A Boeing 787 undergoing conversion into a VIP configuration
recently suffered a nose gear collapse at Grant County International airport in
Moses Lake, Washington.
A photograph
posted online last week shows an unmarked 787 with its nose on the tarmac
outside a hangar labelled with the name Greenpoint Technologies, a company that
provides VIP completions to large jets, including 787s.
The photograph's caption says the
aircraft is at Grant County airport, where Greenpoint has a hangar.
Online
observers suggest the aircraft's registration number is N507BJ, a 787-8
owned by Korean Air and, according to Flight Fleets Analyzer,
operated by Korean for the Republic of Korea Air Force.
Fleets Analyzer confirms that aircraft
sustained unspecified damage on 8 March.
Reached by FlightGlobal, Korean
Air declines to specify registration numbers, but does confirm its
association to the aircraft in the photograph.
"The aircraft is not an aircraft
for the Korean government," the carrier says. "An anonymous client
has asked for conversion, and this is why this aircraft is currently being
converted."
"It is true that Korean
Air [is] doing the conversion for an anonymous client, but because of the
request from the client, we are unable to specify the [registration] number of
the aircraft," Korean adds.
The airline declines to provide
additional details.
"We're aware of the incident and
have been in contact with the completion center Greenpoint," says Boeing
in a statement. But it, too, declines further comment, referring questions to
Greenpoint.
Greenpoint did not respond to an email
or telephone call from FlightGlobal, and the Grant County airport did not
immediately respond to a request for comment.
The incident has not sparked an
investigation by the US Federal Aviation Administration.
"The FAA has no role in this,"
the agency tells FlightGlobal. "It was a privately owned aircraft, not
intended for flight, in a non-movement area. The aircraft was stationary when
the gear collapsed."
"When the incident occurred, they
were not preparing [the aircraft] for flight," the FAA adds.
Korean Air ordered 787-8 with
registration N507BJ in October 2012 and received the aircraft in March 2015,
but never placed it in service, according to Fleets Analyzer.
The aircraft has 25 seats, and it has
been in storage at Grant County airport since 2015, Fleets Analyzer says.
(Evangle Luo of TTFLY shared with you)
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