The Mitsubishi MRJ – Photo: Mitsubishi
It has long been the plan of Mitsubishi Regional to bring their new regional jet family, the Mitsubishi Regional Jet MRJ90 and the MRJ70 (the number represents planned seating capacity) to Washington State to take advantage of the favorable weather and existing aviation talent in the region.
This week marked the official opening of the Seattle Engineering Center for Mitsubishi, and their partner Aerotec. Located quite close to Boeing Field, this center will bring 150 highly-skilled jobs to the Georgetown neighborhood of Seattle. 50 of those jobs will be intra-company transfers from Mitsubishi regional in Nagoya; the remainder will be local hires.
The front of the brand-new Aerotec hangar at Grant County International Airport – Photo: Bernie Leighton | AirlineReporter
Local firm Aerotec was chosen as a partner because of its expertise in flight test logistical and regulatory support. Or at least, so summarized their president Lee Human.
Sadly for local AvGeeks, the engineering center is separate from the flight test center. That is located at Grant County International Airport in Moses Lake, which is about three hours to the east of Seattle.
The facility in Moses Lake will have a hangar that is 65,000 square feet and house about 200 additional employees. It will be an important part of making sure that the MRJ is a successful airliner.
Both opening ceremonies were simultaneously held at the Museum of Flight. The ceremony featured not only sake, but speeches by Washington’s governor, Jay Inslee, and U.S. Senator Patty Murray.
The MRJ has a few things that set it apart from the competition. The aircraft is one of the launch customers of Pratt & Whitney’s PurePower PW1200G Geared Turbofan. Like the Boeing 787, the airframe is largely made of composite, which helps to give it a 20% lower carbon footprint than an Embraer E-190.
Mitsubishi also states that the MRJ will be about 40% quieter, which will assist in bringing mainline passenger comfort to regional flying.
Mitsubishi and Aerotec executives pose with a model MRJ90 – Photo: Bernie Leighton|AIrlineReporter
The 2-2 economy cabin layout will feature seats manufactured by Zodiac. Business class seating configuration will be at the airline’s discretion (though the renderings also illustrate a 2-2 configuration). Zodiac will also provide the other cabin furnishings and monuments.
After its initial delay, Mitsubishi has been hitting its adjusted milestones quite well. Power on, in the aircraft, occurred in October of 2014, while taxi tests commenced in June of this year. They aim for first flight in either September or October, which will take place in Nagoya.
Do not expect the four U.S.-bound MRJs to grace our shores before Q2 of 2016. How will they get here? Well, Mitsubishi is still working on the logistics, but I am not certain it will be under their own power.
Mitsubishi is building seven test frames; two for static and structural testing, with the remaining five as flight-test articles. The fifth flight-test MRJ, all of which are to be completed by the end of the third quarter, will wear the livery of launch customer, All Nippon Airways (ANA).
Mitsubishi has logged 407 orders, 223 of them firm. The current customers are ANA, Trans States, SkyWest, Eastern Air Lines, Air Mandalay, and Japan Airlines.
The two largest customers are Trans States and Skywest. Both are U.S. regional airlines and the issue that those orders face is the fact that U.S. regional flying is dictated by U.S. major carriers’ labor scope clauses. The MRJ would be the largest regional jet ever operated, and this runs afoul of the current scope clauses in which it is too large by both capacity and mass.
I would expect, due to the gravitas of their orders, that they are confident that the major airline scope clauses will be renegotiated prior to their delivery positions opening.
Either way, Mitsubishi is on track to deliver their first MRJ90 to ANA in the second quarter of 2017.
Bernie Leighton – Managing Correspondent Bernie has traveled around the world to learn about, experience & photograph different types of planes. Bernie will go anywhere to fly on anything. He spent four years in Australia learning about how to run an airline, while putting his learning into practice by mileage running around the world. You can usually find Bernie in his natural habitat: an airport. @PowerToTheThird | Flickr | bernie@airlinereporter.com |
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