Bombardier plans to issue an update on the flight test schedule for its new CSeries jet âin a few weeksâ as program managers assess whether or not to maintain the companyâs admittedly ambitious entry-into-service target date of one year after first flight, Bombardier Commercial Aircraft marketing vice president Philippe Poutissou told AIN on Sunday during a briefing in Dubai. Meanwhile, the company will now quote only total flight and ground test hours rather than specifying an exact figure for time in the air. So far the first flight test vehicle (FTV1) has completed a total of 190 hours of testing. It has flown as high as 25,000 feet and as fast as 340 knots (Mach 0.6).
Speaking with AIN about a month before the show, Poutissou reported that FTV1 had flown a total of eight hours over the course of three flights. On Sunday he told AIN that the airplane now flies âfairly regularly.â
âWe havenât provided a breakdown [of flight and ground test hours] and part of the reason is we see that all that testing is value added,â he said. âWeâre not surprised by anything the aircraft does relative to the simulators and the simulation, which is always great because it means that the investment weâve made in our CIASTA [Complete Integrated Aircraft Systems Test Area], the engineering simulator and all the tools that we use to do a lot of the development testing on the ground allows us to gain confidence with those tools and then minimize the amount of real testing we need to do in the air.â
Still, the airplane flies in so-called direct mode, or without the full aid of its fly-by-wire system. In October Poutissou told AIN that Bombardier would wait to finish a software upgrade to its Parker Aerospace fly-by-wire system before it flew the airplane in normal mode. Yesterday, he could offer no new details related to the status of the work on the system.
The certification program calls for 2,400 hours of flight testing with five aircraft, all of which now sit in various stages of completion. FTV2 has reached a âvery advancedâ state of readiness for its own first flight. However, Poutissou couldnât offer a first-flight target date, nor could he indicate what test regime the company has planned for each of the five flight-test vehicles.