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Boeing's new 777X extends its folding wingtips to complete first flight

The aircraft's design is intriguing: Folding wingtips will let the 777X fit at existing airport gates while still giving the wings the lift they need.

Kent German Former senior managing editor / features
Kent was a senior managing editor at CNET News. A veteran of CNET since 2003, he reviewed the first iPhone and worked in both the London and San Francisco offices. When not working, he's planning his next vacation, walking his dog or watching planes land at the airport (yes, really).
Kent German
3 min read
Boeing 777X

The new Boeing 777X features wingtips that fold up. You can see one of those in the upright position just behind the cockpit here.

Boeing

After a delay Friday due to windy conditions, Boeing's newest airliner completed its first flight Saturday when a 777X test aircraft landed at Paine Field north of Seattle after a four-hour cruise over Washington state. A next-generation model in the 26-year-old 777 family, the 777X is the first commercial aircraft with fold-up wingtips.

"This major milestone for the #777X airplane program begins the next critical phase of testing as we work towards certification and then delivery to customers in 2021," Boeing said in a tweet after the flight.

Watch this: Boeing's massive foldable-wing 777X jet completes its first test flight

Like Boeing's 787 Dreamliner, the aircraft is made from composite materials and has larger windows and a redesigned passenger cabin. Able to carry more people and fly farther than existing 777 models, it'll be the most efficient twin-engine plane in the world, Boeing says.

The plane's standout feature is the movable wingtips, which will cut the aircraft's enormous wingspan from 235 feet down to just under 213 feet, letting the 777X fit on existing airport taxiways and at terminal gates where older 777s can operate. The Airbus A380's 261-foot wingspan forced airports to make expensive modifications when the double-decker plane debuted in 2007, something Boeing wants to avoid.

The successful flight is welcome news for Boeing as it continues to face fallout from the twin crashes of its 737 Max that killed a total of 346 passengers and crew in 2018 and 2019. On Monday, the company announced that the Max will stay grounded until at least the middle of this year.

A debut... and delays

Built and designed to compete with the Airbus A350, the wide-body 777X will consist of two models. The 777-8 will fit about 384 passengers and have a range of 8,730 nautical miles (about 10,000 miles), and the 777-9 will fit about 426 passengers, with a range of 7,285 nautical miles. At 251 feet, the 777-9 also will be the longest commercial airplane.

Boeing rolled the first 777X out of its factory in Everett in March, but it soon encountered problems that delayed this test flight. In June at the Paris Air Show it said that excessive wear inside the 777X's General Electric GE9X engine was delaying its approval. Built for the 777X, the GE9x is the largest commercial jet engine ever built.

Then in September one of the test aircraft explosively depressurized during a test of the flexibility of its wings (photos published by the Seattle Times showed a massive tear through the fuselage). And two months ago the company announced it would abandon plans to use robots to automatically assemble the plane, handing the job back to human machinists.

Boeing says the 777X could begin passenger service as early as next year. So far it has orders from eight airlines, including British Airways, Cathay Pacific, Emirates, Lufthansa and Singapore Airlines.

But before passenger service can start, the Federal Aviation Administration and other aviation regulatory bodies around the world will need to certify the aircraft, and its flip-up tips, as safe. According to an FAA document published in May 2018, Boeing had determined that "a catastrophic event" could occur if the airplane wingtips aren't properly positioned and secured for takeoff and during flight.

In that document, the FAA set 10 conditions the wingtips must meet before the agency will certify the aircraft. Those include having more than one method to alert the flight crew that the wingtips aren't properly positioned prior to takeoff, a mechanism to prevent takeoff if the wingtips aren't extended and another mechanism to prevent the wingtips from folding during flight.

Originally published Jan. 24.
Updates, Jan. 24: Adds that Friday flight was postponed, with next attempt set for Saturday; Jan. 25: Includes Boeing's Saturday morning info on weather conditions; adds that plane took flight; includes additional background and notes that plane completed its journey.

Building a Boeing 777

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