Close
Boeing Images
Cart (0)
Login / Register
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
Go to Login page
Hide details
Linked assets
787-9
787-8
787-8
Conceptually similar
Boeing South Carolina's Second Autoclave Moves into Position
Moving Boeing South Carolina's Second Autoclave into Position
Maneuvering Boeing South Carolina's Second Autoclave into Position
Three Boeing Dreamlifters Transport PPE to South Carolina for COVID-19 Recovery Efforts Across the State
Boeing DreamliftersTransport PPE COVID-19 Recovery Efforts
Three Boeing Dreamlifters Transport PPE to South Carolina for COVID-19 Recovery Efforts Across the State
Dreamlifter Loader in the Raised Position
Dreamlifter Delivers Body Sections to Boeing's Everett Assembly Facility
Dreamlifter and 787 Center Section Arrive at Paine Field
Dreamlifter Delivers Body Sections to Boeing's Everett Assembly Facility
Dreamlifter Unloads Dreamliner Fuselage Sections
Dreamlifter Delivers First Major Assemblies to Everett
Dreamlifter Delivers Body Sections to Boeing's Everett Assembly Facility
Dreamlifter Delivers First Major Assemblies to Everett
Dreamlifter Delivers First Major Assemblies to Everett
Loader for the Dreamlifter Large Cargo Freighter
Boeing Dreamlifter Arrives at Everett
Dreamlifter Delivers First Major Assemblies to Everett
Dreamlifter Delivers First Major Assemblies to Everett
First South Carolina-built 787 moves to Final Assembly Position 3
Similar tones
View images with similar tones
Boeing South Carolina's Second Autoclave Moving into Position
On August 2, 2015, Boeing South Carolina’s (BSC) new autoclave completed the half-mile (0.8-kilometer) move from its on-site assembly area at the company’s North Charleston, S.C., facility to its new home beside the Aftbody building, which houses the original autoclave.
The vessel weighs 1 million pounds (463,600 kilograms) and provides the super-heated pressure needed to build 787 aftbody sections. With the help of a cross-functional team at the site, Boeing Site Services developed an intricate plan to safely navigate the vessel around tight spaces, three Dreamlifters and site production buildings before proceeding down the main site road to its new location.
Before the move could begin, the team lifted the 120-foot-long-by-32-foot-wide (37-meter-by-10-meter) autoclave three feet (0.9 meters) off the ground by placing jacks on each end. Using a rail system, the autoclave was then transferred onto a Goldhofer trailer, a 21-axle, 336-tire vehicle designed for moving extremely heavy equipment.
Once the autoclave was secured to the trailer, the procession began. One of the many spotters accompanying the vessel during the move remotely steered the trailer around the site.
The autoclave will be shifted onto its concrete foundation later this week so construction can begin on a 30,751-square-foot (9,372-square-meter) building expansion to enclose it. After being sanded and painted, the autoclave will be configured with internal components — electrical, air, vacuum and pressure lines, equipment and tooling requirements — and then tested before being commissioned for production in 2016.
Add to lightbox
Add to cart
Unique identifier
BI46022
Boeing ID
shf15-02aug15-015
Type
Image
Size
4697px × 3126px 42MB
License type
RM
Keywords
2010s
adults
Boeing
clouds
copy space
day
exteriors
flight lines
full body views
fuselages
ground crews
ground shots
high-tech / advanced
large
other livery
perspective lines
several/groups
unpainted
Restrictions