and then seeing when to sell from one’s own market position, and then buy again when the light at the end of the money pit is turned on. Currently Merrill Lynch sees the lights have been turned off in the 787 Money pit. 

As always it becomes a risk and an investor should use best information at the time of any financial decision. However, there are both positive and negative points for Boeing stock related to the 787 program at this time. The Merrill Lynch rating states an obvious stock condition while using its best information for its conclusions of the Boeing stock valuation. It does not include a rating based on unforeseen conditions as would a Winging It assumption is often made.



Tuesday, April 19, 2016

Parts N Stuff Delay Airbus in Pursuit of Boeing

Remember when Boeing had parts issues then battery issues and so forth. Well Karma comes around as a self-predicting outcome even for Airbus as it houses 24 NEO's and a half dozen A350's within its vast holdings in Europe. The tight dogfight between Boeing and Airbus suggest Boeing will once again out deliver Airbus during 2016.  The parts bin and technological development has stumbled Airbus into a P&W standoff for single aisle A320's as newly run A320's sit idle awaiting its PW engine upgrades.

The ticking clock will build its parking lot into a massive headache. Boeing lined up its unfinished 787's outside on Paine Field until moving some into Change Incorporation and Re-work warehousing. They have just cleared the last of those obstinate first builds from the rain swept tarmac since 2011. Five years later Airbus becomes a lady in waiting and waiting for seats, parts and engines.

It will skew the Airbus cash flow and dash another year for its hopes of becoming the world's largest airplane maker. Two different continents two different results tests the respective airplane makers on how they handle the hick-ups. Boeing has cleared its forest of problems from the last decade. Airbus has just entered into the "issue zone" during a time of critical order making for both giants. Any delay with delivery can handicap Airbus during this year and it has already during the first four months of 2016  made it impossible to catch-up with Boeing as it has already hit its stride of twelve 787 a month production pace. Next time Boeing increases single aisle production, it will be at a 47 airplane a month rate.

Boeing has made it the key talking point of its strategy making more airplanes than its competitor. It realized during 2010 the NG series needed a production change since it was losing sales to Airbus from a pure backlog point of view. They sought a level of backlog that would benefit the customer ordering pattern within a customer's five year plan. Both the 737 and 787 backlog fell outside this five year window causing the wait time to be a critical part for gaining additional sales.

Airbus has already begun a reaction with Boeing's production onslaught and has set its production goals upward meeting the demand within a relative time frame for its customers. The problem for Airbus that its own supply chain is having teething woes, not the Aircraft. The critical moment is 2016. Airbus needs to sort out game changers like seats and other critical parts in order to compete with a fully operational Boeing production stream. 

The production forecast is as important as the ordering forecast as it will give opportunity for its customers if delivery matches market demand. This is a long held observation in the dynamics of production and sales relationship. Henry Ford first mass production of its automobile made production the key selling point for its Ford motor car. A customer didn't have to wait and it could own a car meeting a superior standard in a short amount of time.

Boeing referred back to the industrial age early in the 20th century. Build it just in time, creating cash flows and advancing efficiency at a higher rate than its competitor. Airbus is struggling at this time five years after Boeing struggled and now the comparison will be if Airbus recovers faster than Boeing did during the next five years.


Saturday, April 16, 2016

Single Aisle As It Stands

Airbus and Boeing have been waging a competition for the single aisle market since 2013 with its respective NEO vs Max Version. Overall, including the CEO and NG backlog for market share relationships Boeing edges Airbus in the NG category. Airbus hold an undeniable lead for the single aisle class with orders. Mainly having a huge lead with its A321NEO model. This chart is not complete as the order intake is very fluid and data for the Single aisle represents the last known update.


However, it does show a relative 60-40 market split for which Boeing hopes to narrow during 2016, bringing the market difference to a 50-50 competition. Boeing would need to gain about thousand more than Airbus for the program history. I am going to assume that Boeing will chip away at the Airbus single aisle lead and will catch them in sales by 2020.  

Friday, April 15, 2016

On The Cusp Of The 400th Dreamliner

Boeing started delivering the 787 in the fall of 2011. Since that beginning it has suffered smoke, fire, and groundings. It was stated, Boeing may have a "Bridge Too Far" for its aspirations in the latest generation of aircraft. It was often called the 7 Late 7 as a humorous slam towards its three year late on arrival to the market. The problem was Boeing stuffed the aircraft with a NASA like technological ambitions. It became the commercial airplane answering all the checklist items for a dream machine.

Boeing is on the cusp of delivering its 400th Dreamliner by April's end 2016. What has been validated is enormous. It checked off economy, environment, and customer appeal in one model progression. The innovations discovered, implemented and appreciated have become its legend. The culmination of its journey start is the 395 flying customer versions to date. Even though the reach forward by Boeing was farther than any aircraft framer has ever attempted, it pushed through with a flying record of unprecedented safety. Part luck and mostly innovation has kept the 787 intact and without mishap of a hull loss. Which is a polite way of saying a crash. 

I am not tempting fate by mentioning the word "crash" as with all aircraft types ever built, there have been incidences that make the hair stand on end. The Boeing 787 will be no different over time. It will have its moment or may have already had its moment when something does not go according to plan.

However, Boeing, and as other makers try for perfection, while using its build processes through a continuos improving way, in which to prevent any mishaps. The 787 represents a quantum leap in preventing such an occurrence, other than the things the man cannot control, and with that even weather anomalies become a fly over. The myriad amounts of data tracking, sensing, and onboard systems management found on the 787 has allowed it to complete its maturation until the 400th Dreamliner will be delivered by the end of this month. This blog could have been written last year when it delivered its 300th Dreamliner. But the 400th is a significant milestone because it represents the always improving model of the 20th century carried into the 21st century.

The 400th 787 also is a benchmark comparing against its rival Airbus. The counterpart A350 has only delivered about 20 A350's in comparison. It is a less sophisticated representation with its prolific use of older technology refined from the prior generation of aircraft. 

The 787 is in a class by itself, and that recognition will clearly be found out as time goes forward. The 787 duration in service will over match the A350 duration in service just from its use of conceptual vision of best technology applied to a new airframe. Even though Boeing had its battery problems, it was a risk for something better, and was supported with knowledge that the 787 was not dependent on the Lithium-Ion battery exclusively.

Someday Boeing's competitor may incorporate "787 like architecture" on its own aircraft. Having a core electrical system was logical even though no one had done it before. Electronic window shades was a doable concept Boeing believed it was ready for this implementation. The E-window shade has evolved since the first delivered 787, and now the windows will be a more complete fixture for the customer, as it will be able to give 100% darkening for its customers. The "competitor" was risk averse even on the window shade issue, and still employs window slats for its passengers instead. Even though this was a touch from the 1930's from the curtain era. 

Boeing also centered on an all-electric airplane system where it does not use bleed air bypass energy from its engines, while going with bleed air bypass system it could contaminate the air. The cabin environment has become one of the big issues today where the prior generation cabin air can make passengers sick while using the Bleed Air bypass system as it introduces contaminated air into the cabin. The 787 has the best air for the passenger’s experience period.

Boeing introduce a concept for its flight ride. Sensors determine rough air and make appropriate trim adjustments for muting the effects of turbulence occurring on the typical airplanes today. It provides customer comfort and peace of mind. I know when getting off the airplane usually the first thing spoken to family and friends in waiting is: "it was rough ride going over the Rockies". The 787 provides an environment where a customer remarks about the food service rather than turbulence terror.

The 400th Dreamliner will make you smile as it has a continuous improvement from its first dozen commercial Dreamliners. In fact Ethiopian Airline has purchased one of the terrible teens assembled in 2010. It is bringing its next delivered 787 up to a current standard. The only penalty coming forward is its overall aircraft weight coming from that first run as a heavier than current 787 aircraft coming off the production line. Even having an additional few thousand pounds included from the "early teens", performance is remarkable for the first 787-8.

Boeing is making number 400 for the airline customer and its travelling customer with the same scale of importance for each category. The airplane customer is keenly looking for value, and the Boeing value has increased since its first introduction. The travelling customer wants the experience of flying, as part of its rest and relaxation regimen. Once a passenger leaves the Jet way and boards the 787, the airport part is in the past. Since Boeing has taken special care and technology fashioned for the passenger experience. 

The only thing remaining is determining who will receive the 400th Dreamliner. It may be Etihad receiving a 787-9 on April 26, 2016.

Boeing Photo Credit


Thursday, April 14, 2016

The Max Attack Has Begun

Boeing has entered if first 737-800 commercial production type on its line. These are special times where learned lessons from the NG, 787 and 747 projects. They will produce seven production (delivery) models but will not be ready for delivery until the engine maker goes through its testing and Boeing tweaks its test model until satisfied or when they have found a "Seattle Nirvana" replication. 

Rumor has it, Boeing may be months ahead with its Max schedule. They want a smooth roll out for the 737 unlike its arch rival Airbus who biffed it on the NEO having its engine retrenchments and step backs after it delivered its first single aisle Neo for Lufthansa. It has since re engineered its engine not meeting initial operational specs for its PW1100G needing extended warm-up time.

Boeing wants specifically a perfect first delivery to its customers with its CFM Leap engines. If they avoid those NG, 787 and 747 introductory drags, then it will have a leg up on the Airbus offering when selling the Max. The A320NEO has teething woes for its bread and butter single aisle offering. 

Boeing will hang cement blocks under the first delivery models until all engine testing is complete. The importance is not only for reliability issues but its often quoted 14% fuel increase over the NG. If it does tune the aircraft successfully prior to first delivery it will avoid a similar situation Airbus is now experiencing with its own A320NEO's coming off the line. Boeing will hang fundamentally complete advanced engine technology under its wings. Boeing is ahead of schedule and has its developmental program under control for the 737 Max. 

Wednesday, April 13, 2016

A Foreseeable Market.

As slow as the market seems to most observers of aircraft sales, it is suggest a market pause predicated on what the fuel price will do. The price per barrel of oil will boost or freeze sales at this junction. A true pause has made both Airbus and Boeing work harder pushing the respective order books. With Boeing's 122 net sales during the first quarter 2016 and then Airbus only netting a ten count, the manufacturers must rely on the foreseeable market trends.

Continued low fuel prices will grow the industry from the demand perspective. New aircraft orders for the latest airplanes will go into temporary repose as currently experienced during 2016. Leasing used airframes is a hedge against long term capital intensive acquisitions. As, and when fuel prices rise, a pent up need for new generation aircraft will rise to the top of the firing order for the market place.

This is the current position for having all new generation airplane orders flooding the market from wide body to single aisle frames. The new norm for fuel will have a steady but modest increase going forward until 2018. The modest fuel price increase will allow the market to settle with a steady but lower purchase pace. One American Company, Delta, has yet to commit for its MD 80 replacements. However, because of the used single aisle supply having a robust inventory, Delta will use the right time-right price strategy for replacing its fleet of older aircraft. The Airbus NEO backlog maybe too deep for Delta and Boeing's factory production of NG's may accommodate Delta at the right time for the right price.

A transition to the MAX would be made easier for transitioning forward using a low ball NG purchase and converting some of the single aisle in a purchase block later on by changing remaining open orders into MAX orders at an appropriate time. The Airbus book is too far out with its NEO's and the 737 NG is a better aircraft than the A320 CEO. A win for Boeing would make the Boeing order book draw closer to a 50-50 split with the Airbus offering.

Once fuel prices begin turning northward, it will signal a much anticipated resumption of a stable oil market from its current collapse of $40 per barrel price. A $70 per barrel price will begin to move more duo aisle aircraft for both makers. Boeing has a favorable and smaller 787 backlog at this time over the Airbus A350, as mentioned in a prior Winging It Blog. The Boeing 2016 book orders currently lead Airbus' paltry net of 10 ordered. In the coming months Airbus will have its order day, but it will be important to notice if Boeing continues its 40 ordered a month pace during the 2nd quarter 2016. If it does, and Airbus remains relatively quiet, then there is definitely a backlog bias in Boeing's favor.