Boeing Reveals at Farnborough Innovative Method of Building 777 Fuselages
Boeing announced on the opening day of the Farnborough Air Show that it is in the final phases of testing and production readiness of a new method for building 777 fuselages "as part of its ongoing technology investment strategy."
Known as the Fuselage Automated Upright Build (FAUB), this advanced manufacturing technology is expected to improve workplace safety and increase product quality. The technology has been in development by Boeing since 2012.
With this new technology, fuselage sections will be built using automated, guided robots that will fasten the panels of the fuselage together, drilling and filling the more than approximately 60,000 fasteners that are today installed by hand.
FAUB offers numerous benefits including an improvement in employee safety. The nature of the drilling and filling work makes it suitable for an automated solution. According to Boeing, more than half of all injuries on the 777 program have occurred during the phase of production that is now being automated. In addition, the automated system is expected to reduce build times and improve first-time quality of the build process.
"This is the first time such technology will be used by Boeing to manufacture wide-body commercial airplanes," said Elizabeth Lund, Vice President and General Manager, 777 program and Everett site, Boeing Commercial Airplanes. "We're excited to continue improving the production process here and we're positioning ourselves to begin building 777X airplanes in the future."
The 777 program has already begun testing FAUB at a facility in Anacortes, WA. Production readiness preparations are underway and the system will be installed in Everett in a new portion of the main factory that is under construction now. The technology is expected to be implemented in the next few years.
The robotic system, designed for Boeing by KUKA Systems, is the latest in a series of strategic advanced manufacturing moves on the 777 program, which have already included new systems for painting wings and other drilling operations.
Top Stories
INSIDERUnmanned Systems
Airbus Tests Low Cost Missile on New Bird of Prey Interceptor Drone
INSIDERMaterials
Army Advances Additive Manufacturing From Experimental Tech to Enterprise...
NewsTransportation
WCX: Expert Claims War Hurting China’s Already-Struggling Economy
ArticlesPropulsion
Detroit Unveils Gen 6 Heavy-duty Diesel Lineup
INSIDERPower
New Study Finds Lean-Burn Engines Don’t Reduce Aircraft Contrail Formation
NewsPower
Webcasts
Automotive
Driving Reliability: Simulation Driven EMI Techniques for Modern Vehicle...
Defense
Smarter Aerospace Manufacturing & Design with Digital Twins and Agentic AI
RF & Microwave Electronics
How Modular Computing Is Accelerating Modern Defense Technology
Software
How AI Acceleration Strategies Are Changing Embedded Computing Architectures
Energy
2026 Battery & Electrification Summit (Online)



