Beta 9 Has Expired Qualitywings 787 🚀
Many simmers keep backups of old installers on external hard drives. If you recently reinstalled FSX or P3D and dug up a file named QW787_Beta9_Installer.exe, you are installing an expired product. The server-side authentication fails because the beta period ended long ago.
Issue: Upon loading the QualityWings 787, users receive a pop-up message: “Beta 9 has expired. Please contact support.” The aircraft systems (FMC, displays, flight controls) are subsequently locked, non-functional, or the aircraft fails to load entirely.
Affected Versions: QualityWings 787 v1.0, v1.1, v1.1.1, v1.1.2, v1.1.3 (specifically early release builds that contained a time bomb mechanism).
Root Cause: A hard-coded internal expiration date embedded in the aircraft’s logic (Gauges DLL or compiled scripts) as a beta-testing time lock. This date has passed, causing the aircraft to revert to an expired state even for legitimate users who purchased a full license. beta 9 has expired qualitywings 787
Status: As of mid-2026, this is a known issue for users who have not applied the final v1.1.3 or later patch or who are running the aircraft in an unsupported simulator environment (e.g., P3D v5/v6 without proper updates).
An “expired beta” is both a technical checkpoint and a social signal: technically it marks a cut-off where old test builds are frozen; socially it forces users to choose between staying on a known-but-flawed snapshot or upgrading to a newer, possibly incompatible release. For a complex product like a 787 airliner add-on, that tension exposes issues in project management, QA, communication, and the user experience of simulation communities.
Despite the fix in v1.1.3, users still report this error due to: Many simmers keep backups of old installers on
You might be thinking: I bought this plane years ago. Why is it just expiring now?
There are three primary scenarios:
Some users have fixed this by replacing the QW787.gau (FSX) or QW787.dll (P3D) with a non-expired version from an updated installation (if a friend or second PC has one). This is not officially supported and may violate the EULA, but it is a common discussion in flight sim forums. An “expired beta” is both a technical checkpoint
Here is the core mystery: This isn't a new error. So why is it surfacing now, years after the final release? There are three primary scenarios:
The error message appears due to a "Time-Limit" or "Time-Bomb" check within the software code.