Seeing an aging airliner broken up for parts is normal. Seeing a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner with barely any flying time meet the same fate is something else entirely. Yet that is exactly what is happening to N947BA, the 17th Dreamliner to roll off the production line in Everett. The aircraft has racked up only a handful of ferry flights, but is now at Roswell International Air Center (ROW) in New Mexico to be torn down for parts.
C&L Aviation, which is marketing the materials to be taken from the aircraft, called it the first GE Aerospace-powered 787 to be disassembled in the United States, and also the first time a “new” 787 had been dismantled anywhere in the world. That immediately raises the obvious question: how does a nearly-new Dreamliner end up on the scrapheap?
The answer is a mix of early-build 787 headaches at
Boeing, a customer plan that unraveled before the aircraft ever found a real mission, and a 787 parts market that has suddenly become valuable enough to make tear down a rational business decision.
From Early-Build Headache To Scrap Candidate
N947BA’s story was unusual almost from birth. The aircraft is Boeing serial number 35507, line number 17, one of the early-production Dreamliners built prior to certification, and often grouped into the so-called “terrible teens.” The Seattle Times says that Boeing struggled to place these aircraft because they had significant shortcomings, notably structural weakness where the plane’s wings melded with the fuselage, requiring custom-fitted reinforcements. These modifications made the jets heavier, reducing their maximum takeoff weights by up to 12 tonnes.
N947BA was originally part of an order for Royal Air Maroc, but was not accepted because of assembly defects and excess weight. Instead, it was sold in 2017 to Crystal Cruises, where it was going to be reconfigured with 60 first class seats and used to launch Crystal Luxury Air, featuring 14- to 28-day around-the-world private jet journeys. But that never got off the ground, and in 2021, Crystal sold the aircraft for $25 million as it sought to increase liquidity during the pandemic.
After seven years being stored at Victorville, the aircraft was sold again last year and moved to Roswell for dismantling. Aviation Flights lists just two total flights for the aircraft (outside of flight testing with Boeing), something that made the aircraft particularly attractive to Tim Brecher, president of C&L Aviation:
“Disassembling a virtually new 787 with only a few ferry cycles has never been done before. But with much of the 787 fleet hitting the 12-year mark and needing heavy maintenance, the shortage of spares in the marketplace, combined with the ongoing challenges in the supply chain, make this sort of project critical to OEMs and operators.”
Why A 787 Can Be Worth More In Pieces
The reason N947BA is being broken up is simple enough: the parts market now values a donor 787 far higher than an airline values a second-hand aircraft. Spares shortages and broader supply-chain issues are making materials hard to find, and EirTrade, which has conducted some of the first 787 teardowns, says it has been “inundated” with requests for 787 components:
“The reason we part them out is that there is a business case. Someone needs the engines, someone needs the landing gears, someone needs the avionics… it’s not like a deficiency in the Dreamliner, it’s just math.”
So what does that math look like? Well, the engines are the biggest prize. N947BA has two GEnx-1B engines, and IBA gives them a half-life market valuation of $20 million each. That alone represents $15 million more value than the complete aircraft as sold five years ago, and that’s before you even get to the landing gear, avionics, flight controls, nacelle hardware, APU, brakes, wheels, and other high-demand rotables. These all push the parts value of a 787 well north of $50 million:
|
Component |
Value |
Notes |
|---|---|---|
|
2 × GEnx-1B engines |
$20 million |
IBA half-life value of $20 million each for GEnx-1B engines |
|
Landing gear shipset |
$4–6 million |
High-value overhaul material as 787s enter heavier maintenance |
|
Avionics and major LRUs |
$2–4 million |
Includes hard-to-source line-replaceable units |
|
APU, nacelle and thrust reverser hardware |
$2–3 million |
Valuable rotable/supporting hardware |
|
Other rotables, brakes, wheels, actuators and cabin assets |
$2–3 million |
Smaller items, but collectively meaningful |
|
Total |
$50–56 million |
Broad estimate, not a formal appraisal |
That $50 million+ value helps explain why N947BA became a tear down candidate. The resale of a complete aircraft with a complicated backstory, almost no operating history, and an odd market position, is not easy. The immediate certainty of monetizing its major components makes a lot more sense, because when airlines and OEMs are chasing scarce Dreamliner spares, a low-cycle donor aircraft suddenly becomes a very attractive warehouse.
Why Airlines Are Tearing Apart Brand-New Planes For Their Engines
Demand for parts is making aircraft more valuable in pieces than as a whole
N947BA Is Unusual, But It Is Not Alone
For all the shock around N947BA, it is not the first Dreamliner to be scrapped. The earliest 787s to be dismantled were Boeing test aircraft, which is easier to understand because those jets were never intended to spend decades in airline service. More recently, however, the first airline-operated Dreamliners have also begun to be scrapped, with two ex- Norwegian 787-8s dismantled at Glasgow Prestwick International Airport (PIK) in 2023.
The Norwegian examples were good teardown candidates because they were approaching 12-year checks and landing-gear overhauls. That is a very different reason from N947BA’s fate, but it leads to the same conclusion: if the maintenance event is large enough and the parts demand is strong enough, even a comparatively young 787 can become more useful in pieces than in one piece.
And there will be more to come. One obvious example is VP-CSC, another early-build 787-8 (line number 19) tied to the same “terrible teens” backstory. Public fleet data shows it has remained stored for over eight years, and has only ever made three flights. While no teardown has been announced, aircraft like that inevitably attract attention when the market is paying up for engines and major components.
That is the wider point here: N947BA is dramatic because of its tiny amount of flight time, but it may be less of an outlier than it first appears. While it is sad to see a Boeing 787-8 reduced to parts after barely flying, it is a very clear sign of where the market is. The Dreamliner fleet is maturing, supply chains remain tight, and airlines urgently need components. N947BA’s end was unusual, but the logic behind it was brutally straightforward: there is, as the teardown specialists put it, a huge demand.







