(18 Mar 2022, 11:18 +07)
Boeing P-8A team members and Spirit AeroSystems employees have laid the keel beam for New Zealand’s
first P-8A.
The process, also called ‘keeling’, was done at the
Spirit AeroSystems facility where all Boeing 737 fuselages,
nacelles and pylons are designed and built.
Laying the keel is an
important production milestone during the build of any ship or
aircraft and represents the cornerstone of this latest P-8.
Rosemary Banks, New Zealand’s Ambassador to the
United States, who was on hand to witness the keeling, said,
“This keeling ceremony is the beginning of a new era for New
Zealand’s maritime patrol and response capability. Our four P-8A Poseidons will better equip our defence forces to extend their
reach into the Pacific and beyond, working with our partners and
friends.”
Boeing P-8A
An aircraft keel runs the length of the fuselage
belly. Due to the innovative in-line approach to the build of
commercial derivative aircraft pioneered on the P-8A, the keel
beam on a P-8 is different from the typical 737 keel beam. The P-8
keel includes unique aspects of the P-8 configuration, such as the
integration of an internal weapons bay.
“The excitement of seeing this come together was
contagious,” said Brian Stuart, P-8 program manager for New
Zealand. “Not only are we kicking off the journey to the first New
Zealand P-8A delivery, but we are strengthening our relationships
with suppliers like Spirit as well as our U.S. Navy and Royal New
Zealand Air Force customers.”
The panel and other fuselage components will be
completed on Spirit's existing 737 production line. Spirit will
ship the P-8A fuselage to a Boeing Commercial Airplanes facility
in Renton, Washington for final assembly. After that, Boeing
Defense, Space & Security employees will install mission systems
and complete testing prior to delivery to New Zealand later this
year.
In total, four Boeing P-8A Poseidon maritime
patrol aircraft will eventually replace New Zealand’s current
fleet of six aging P-3K2 Orion aircraft providing advanced
capabilities to maintain situational awareness in neighboring
waters on and below the surface of the ocean.
The New Zealand Defence Force is one of eight global customers,
the others being: the U.S. Navy, Royal Australian
Air Force, Indian Navy, United Kingdom’s Royal Air Force and
Norway’s Royal Norwegian Air Force.
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