
While the program is meeting cost and performance targets, its schedule presents a risk due to potential delays in securing design certifications from the Federal Aviation Administration and completing flight-test points. Boeing must complete more than 1,700 test points per month on average from February through September, a level more than double what it completed in the last 11 months, the GAO said.
Briefing reporters on the program’s status on May 16 at Boeing Field, south of Seattle, KC-46 program manager Mike Gibbons was confident the manufacturer will meet the current schedule. The program is 90 percent complete with the requirements of obtaining an amended type certificate from the FAA for a 767-2C baseline freighter with tanker-system provisions, and 60 percent complete toward obtaining a supplemental type certificate for the full KC-46 tanker. The Air Force will then certify airworthiness of the military platform.
“The plan this year is just to complete that certification of the aircraft with the FAA,” then acquire Air Force certification, Gibbons said. “The FAA is very committed this. I work collaboratively with them every day,” he added. “We, the Air Force and the FAA meet and discuss this program on a monthly basis. They are very committed to making this a successful venture.”