nope..Oh, sure. I think I may have missed some.
its accurate interpretation.
nope..Oh, sure. I think I may have missed some.
nope..
its accurate interpretation.
You should stop citing that account. Dude just regurgitates stuff he scrapes off here.
Noted. I was referring to his "Dude just regurgitates stuff he scrapes off here" quote.
Still though, if what I've posted have already been discussed in the thread/forum before, then I don't see any harm having it seen as a rehash of some kind.
"Certification Test Adaptability Manufacturing and Installation", apparently a tender related to the certification testing of CJ-1000A, found by SOYO
According to 老王RR涡扇花动机 on Weibo: "CJ1000A has entered the certification testing phase. The first engine built to the design baseline has already rolled off the production line." (1ka 当然进入到取证试验阶段了。第一台设计基线的航发已经下线了)
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How long is certification likely to take?
Well yeah that’s Russia.The Russians thought they could finish the import substitution of components for MC-21 in 2 years. It is taking them more like 5 years.
In theory certifying a modification of an aircraft type is easier and faster than a whole new one.
Boeing 777X took first flight in Jan, 2020 but still unable to enter in service and now pushed to 2027.. solid seven years difference despite decades of experience and infrastructure Boeing have.Quick question. Let's say the CJ-1000a is certified and installed on the C919. Does that make the C-919 sanctions proof? Aren't there a ton of other components on the C-919 that are from foreign companies? And even if they rolled out a prototype of the C-919 with all domestic parts, including engines, tomorrow, dont all new models require an insane amount of flight time for certification? The original C-919 was rolled out in 2017 and it didnt go into service by 2023.