How Boeing Builds a 737 in Just Nine Days
Released on 09/27/2016
This is the most productive
aeroplane factory in the world
Boeing's Renton Plant outside Seattle builds the 737
in all its configurations for customers globally.
To build 42 planes a month, you need
a pretty sophisticated, pretty huge production line.
It takes nine days for a plane
to do this loop and be assembled.
Let's break that down.
Boeing's built more than 9,000 737s since launching
the single aisle jet in the mid 1960s,
and each one started life something like this,
a hollow fuselage built in Wichita, Kansas,
and hauled by train to Renton.
Once that shell enters the factory,
days one through three are really all about the internals.
It's like building a house.
First, engineers install the plumbing
and electrics and the insulation.
On the fourth day, the tube becomes a plane.
The wings go on, along with the vertical fin, or tail.
Workers align them with laser guidance.
This is when they fit the landing gear too.
Day five is for the horizontal stabilizer install
and the start of functional tests.
Engineers are putting wiring in now for flight control
and finishing the internal floorboards.
They start building the interiors up,
the galleys and the bathrooms.
Then, on day six, the plane comes alive.
That flashing red light means their power to the aeroplane.
Large scale test are now possible,
like does the landing gear retract properly?
It had better; the next time it's folded away
will be when this plane takes off for the first time.
Day seven and the plane's weight is set on its own wheels
and the engines are fixed to the wings,
along with their own network of wires, cables and tubes.
All through the build, systems are checked and rechecked,
and day eight is a critical test
of the flight control surfaces, the flaps
and the flight deck itself, the cockpit.
All these parts have been checked in isolation.
Now, it's crucial they work together.
The plane is nearing the end of the moving production line.
On day nine, the customer gets
to do a walkthrough inspection
before its towed out of the factory,
born, in a way, into the big wide world.
The next stop is Renton Field for ground tests
of the engines and other systems, and then first flight.
Has The U.S. Become A Surveillance State?
Sydney Sweeney Answers The Web's Most Searched Questions
Economics Professor Answers Great Depression Questions
Palantir CEO Alex Karp On Government Contracts, Immigration, and the Future of Work
Historian Answers Native American Questions
Cryogenics, AI Avatars, and The Future of Dying
EJAE on KPop Demon Hunters and Her Journey to Success
Why Conspiracy Theories Took Hold When Charlie Kirk Died
Historian Answers Folklore Questions
Language Expert Answers English Questions