PRESS RELEASE
Issued by: Curtiss-Wright Sensors & Controls HQ
Curtiss-Wright Corporation (NYSE:CW) today announced that it has received a contract with a total potential value of $20 million from Moog Aircraft Group to provide solenoids for use on the flight control system of Boeing's 787 Dreamliner aircraft.
"Curtiss-Wright is pleased to announce our selection by Moog as the supplier of solenoids for use on the Boeing 787," said Martin R. Benante, Chairman and CEO of Curtiss-Wright Corporation. "We are very excited to increase our participation and support for this important new aircraft."
Curtiss-Wright will manufacture the solenoids at its Motion Control facilities in Tempe, AZ and Nogales, Mexico. Production will begin immediately and continue through 2035.
| Contact details from our directory: | |
| Curtiss-Wright Sensors & Controls HQ | Position/Displacement Detectors, Variable Transformers, Linear Sensors, Linear Actuators, Electronic Control Equipment, Flight Recorders, Electric Motors, Rotary Actuators, Sensors/Transducers, Ice Detectors, Power Conversion Equipment, Mechanical Actuators, Airborne Electrical Power Supplies, Air Data Computers, Signal Conditioners, Gearboxes, Ball Screw Assemblies, Onboard Computers, Fire & Smoke Detectors, Potentiometers, Data Bus, Solenoid Valves, Electromechanical Actuators, Ice Protection/Prevention Equipment, Transducers, Solenoids, Vibration Analysers, Hydraulic Power Supplies |
| Moog Inc. | Mechanical Actuators, Airframer, Test Equipment, Automatic Flight Control Systems, Engine Controls, Autopilots, Fly-by-Wire Systems, Servoactuators, Electromechanical Actuators, Servovalves, Rotary Actuators, Aircraft & Helicopter Controllers, Flight Management Systems, Hydraulic Actuators |
| Related aircraft programs: |
| Boeing 787 Dreamliner |
| Related directory sectors: |
| Electrical Components |
Weekly news by email:
See the latest Bulletin, and sign up free‑of‑charge for future editions.
Garmin expands flight test footprint with Mesa Gateway acquisition
ERC System begins flight testing Romeo prototype in Munich
Electra.aero secures US patents for hybrid-electric blown-lift control system