During
a press conference at Paris Air Show on June 18, Pierre Fabre, President
and CEO of CFM International, Bill Clapper (General Electric) and
François Planaud (Snecma), both Executive Vice Presidents
Project General Managers, announced a new world record set by a
CFM56 engine.
This engine, a CFM56-3 fitted on a Boeing 737-500 delivered to Hapag-Lloyd
in 1990 and leased by the Hungarian company Malev since 1999, has
logged 40,000 hours and 17,000 cycles without a single removal,
setting a new world high-cycle single-aisle aircraft record for
time on wing. Such a performance is significant since engines powering
short and medium-haul jetliners operate in very demanding conditions,
with very high hours to cycles ratio. At its current utilization
rate, the Malev engine may well beat the current world record of
40,531 hours by August 2003.
During the conference, Pierre Fabre also analyzed the current situation
of the civil aircraft market. Despite a lasting crisis (traffic
will not return to 2000 levels until 2004), CFMI won major orders
from easyJet, Virgin Blue, Ryanair, Southwest and All Nippon Airways,
at the beginning of the year. The CFM56 engines remain the standard
for the single-aisle aircraft market. Production should level out
at about 600 engines per year through 2006.
François Planaud then stressed the CFM56 engine family highlights
and presented the different upgrade kits for CFM56-3, -5B et -5C.
By the end of 2003, 14 000 engines will have been delivered, among
which 3,000 CFM56-7B and 1,500 CFM56-5B. Bill Clapper closed the
press conference focusing on the TECH56 program and the technological
solutions that will be validated by the end of the year.
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