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First Sukhoi-Superjet To Be Displayed At Komsomolsk-On-Amur

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  • First Sukhoi-Superjet To Be Displayed At Komsomolsk-On-Amur

    FIRST SUKHOI-SUPERJET TO BE DISPLAYED AT KOMSOMOLSK-ON-AMUR

    ITAR-TASS News Agency, Russia
    September 24, 2007 Monday

    The long-awaited first demonstration of the new Russian regional
    "Sukhoi Superjet-100" liner will be held at Komsomolsk-on-Amur this
    Wednesday. Work on its construction began in 2001. It is to replace
    the outdated family of Tu-134 and Tu-154 planes on the short and
    medium-range Russian airlines not longer than 5,000 kilometres. The
    plane will appear on the world market, too.

    President Vladimir Putin told a meeting, which he held early this year,
    that as many as 700 such aircraft would be built in Russia within the
    next few years. Officials of the Sukhoi Company predict a still bigger
    figure. "According to more optimistic forecasts, it will be up to 1,200
    planes. The average forecast is 800-900 machines," Director General
    of the Sukhoi Aviation Holding Mikhail Pogosyan stated last May.

    The first Sukhoi Superjet will be rolled out of the shops of the
    KNAAPO Aircraft Building plant in Komsomolsk-on-Amur, where such
    planes are to be eventually assembled. The first liner will come off
    the conveyor line in time for its scheduled flight trials.

    "There are 73 rigid orders for Sukhoi Superjet-100 planes today:
    for 61 aircraft from Russian air companies and twelve - from foreign
    air carriers," Itar-Tass was told on Monday at the Press Service of
    the Sukhoi Civil Aircraft Company. Itar-Tass has gleaned information
    that 30 such machines were ordered by Aeroflot Company, ten - by
    the Financial Leasing Company, fifteen - by the Air Union Aviation
    Alliance, and six - by the Dalavia Air Company. The Italian Air Italy
    Company is expecting to get ten such planes and the Armenian ArmAvia
    Company - two. "Even conservative forecasts show that we shall get
    firm contracts for 100 planes already this year, not counting the
    various memorandums on intentions," Acting First Vice-Premier Sergei
    Ivanov, who is in charge of the project on behalf of the government,
    stated last May.

    Nine planes will be assembled in 2008, thirty - in 2009, and sixty -
    in 2010. After that, the annual output will total 70 machines. Acting
    Minister of Transport Igor Levitin estimates the cost of each aircraft
    at 25 million U.S. dollars. This is 15 percent cheaper than planes
    of the Embraer Company, which is Sukhoi's chief rival on the market
    of regional aircraft.

    Sergei Ivanov, who visited Komsomolsk-on-Amur six months ago, predicted
    that 500 Sukhoi planes would be sold on the world market of aircraft
    in 2025. "The Sukhoi Superjet-100 is of priority, actually of state
    importance, because we shall substantially reduce our transport
    inequality by producing such planes," he said. Ivanov noted that
    this primarily referred to the Russian Far East, "meaning that the
    program can be regarded as a parallel one to those that are now being
    adopted at state level for the social and economic development of
    the Far East."

    Approximately 115 million euros will be invested in the technical
    re-equipment of Russian enterprises, figuring on the Superjet-100
    program. Funds to modernise the production facilities of three
    aircraft-building plants, located in Komsomolsk-on-Amur, Novosibirsk
    and Voronezh, are coming from several sources. They include budget
    financing, KNAAPO's and Sukhoi's own means, and contributions of
    leasing companies.

    "In accordance with the technical re-equipment program, KNAAPO is
    getting, along with other equipment, many automatic assembly tools,
    cutting down to the minimum the share of manual labour in the assembly
    process. This is bound to substantially improve the quality and
    exactitude of the production processes and to reduces the time required
    to do the job," officials of the Sukhoi Civil Aircraft Company noted.

    They also noted that the characteristics of the new Russian plane
    are unique for global civil aviation. Their service life equals to
    70,000 hours, while the mean global figure is 30,000 hours. This was
    achieved chiefly by means of novel construction methods and by using
    new-type wear resistant materials in individual assemblies.

    Sukhoi officials are sure that the plane's interior will be on a par
    with its flight qualities. "We are not saving money on the inside
    finish because the liner is not sufficiently known yet and, therefore,
    everything must be topnotch. For instance, we are purchasing seats for
    the plane in the Untied States, where they are cheaper and more in
    line with the international standards," Pogosyan told reporters. As
    a matter of fact, Sergei Ivanov has issued an instruction to "launch
    the production of such seats in Russia."

    The Superjet-100 project is being implemented in cooperation with
    some Italian companies, which are supplying spare parts and avionics,
    and also in cooperation with the Boeing Company". Sukhoi and Boeing
    signed a protocol last June on the latter's broader participation in
    the program to design and build planes of the Superjet family. The
    document envisages cooperation in the provision of post-sales technical
    services, assistance to the Sukhoi Civil Aircraft Company in its
    work to build its own infrastructure, access to the infrastructure
    and modern technologies needed to service the sold Boeing planes,
    including the training of pilots and technical personnel, as well as
    access to the spare parts distribution sources.

    President Putin backed the cooperation of foreign and Russian companies
    in the work to implement the Superjet project. "I was reported on
    the proposals of our foreign partners to boost cooperation in the
    development of this plane. They are good proposals and I think a
    decision is needed to go ahead in this direction," he stated.

    The first statistical copy of the plane is now being tested at the
    Central Aerohydrodynamics Institute (TsAGI), which is near Moscow,
    in the town of Zhukovsky. Plans are already afoot to test the service
    life of the second statistical prototype. The trials will be held
    early next year, Director of the Komsomolsk-on-Amur subsidiary of the
    Sukhoi Civil Aircraft Company Sergei Shkryabun stated. All in all,
    the program envisages the building of six test planes: four for fight
    tests and two - for statistical trials.

    The Aeroflot Company is planning to certify the Superjet-100 and to
    begin the delivery of these aircraft to the first client at the end
    of next year. An important role in the certification of the plane
    according to European flight standards is assigned to the Italian
    Alenia Aeronautica Company, Pogosyan said. "We are also planning to
    certify our Superjet according to the American flight standards,"
    he added.

    A conveyer-type assembly method will be used when the quantity
    production of these planes is started. Six workplaces have been
    equipped in the final assembly shop: a sector for the automatic laser
    assembly of the fuselage, a sector for the connection of the wings
    with the fuselage, a sector for the integration of the engine with the
    fuselage, a sector for the assembly of the plane's systems - hydraulic,
    oxygen, anti-fire, water supply, etc. Six planes will be simultaneously
    handled within this shop, moving across the indicated sectors.

    It is planned to spend twenty-eight days on the assembly of each plane.

    The Sukhoi Superjet family consists of two types of plane, one with 75
    and another with 95 passenger seats in configuration with the basic
    one - SSJ100/75B and SSJ100/ 95B and of increased flying range -
    SSJ-100/75LR, SSJ100/95LR.

    The Sukhoi Civil Aircraft is a "daughter" firm of the Sukhoi Company.

    It was founded in 2001 to implement the latter's civilian projects.

    The company is now working, among other things, on the regional
    Superjet-100 project.

    The company expects to sell as many as 1,800 planes of the Superjet-100
    family within the next twenty years, including the 120-seat machine,
    which is now on the drawing boards. The Holding expects to account for
    fifteen per cent of the world market of civilian regional aircraft,
    which the Boeing Company predicts to be at the level of 6,000 machines
    until 2022.
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