Dassault on target with first Falcon 5X development

Dassault Aviation is on schedule for the first flight of its Falcon 5X with the joining of the main centre fuselage subassemblies - a key milestone in the production program for this new large cabin twinjet.
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The 5,200 nm Falcon 5X was unveiled at the National Business Aviation Association Convention in Las Vegas, Nevada last October and performed its first virtual flight on the simulator last November. It will complete assembly and begin ground tests this summer.
The aircraft will feature the largest cabin cross section and the most advanced flight controls in the industry. First flight is expected in the first half of 2015 and entry into service mid 2017.
The centre fuselage subassemblies – the front and rear lower subassemblies and the upper subassembly – are part of the main centre section, which includes the cabin and baggage hold. They arrived in March at Dassault’s Biarritz plant in southwestern France and were joined there to the wing centre section in mid-April.
Next month, the main centre section will be joined to the forward section, comprising the cockpit, entryway and galley, and the rear section, which carries the empennage and power plant, forming the complete fuselage. Once fully assembled and pressure tested, the fuselage will be ready for shipment to the Mérignac plant, near Bordeaux, for aircraft final assembly. Fuselage delivery is expected in the summer.
Meanwhile, automated wing assembly is well advanced at the Martignas plant, near Mérignac, and work on equipping the first wing has begun. The wings are due to arrive at Mérignac at the same time as the fuselage.
First aircraft equipment and systems have been delivered, including the Héroux-Devtek landing gear. The Snecma (Safran) Silvercrest engines will soon start podding operations and are due to arrive later this summer.
Landing gear tests have been completed and tests on other systems have begun, including avionics, fuel and air conditioning systems.
“We are extremely pleased with the way work is progressing,” said Olivier Villa, senior vice president, Dassault Aviation, Civil Aircraft. “The centre fuselage subassemblies fit perfectly and we expect to have the aircraft fully assembled and ready for testing by the summer, right on schedule.”