Boeing Systemic Problems Continue

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Daniel Cooper
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Re: Boeing Systemic Problems Continue

Post by Daniel Cooper »

That's interesting. I haven't been following the story lately. What about the fix will require new hardware and wiring?
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Inverted2
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Re: Boeing Systemic Problems Continue

Post by Inverted2 »

Boeing needs to hire those East Indians who call me on a daily basis on behalf of the Canada Revenue Agency and put them back to work and figure out their software coding.
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Re: Boeing Systemic Problems Continue

Post by Raymond Hall »

From CNBC:

Boeing 737 Max crash victims’ lawyers to subpoena Southwest, American Airlines

Lawyers representing families of passengers killed in a Boeing 737 Max crash in Ethiopia in March are set to issue subpoenas to Southwest Airlines and American Airlines, the two biggest U.S. operators of the jet, according to documents seen by Reuters.

The subpoenas will be issued over the next couple of days, the lawyers separately told Reuters.

The lawyers want to know what Boeing promised potential airline customers about flight crew training and the 737 Max certification process, and its communications with the two airlines following a Lion Air crash in Indonesia on Oct. 29, 2018, and before the Ethiopian Airlines crash on March 10.

https://www.cnbc.com/2019/10/17/boeing- ... lines.html
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Raymond Hall
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Re: Boeing Systemic Problems Continue

Post by Raymond Hall »

Interesting television news story regarding discovery of Boeing e-mails during the initial simulator testing of the MCAS system two years ago...

https://www.nbcnews.com/nightly-news/vi ... 1634501586
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BMLtech
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Re: Boeing Systemic Problems Continue

Post by BMLtech »

Daniel Cooper wrote: Fri Oct 18, 2019 12:15 pm That's interesting. I haven't been following the story lately. What about the fix will require new hardware and wiring?
It remains to be seen what they are doing for the fix, but there was talk of having to go to dual AOA input and AOA comparator warning at minimum for MCAS. I’m not sure if this could be accomplished with software alone. It amazes me how badly Boeing dropped the ball on this one after all the great airplanes they have built. We used to have a saying about the 727,” the airplane will never kill you,only the guy in the front can do that”
The latest news is that the FAA and EASA still do not see eye to eye on the proposed fix so don’t hold your breath.
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corethatthermal
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Re: Boeing Systemic Problems Continue

Post by corethatthermal »

I would imagine Boeing still wants to retain the current type qualification with their other NG A/C ( Due to the already mounting costs to put this failure behind them ) . To do that with minimal training and a MCAS system that still does the same rate of fwd trimming may need more changes than a second AOA and computer code to pick the operating AOA ! The present design was soooo lacking foresight and redundancy, not even mentioning specific training that the world will DEMAND a bulletproof system to replace it!
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BMLtech
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Re: Boeing Systemic Problems Continue

Post by BMLtech »

The max is a bridge to far for the 737 classic architecture. Likely what it really needs is a completely new FBW empennage, something that would have required a new type designation.
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goingnowherefast
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Re: Boeing Systemic Problems Continue

Post by goingnowherefast »

Maybe they can stick a bunch if extra fins on it like the Beech 1900 C and D differences. :lol:
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Raymond Hall
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Re: Boeing Systemic Problems Continue

Post by Raymond Hall »

From today's New York Times: The heads begin to roll....

Boeing Ousts Top Executive as 737 Max Crisis Swells

Boeing ousted one of its top executives on Tuesday, the most significant management change the airplane maker has made as it struggles to contain the crisis following the crashes of two 737 Max jets that killed 346 people.

The executive, Kevin McAllister, was the head of Boeing’s commercial airplanes division. He had been at the center of the company’s response to the crashes and its troubled efforts to return the Max to service after regulators grounded it. This month, The New York Times reported that he was under scrutiny inside the company for his poor handling of relationships with airlines, and his management of the commercial division, which is Boeing’s largest business.

The ouster was Boeing’s most direct effort to hold someone in senior leadership accountable for the bungled handling of the Max crisis, which continues to spiral out of control. The company’s board stopped short of removing Boeing’s chief executive, Dennis A. Muilenburg, though it stripped him of his title of chairman just over a week ago.

The decision to remove Mr. McAllister was made while the Boeing board met in San Antonio on Monday. With directors and senior executives gathered for tense meetings at the plant where the company builds Air Force One, Boeing’s stock took a beating. Two analysts issued downgrades and shares plummeted to their lowest level in more than three months.

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/22/busi ... e=Homepage
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boeingboy
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Re: Boeing Systemic Problems Continue

Post by boeingboy »

and a MCAS system that still does the same rate of fwd trimming
The fix includes a lower trimming speed genius.
I would imagine Boeing still wants to retain the current type qualification with their other NG A/C ( Due to the already mounting costs to put this failure behind them )
WRONG! I forgot your an expert on all this though. Please tell us more....
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'97 Tercel
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Re: Boeing Systemic Problems Continue

Post by '97 Tercel »

angry dude
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BMLtech
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Re: Boeing Systemic Problems Continue

Post by BMLtech »

The latest info from Boeing is that the fix is primarily software, and I did not know that the Max already has dual AOA sensors fitted. MCAS will now require AOA to agree before activating, etc. Odd that they didn't set it up that way to begin with.
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corethatthermal
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Re: Boeing Systemic Problems Continue

Post by corethatthermal »

Odd that they didn't set it up that way to begin with.
About 380 dead people would think the same way if they could think now!
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Raymond Hall
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Re: Boeing Systemic Problems Continue

Post by Raymond Hall »

BMLtech wrote: Fri Oct 25, 2019 8:24 am The latest info from Boeing is that the fix is primarily software, and I did not know that the Max already has dual AOA sensors fitted. MCAS will now require AOA to agree before activating, etc. Odd that they didn't set it up that way to begin with.
Boeing required the airlines to PAY for the option that would have allowed to the comparison of the two AOAs. It shows just how much to believe them when they say that their highest priority is safety. Safety, for the right price.

Neither Lion Air nor Ethiopian Airlines elected to purchase the option—a decision that was undoubtedly based at least in part on its cost.
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BMLtech
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Re: Boeing Systemic Problems Continue

Post by BMLtech »

I had read that the AOA comparator warning system was an option, but I'm pretty sure the MCAS still relied on a single AOA data source, regardless if the comparator warning option was installed. The comparator warning would give an additional clue to the crew in the event of false MCAS stab trim activation, but of course this would add yet another warning into a task saturated situation, with all the other false and contradictory warnings going off.
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BTD
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Re: Boeing Systemic Problems Continue

Post by BTD »

BML

You are correct.
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Raymond Hall
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Re: Boeing Systemic Problems Continue

Post by Raymond Hall »

From today's New York Times:

Before Deadly Crashes, Boeing Pushed for Law That Undercut Oversight

With a few short paragraphs tucked into 463 pages of legislation last year, Boeing scored one of its biggest lobbying wins: a law that undercuts the government’s role in approving the design of new airplanes.

For years, the government had been handing over more responsibility to manufacturers as a way to reduce bureaucracy. But those paragraphs cemented the industry’s power, allowing manufacturers to challenge regulators over safety disputes and making it difficult for the government to usurp companies’ authority.

Although the law applies broadly to the industry, Boeing, the nation’s dominant aerospace manufacturer, is the biggest beneficiary. An examination by The New York Times, based on interviews with more than 50 regulators, industry executives, congressional staff members and lobbyists, as well as drafts of the bill and federal documents, found that Boeing and its allies helped craft the legislation to their liking, shaping the language of the law and overcoming criticism from regulators.



In a stark warning as the bill was being written, the Federal Aviation Administration said that it would “not be in the best interest of safety.”


https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/27/busi ... e=Homepage
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Raymond Hall
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Re: Boeing Systemic Problems Continue

Post by Raymond Hall »

From today's Washington Post:

What Boeing learns from plane crashes —
Company’s reaction to 737 Max crash follows a familiar pattern of deflecting blame


One year after rescuers hoisted fragments of the wreckage of Lion Air Flight 610 out of Indonesia’s Java Sea, Boeing has apologized for the loss of life but has not detailed what mistakes it made in its design of the 737 Max. Indonesian authorities’ 320-page final report on the accident, released Friday, faults Boeing for developing a powerful flight-control system called MCAS that relied on a single problematic sensor, and for failing to adequately inform pilots and regulators how it works.

The report, which also cited problems with Lion Air’s maintenance and lapses on the part of a Florida sensor manufacturer, added to a growing body of evidence feeding public concerns about safety oversight at Boeing.

Boeing’s response to the public uproar over the 737 Max follows a historical pattern for the company, according to interviews with 11 former employees, government officials and aviation safety experts, all of whom worked on crash investigations involving Boeing. For decades, the aerospace giant has tried to carefully shape public perceptions around the causes of plane crashes — both to limit its legal liability and to maintain the confidence of customers, employees and investors in the integrity of its planes, those interviewed said.

The company has earned a reputation in the aviation community for withholding information, favoring theories of pilot errors over product flaws and being slow to make engineering changes to planes that could prevent future crashes, said Jim Hall, a former chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board, the federal agency that oversees investigations into all crashes that occur in the United States.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/business ... e-crashes/
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Raymond Hall
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Re: Boeing Systemic Problems Continue

Post by Raymond Hall »

From today's (Tuesday's) Washington Post:

Boeing CEO to acknowledge mistakes in testimony on deadly 737 Max crashes

Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg plans to acknowledge that his company made mistakes when he faces lawmakers this week who are looking for answers about how flaws in the 737 Max led to a pair of deadly crashes just months apart.
“We know we made mistakes and got some things wrong,” Muilenburg said in prepared testimony to a Senate committee reviewed by The Washington Post on Monday. “We own that, and we are fixing them.”

Muilenburg is set to testify first on Tuesday, the anniversary of a crash in Indonesia that killed 189 people. A Max operated by Ethio-pian Airlines crashed in similar circumstances five months later, killing 157 people. The Max has been grounded worldwide since shortly after the second crash.

Tuesday’s hearing is the first of a pair on Capitol Hill this week, giving members of the Senate and House the chance to publicly question Muilenburg as well as experts who have investigated the crashes and the design of the Max. Democrats in the House are expected to confront Muilenburg with information from some of the hundreds of thousands of pages of evidence they have amassed as they conduct their own investigation into the crashes. …

But Muilenburg’s prepared remarks do not touch on a key topic: the company’s relationship with the FAA, which has come under scrutiny since the crashes. …

https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/tr ... tory.html
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Raymond Hall
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Re: Boeing Systemic Problems Continue

Post by Raymond Hall »

Here is a link to my interview with Laura Lynch this morning on CBC's National radio program, "The Current."

Two aspects that I raised that to my knowledge have not been raised before.

1. The MCAS was developed by Boeing not for the 737 MAX but for the KC-46A Pegasus fuel tanker. Interestingly, that system employed comparators of the AOA Indicators, allowed only one pitch-down command, and didn't apply more pressure than the pilots could override. It was developed around 2004.

2. Legislation was signed into law 24 days before the Lion Air crash that precluded the FAA from certification oversight authority, transferring it to the manufacturers, except on an after-the-fact basis, following an "investigation" regarding alleged safety issues. Although the 737 MAX was certified under the prior system, the FAA no longer has the equivalent authority and is now precluded by law from intervening in certification on a preliminary, pre-certification basis.

https://www.cbc.ca/listen/live-radio/1- ... leadership
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