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Cancelled regional jet airliner project by Mitsubishi Aircraft Corporation From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Mitsubishi SpaceJet (Japanese: 三菱スペースジェット, originally named Mitsubishi Regional Jet) was a regional jet project by Japanese company Mitsubishi Aircraft Corporation (MAC), a Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (MHI) subsidiary.
SpaceJet | |
---|---|
General information | |
Type | Regional jet |
National origin | Japan |
Manufacturer | Mitsubishi Heavy Industries |
Designer | |
Status | Cancelled[1] |
Number built | 7 MRJ90 test aircraft 1 MRJ70 test aircraft[2] |
History | |
Introduction date | \ |
First flight | 11 November 2015 |
MHI first announced the concept in June 2007, then targeting certification for 2012, as the first Japanese airliner since the 1962 NAMC YS-11. After a delayed development, the maiden flight of the MRJ90 took place on 11 November 2015. In June 2019, Mitsubishi rebranded the Mitsubishi Regional Jet (MRJ, Japanese: 三菱リージョナルジェット) program as the SpaceJet. As flight testing took longer than expected, the scheduled entry into service was further pushed back until development was first paused in October 2020, and subsequently cancelled altogether in February 2023.
The airframe was made mainly in aluminium with a carbon fibre composite empennage. The low-wing twinjet was powered by underwing Pratt & Whitney PW1000Gs, and was the first program to select the geared turbofan. The M90 (originally named MRJ90) was to seat 86 to 96, while the smaller MRJ70 was to accommodate 70 to 80 passengers. The MRJ70 was replaced by the SpaceJet M100, stretched by 1.1 m (3 ft 7 in) to better meet US scope clauses at 76 seats with premium seating. It was comparable with the Embraer E-Jet E2 family.
In 2003 the Japanese government started a five-year, ¥50 billion ($420 million) research program to study an indigenous regional jet for 30 to 90 passengers, led by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (MHI).[3]
In 2004 MHI was focused on a 2m high by 2.8m-wide, four-seat-abreast cabin, seating 30 to 50 passengers, and was hoping to fly a prototype in 2007 and deliver the first aircraft in 2010.[4]
In 2005 it switched to a larger 70-90 seat category.[5]
MHI launched its concept at the Paris Air Show in June 2007, showing a full-scale cabin mock-up and aiming to be the first regional jet with an all-composite airframe. Certification was targeted for 2012.[6] Mitsubishi formally offered the MRJ to airlines in October 2007 – the first Japanese airliner since the NAMC YS-11 which stopped production in 1974 – after being the first airframer to select the Pratt & Whitney PW1000G geared turbofan offering a 12% reduction in thrust specific fuel consumption, rated at 15,000 lbf (67 kN) thrust on the 70- to 80-seat MRJ70 and 17,000 lb thrust (75.7 kN) on the 86- to 96-seat MRJ90, projecting a ¥150 billion ($1.275 billion) development cost.[7] The NAMC YS-11 of the 1960s was produced at a loss.[8]
MHI officially launched the Mitsubishi Regional Jet program on March 28, 2008, with an order for 25 aircraft (15 firm, 10 optional) from All Nippon Airways, targeting a 2013 introduction.[9] Mitsubishi was targeting a 20% share of 5,000 sales forecast in the 70-90-seat bracket over 20 years. Flight testing was scheduled for late 2011 and the $1.9-billion program would have needed 300-400 sales to recoup its cost.[10] Mitsubishi Aircraft Corporation (MAC) is a partnership between majority owner Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and minority owner Toyota[11] with design assistance from Subaru Corporation, itself already an aerospace manufacturer.
In September 2009, Mitsubishi unveiled extensive design changes, using aluminium instead of carbon fibre composites for the aircraft's wings and wingbox; the remaining composite parts would make up 10-15% of the airframe: the empennage.[12] The cabin height was increased by 1.5 in (4 cm) to 80.5 in (204 cm) and the fuselage height increased to 116.5 in (296 cm), giving a rounder cabin, wider and higher than its competition.[12] The program was delayed six months with final design frozen in mid-2010, first flight delayed to the second quarter of 2012 and deliveries to early 2014.[12][13] Maintenance intervals were expected to be 750 flight hours per A Check and 7,500 flight hours per C check.[14]
A 100-seat stretched MRJ100 was studied in March 2011.[15] As of June 2015[update] it was still under evaluation.[16]
As the MRJ90 MTOW of 39.6 t was above the US regional carriers' scope clause of 39 t, SkyWest and Trans States Holdings could have converted their MRJ90 orders for 100 and 50, respectively, to the 1.4 m shorter MRJ70: 67% of the 223 firm MRJ90 orders. However, the MRJ70 was to seat only 69 in two classes and attain the 76 seats scope close limit only in all-economy: Mitsubishi wanted to increase seating within its fuselage to compete with the currently compliant Embraer E-175 and Bombardier CRJ900.[17] Mitsubishi worked on a three-class, 76-seat design, with more premium seating than the MRJ70 but still within the scope-clause 86,000 lb (39 t) MTOW, to be unveiled at the June 2019 Paris Air Show.[18] The reworked MRJ70 was to be called the Space Jet M100 and was expected to receive its type certificate in 2022. Mitsubishi envisaged U.S. production.[19] Program cost was expected to reach ¥800 billion by the projected 2020 debut of the SpaceJet M90.[20]
On 15 September 2010, the Mitsubishi Aircraft Corporation announced that it had entered the production drawing phase and was proceeding with the manufacturing process.[21] Assembly of the first aircraft began in April 2011 with construction of the emergency escape for the cockpit.[22] By December 2012, MRJ90 delivery was scheduled for 2017.[23]
A new production facility for the aircraft was built at Komaki Airport in Nagoya, Japan, on land purchased from the government at a total cost of 60 billion yen.[24] The 2015 roll-out of the MRJ took place at Komaki, which had previously been the development site of the Mitsubishi A6M Zero fighter.[25] In early 2013, Pratt & Whitney delayed PW1200G certification to the "latter half" of 2014.[23] Mitsubishi announced in June 2013 that it would establish a quality control facility in Illinois for the sourcing of MRJ components from the United States.[26][27] In August 2013, Mitsubishi announced a third delay to the program, and that the first flight would take place in the second quarter of 2015 instead of end-2013, while the first delivery to launch customer ANA would take place in the second quarter of 2017 instead of 2015, due to parts delivery problems including Pratt & Whitney engines.[28] On 7 September 2013, a prototype of the left wing and four aluminium sections (forward fuselage, front mid fuselage, aft mid fuselage and aft fuselage) were exhibited, to be assembled in October 2013.[29] Mitsubishi hired foreign experts to help with relations with suppliers, ground tests, flight tests, and certification.[30]
Pictures of the first fully assembled MRJ90 were available on 26 June 2014.[31] An official rollout occurred on 18 October 2014.[32] MHI employed new production methods such as integral wing stringers, unusually tight tolerances, shot peening of curved surfaces, and vacuum assisted resin transfer molding, intended to increase quality and thus reduce expensive fault correction to keep price competitive.[33]
The maiden flight of the MRJ90 took place on 11 November 2015.[34][35] On 24 December, Mitsubishi announced a one-year delay for the first delivery of the MRJ, to mid-2018.[36] The delay was attributed to insufficient wing strength and the redesign of the landing gear for better safety.[37]
Much of the flight testing for the MRJ90 took place in Moses Lake, Washington, at the Grant County International Airport, due to the crowded airspace in Japan causing scheduling difficulties.[38] Static strength tests were completed on November 1, 2016, and confirmed that the airframe could withstand 1.5 times the maximum load.[39]
In January 2017, a further two-year delay was announced, pushing the expected first delivery to mid-2020.[40] This resulted from moving the avionics bay and wiring looms and in March the flight certification program was extended from 2,500 to 3,000 flying hours.[41] Four of the five delays were caused, at least partly, by failures to document work for certification or similar failures. As a result, development cost ballooned to 350 billion yen (US$3.17 billion) implying that the project might never be able to fully recover its costs.[42] Mitsubishi originally planned to use five flight test aircraft and two ground test aircraft but one or two additional aircraft will also be needed following this introduction of a two-year delay to mid-2020.[43]
On 26 April 2017, the fifth MRJ was complete in ANA livery, lacking only engines and nose cone, aircraft number six and seven had their fuselage and wings joined without the tails, and the eighth, the first MRJ70, was at the assembly line start; Mitsubishi planned to manufacture 12 aircraft concurrently: in station one are joined fuselage sections, in station two the landing gear, wings and horizontal stabilisers are attached, in section three the major components are assembled, in outfitting takes place in section four and ground tests in station five, then the completed aircraft moves to painting.[43] Seattle engineering consultants Aerotec L.L.C. saw problems for avionics and its wiring certification: damage could cause single point of failure, due to fire, water flooding from a ruptured waterline, or from part penetration of an engine explosion. This necessitated hardware changes in the bays, now frozen, but the electrical wiring interconnection system had to be reconfigured with hired specialist Latecoere. By June 2017, 940 hours of flight tests had been performed and the four prototypes had an above 98% availability.[44] On 21 August, FTA-2 experienced a flameout 170 km (92 nmi) west of Portland International where it landed; partial damage was confirmed in the PW1200G and the test fleet was grounded until the cause was known.[45] Flight testing resumed on 6 September.[46]
By December 2017, the MRJ test campaign was half complete, with 1,500 flight hours and less than 1% cancelled due to technical issues. The rate was accelerating with tests set up before the January 2017 avionics bay redesign: special runway tests, extreme environment and high altitude tests, to be completed in 2018. An additional flight test aircraft incorporating the redesign was to join the campaign in the second half of 2018, focused on wiring tests such as lightning and high-intensity radio-frequency.[47] Two additional aircraft (10007 and 10010), recently painted white and under structural assembly in December, were expected to join the flight test campaign towards the end of 2018.[48] At the end of the year, the mid-2020 deadline seemed difficult to achieve.[49]
In January 2018, the avionics bay rearrangement and rerouted wiring were almost complete to be adequate for extreme events such as bomb explosions or water ingress underfloor.[50] Upgrades and ground tests were performed on four flight test aircraft from February to March at Moses Lake, preceding flight testing for natural icing, avionics and autopilot, performance, stability and control.[51]
By April 2018, the test fleet had logged 1,900 flight hours.[52] The flight-test fleet attained 2,000 hours in May 2018, and as most of the flight envelope was explored, the next trimester shifted to runway performance: takeoff, landing and minimum control speeds.[53] The MRJ70 test aircraft (number 8 and 9) were in final assembly as of May for expected delivery by the end of 2021, one year after the MRJ90 introduction.[17] An MRJ in All Nippon Airways livery was exhibited at the July Farnborough Airshow, alongside appearances by the similar Embraer 190 E2 and larger Airbus A220.[54]
In October 2018, Bombardier sued Mitsubishi in Seattle, alleging that its ex-employees stole trade secrets to help for US certification.[55] By then, the four MRJ90 prototypes had clocked 2,400 hours, targeting certification in late 2019 or early 2020 and first delivery in mid-2020, while the smaller MRJ70 was expected to be introduced in 2022.[56] After the MRJ program lost ¥47.2 billion for six months to 30 September 2018 on top of its ¥110 billion deficit, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries injected ¥220bn ($1.94 billion) in Mitsubishi Aircraft, raising its stake from 64% to 86.7% and capital from ¥100 billion to ¥270 billion.[57] Mitsubishi wanted to dismiss the Bombardier allegations and expected to be heard in Seattle's US District Court on 11 January 2019.[58] By December 2018, the Japan Civil Aviation Bureau delivered its type inspection authorisation, allowing to debut certification flight testing in early 2019 with the four MRJ90 in Moses Lake.[59]
In April 2019, a federal judge dismissed Bombardier's claims against Mitsubishi, a strong case but falling short as there was no proof that Mitsubishi knew about those secrets.[60] By then, the program had completed 2,600 flight hours and was undergoing crosswind and climate testing, while two more MRJ90s were expected by the summer.[61]
On 24 June 2019, Bombardier and Mitsubishi announced that Mitsubishi would purchase the CRJ Programme from Bombardier for US$550 million and assume US$200 million in liabilities. With the deal, Mitsubishi will acquire the maintenance, support, refurbishment, marketing, and sales activities for the CRJ Series aircraft, including the support network locations in Montréal, Québec, and Toronto, Ontario, its service centres located in Bridgeport, West Virginia, and Tucson, Arizona, and the type certificates.[62]
In June 2019, Mitsubishi rebranded the MRJ program as the SpaceJet. The MRJ90 was renamed as the SpaceJet M90 and a 76-seat variant specially targeted to meet US scope clauses, to be known as the SpaceJet M100, was announced. This version would have been 1.1 m (3 ft 7 in) longer than the abandoned MRJ70 but 1.3 m (4 ft 3 in) shorter than the M90.[63]
The E175-E2 is heavier than the current, scope-compliant E175, with its larger GTF engines, and being longer (by one frame) and wider (by 2.3 m (7 ft 7 in)): when its cabin is full, it can only fill 4 t (8,800 lb) of fuel within the 86,000 lb (39 t) MTOW limit, limiting its range to a short 950 nmi (1,760 km). Compared to the E175-E2, the M100 cabin is a tighter fit around its 76 seats, and its wing is lighter, having 3.2 m (10 ft) less span and with smaller winglets than the MRJ90, giving it 50% more fuel than the E175-E2 at the MTOW limit for a 1,500 nmi (2,800 km) range with 76 passengers. Without the scope clause limit, a 42 t (93,000 lb) MTOW M100 could fly 1,910 nmi (3,540 km) with 84 passengers.[64] The M100 redesign pushed back its projected service entry to 2023, one year later than the MRJ70, while the M90 was set to evolve into the M200.[65]
The 2 ft (0.61 m) longer fuselage could seat 88 in single-class, and at 91 ft (28 m), the wingspan is 4 ft (1.2 m) shorter with the modified canted wingtip. The shorter span would allow operation at Colorado's Aspen/Pitkin County Airport, a popular tourist destination; the CRJ700 was the last jet in production to have the capability. The M90 in its final configuration first flew on 18 March 2020, before joining the rest of the test fleet in Moses Lake.[66]
In May 2020, Mitsubishi halved the budget of the SpaceJet program for the year ending 31 March 2021. It confirmed its commitment to the baseline M90 version but intended to reconsider the M100 in light of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the aviation industry.[67] All work on the SpaceJet outside Japan, including flight testing of the M90 at Moses Lake, was repatriated to the company's headquarters in Nagoya.[68] In October 2020, Mitsubishi announced a further budget reduction and a "temporary pause" to most SpaceJet activities other than type certification documentation while it assessed a "possible program restart."[69][70]
However, Mitsubishi Aircraft slashed 95% of its employees in April 2021, leaving 150 employees, while the SpaceJet program budget was cut by half by 2020, from Y370 billion for FY2018, and was to be further cut to only Y20 billion ($194 million) from fiscal year 2021.[71] In October 2021, the manufacturer confirmed to the Federal Aviation Administration that it did not plan to restart development and production of the SpaceJet in the foreseeable future.[72][better source needed]
On 17 April 2022, the third MRJ prototype built, formerly registered as JA23MJ, was dismantled.[73]
On 6 February 2023, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries terminated the Spacejet project altogether, stating the uncertainty of the regional jet market size, and announced plans to dissolve its Mitsubishi Aircraft Corporation subsidiary.[74][75][76] The announcement was made along with Mitsubishi's financial report, though the company said the decision would not hurt its bottom line.[citation needed]
On 8 March 2023, a second Spacejet prototype, registered as JA21MJ, was dismantled.[77]
Variant | M90 | M100 | |
---|---|---|---|
Single class | 88Y @ 31" pitch | 84Y @ 31" pitch | |
Mixed class | 81 (9J@36" + 72Y@30")[79] | 76 (12J+12W+52Y)[64] | |
Cargo | 18.2 m³ / 644 ft³ | 13.6 m³ / 481 ft³ | |
Cabin | 2.02 m / 6 ft 8 in Height × 2.76 m / 9 ft 1 in Width | ||
Length | 35.8m / 117 ft 5 in[79] | 34.5 m / 113.2 ft | |
Wingspan | 29.2 m / 95 ft 10 in | 27.8 m / 91.3 ft | |
Tail height | 10.4 m / 34 ft 2 in | 10.3 m / 33.9 ft | |
MTOW | 42.8 t / 94,358 lb | 42.0 t / 92,594 lb[a] | |
OEW | 26,000 kg (57,320 lb)[80] | ||
Fuel capacity | 12,100 L / 3,200 US gal / 21,344 lbs / 9,680 kg | ||
Engines (2x) | Pratt & Whitney PW1200G | ||
Fan diameter | 56 in (142 cm)[81] | ||
Engine thrust (2x) | 78.2 kN / 17,600 lbf | ||
Range[b] | 3,770 km / 2,040 nmi | 3,540 km / 1,910 nmi[a] | |
MMo | Mach 0.78 (447 kn; 829 km/h) | ||
Ceiling | 11,900 m / 39,000 ft | ||
Takeoff (MTOW, SL, ISA) | 1,740 m / 5,710 ft | 1,760 m / 5,770 ft[a] | |
Landing (MLW, dry) | 1,480 m / 4,860 ft | 1,550 m / 5,090 ft |
In 2008, All Nippon Airways was the first customer, with an order for 15 MRJ 90s and an option for 10 more.[82]
In March 2008, and again in October 2008, Sankei Shimbun and Fuji Sankei Business I reported that the government of Japan would buy ten MRJs to serve as short-haul and small-field VIP transports, supplementing the existing Japanese Air Force One Boeing 747 aircraft.[83][84] The government reportedly was still considering this option as of July 2013, with MRJs possibly supplementing the then new Boeing 777 on domestic and short-haul government flights.[85]
At the July 2012 Farnborough Airshow, SkyWest agreed to buy 100 MRJ90s, to be delivered between 2017 and 2020. The deal was worth $4.2bn at list prices. During the 2013 Regional Airlines Association conference, held in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, Mitsubishi announced that ANI Group Holdings, which firmed a MoU for 5 MRJ aircraft in June 2011, cancelled the deal, without giving further details.[86]
On 20 July 2016, one of the officials at Iran's ministry of transportation announced Iran was buying 25 ATR airplanes for Iran Aseman Airlines and for further purchases Mitsubishi has shown interest in offering 20 MRJ planes.[87] On 21 May 2017, Iran cancelled its plans to buy Mitsubishi's Regional Jet (MRJ). Inability to set a delivery timeline for ordered aircraft and lack of testing were cited as their main reasons.[88]
The MRJ's future was uncertain after six years of delays, with 70% of the backlog shared by two US regional carriers bound by scope clauses: the MRJ90 is too heavy and the smaller MRJ70 accommodates seven fewer seats than the 76 permitted.[89] Following five postponements, and having lost ten percent of the MRJ's order book following the acquisition of Eastern Air Lines by Swift Air (bought existing Eastern assets only), Mitsubishi Aircraft closed its books at the end of March 2018 with a negative net worth of $979 million.[54] By December 2018, the MRJ90 had 213 firm orders plus 194 commitments.[59] During 2019, some of these orders were subsequently cancelled or converted to the new M100 variant, which had 115 commitments from US operators as of 31 October 2019.[90]
On 19 June 2019, Mitsubishi signed a Memorandum of Understanding with an unnamed American customer for 15 of the new 76-seat SpaceJet M100 variant, to be delivered from 2024.[91]
On 5 September 2019, US regional carrier Mesa Airlines signed a Memorandum of Understanding for up to 100 SpaceJet M100s, 50 of which were targeted as firm orders and 50 as purchase rights. Deliveries would have begun in 2024.[92]
On 31 October 2019, Trans States Holdings cancelled its order for 100 MRJ90s (50 firm, 50 optional) because the aircraft did not comply with US airlines' scope clauses.[93]
Order date | Airline / Purchaser | Entry into service | Type | Remarks | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
M100 | M90 | Options | ||||
27 March 2008 | All Nippon Airways[82] | 2025 | — | 15 | 10 | was to be operated by ANA Wings |
11 July 2012 | SkyWest[94][95] | 2022 | — | 100 | 100 | |
28 January 2015 | Japan Airlines[96][97] | 2023 | — | 32 | — | was to be operated by J-Air |
11 July 2016 | Rockton AB (Lessor)[98] | 2020 | — | 10 | 10 | |
5 September 2019 | Mesa Airlines[99] | 2024[100] | 50 | — | 50 | |
Total | 50 | 157 | 170 |
Order date | Airline / Purchaser | Type | Remarks | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
MRJ70 | MRJ90 | Options | |||
16 June 2011 | ANI Group Holdings[101] (Lessor) | 5 | — | MoU cancelled in 2013[86] | |
2014 | Eastern Air Lines | — | 20 | 20 | Airline ceased operations in 2017 and order was subsequently terminated in January 2018[102] |
14 July 2014 | Air Mandalay[103] | — | 6 | 4 | Airline ceased operations in 2018[104] |
2 October 2009 | Trans States Holdings[105] | — | 50 | 50 | Cancelled in October 2019 as the M90 does not comply with U.S. scope clauses[106] |
16 February 2016 | Aerolease Aviation (Lessor) | — | 10 | 10 | Contract ended on 8 January 2021[107] |
Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era
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