(23 May 2022, 11:00 +07)
Parts production for Dassault Aviations new
ultra-long range Falcon 10X is now underway, with final assembly
of the first aircraft set to begin next year.
With detailed design nearly complete, production
and assembly of the widebody twin is gearing up at sites
around Europe and North America, including a brand-new Factory 4.0
smart manufacturing facility in Seclin in northern France.
A new production hall in Biarritz in southwestern
France is dedicated to the aircrafts all-composite wing, with the first wing
already in final
assembly and scheduled to be placed in a static test rig this summer.
Dassult is aiming for the Falcon 10X to enter service in late 2025
We are making excellent progress in getting this
new aircraft into production, and the coming months will see an
increasing flow of parts, subsystems and large structures into our
facilities in the south of France, said Dassault Aviation
Chairman and CEO, Eric Trappier. With help from the worlds
leading suppliers, the Falcon 10X will be the most advanced and
capable aircraft in business aviation.
The 10X will have a cabin height of six-feet, eight inches,
a volume of 2,780 cubic feet, a range of 7,500 nautical
miles (13,900 km) at Mach 0.85 and a top speed of Mach 0.925.
The first of the Pearl 10X engines
that will power the 10X recently ran on a test stand at
Rolls-Royces Dahlewitz, Germany facility, surpassing its target
thrust level on the first run.
Already, Rolls-Royce has
accomplished 1,000 hours of testing on the 18,000 pounds-plus
thrust engine, including runs on 100 percent sustainable aviation
fuel. The Pearl 10X will be certified to use 100 percent SAF.
Other test highlights include installation of a
multi-system integration bench, complete with subsystem computers,
at Dassaults Istres flight test facility near Marseille. This
multi-system bench, along with individual benches for fuel
systems, electrical systems, hydraulics, and flight controls, will
serve to ensure that all systems are fully tested and mature when
the 10X takes to the sky.
Certification and entry into service is
anticipated in late 2025.
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