American becomes 2nd US airline to use Boeing’s 787

Captain Fergie Ferguson poses with the engine of American Airlines first Boeing 787 Dreamliner at the Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport on april 29. 

FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) — American Airlines has joined the list of airlines flying the Boeing 787 jet, which it hopes will appeal to passengers and open new, profitable international routes.

Passengers boarded at Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport on Thursday morning for Fort Worth-based American’s debut flight of a 787 to Chicago. Domestic service is just a warm-up. Next month, American will begin using 787s on flights to Beijing and Buenos Aires and eventually other places.

American joins United as the only U.S. airlines using the plane, which Boeing calls the Dreamliner.

The 787 is made with lightweight carbon material and other advances to improve fuel efficiency. The interiors feature larger windows and mood lighting.

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The plane’s range and efficiency make it ideal for long flights, particularly to secondary cities in Asia, where there might not be enough demand to regularly fill a larger jumbo jet.

The 787 has run into many delays and glitches, from labor strikes that slowed production to a problem getting seats from a supplier. Most ominously, regulators grounded the worldwide fleet of Dreamliners in 2013 while Boeing developed a fix for lithium-ion battery packs that overheated.

Just last week, U.S. officials ordered airlines to shut down the planes’ electrical systems every few months to prevent a loss of power that showed up in laboratory testing. Boeing is working on a more lasting software fix.

Boeing has taken nearly 1,100 Dreamliner orders and has delivered about 270 planes so far, according to a spokesman, but it continues to lose money on each one because of high production costs.

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American has ordered 42 Dreamliners and has taken delivery of the first five. United has 17 with 38 more on order, and Delta has 18 on order but none due for delivery until 2020.

American took delivery of its first 787 in January. For several weeks, pilots who trained on 787 simulators have taken the planes out on practice runs, mostly across the western United States.