From News Nation:
“FAA clears
Boeing 737 Max to fly again”
After nearly
two years and two deadly crashes, the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration has
cleared Boeing 737 Max for flight. Boeing announced Wednesday that the FAA has
“rescinded the order that halted commercial operations of Boeing 737-8s and
737-9s,” allowing airlines under its jurisdiction to resume service. The agency
had detailed software upgrades and training changes Boeing must make in order
for it to resume commercial flights after a 20-month grounding, the longest in
commercial aviation history.
The 737 MAX
crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia killed 346 people within five months in 2018
and 2019 and triggered a hailstorm of investigations, frayed U.S. leadership in
global aviation and cost Boeing some $20 billion. Regulators around the world
grounded the Max in March 2019. “We will never forget the lives lost in the two
tragic accidents that led to the decision to suspend operations,” Boeing CEO
David Calhoun said in a statement Wednesday. “These events and the lessons we
have learned as a result have reshaped our company and further focused our
attention on our core values of safety, quality and integrity.” Agency
Administrator Steve Dickson said last week the FAA was in the final stages of reviewing
changes to the Max that would make it safe to return to the skies. “I will lift
the grounding order only after our safety experts are satisfied that the
aircraft meets certification standards,” he said in a statement.
The move comes
after numerous congressional hearings on the crashes that led to criticism of
the FAA for lax oversight and Boeing for rushing to implement a new software
system that put profits over safety and ultimately led to the firing of its
CEO. Investigators focused on anti-stall software that Boeing had devised to
counter the plane’s tendency to tilt nose-up because of the size and placement
of the engines. That software pushed the nose down repeatedly on both planes
that crashed, overcoming the pilots’ struggles to regain control. In each case,
a single faulty sensor triggered the nose-down pitch. Boeing’s redemption comes
in the middle of a pandemic that has scared away passengers and decimated the
aviation industry, limiting the company’s ability to make a comeback. Air travel
in the U.S. alone is down about 65% from a year ago. Boeing sales of new planes
plunged because of the Max crisis and the coronavirus pandemic. Orders for more
than 1,000 Max jets have been canceled or removed from Boeing’s backlog this
year. Each plane carries a sticker price between $99 million and $135 million,
although airlines routinely pay far less than list price. John Hansman, an
aeronautics professor at MIT, said that people typically avoid airplanes for a
few months after there are problems. But the Max case is unusual, and were it
not for the novel coronavirus, Hansman said he would feel safe flying on a Max.
“This whole thing has had more scrutiny than any airplane in the world,” he said.
“It’s probably the safest airplane to be on.” American is the only U.S. airline
to put the Max back in its schedule so far, starting with one round trip daily
between New York and Miami beginning Dec. 29.
Nearly 400 Max
jets were in service worldwide when they were grounded, and Boeing has built
and stored about 450 more since then. All have to undergo maintenance and get
some modifications before they can fly. Pilots must also undergo simulator
training, which was not required when the aircraft was introduced. Hansman said
pilot training for qualified 737 pilots shouldn’t take long because Boeing has
fixed problems with the Max’s software. It no longer automatically points the
plane’s nose down repeatedly, and doesn’t override commands from the pilot,
according to Boeing. The company posted a summary of changes to the plane. Relatives
of people who died in the crashes remain unconvinced of the Max’s safety. They
accused Boeing of hiding critical design features from the FAA and say the
company tried to fix the tendency for the plane’s nose to tip up with software
that was implicated in both crashes. “The flying public should avoid the Max,”
said Michael Stumo, whose 24-year-old daughter died in the second crash.
“Change your flight. This is still a more dangerous aircraft than other modern
planes.” Boeing’s former CEO Dennis Muilenburg initially suggested that the
foreign pilots were to blame. However, congressional investigators discovered
an FAA analysis — conducted after the first Max crash — that predicted there
would be 15 more crashes during the plane’s life span if the flight-control
software were not fixed.
After an
18-month investigation, the House Transportation Committee heaped blame on
Boeing, which was under pressure to develop the Max to compete with a plane
from European rival Airbus, and the FAA, which certified the Max and was the
last agency in the world to ground it after the crashes. The investigators said
Boeing suffered from a “culture of concealment,” and pressured engineers in a
rush to get the plane on the market. Boeing was repeatedly wrong about how
quickly it could fix the plane. When those predictions continued to be wrong,
and Boeing was perceived as putting undue pressure on the FAA, Muilenburg was
fired in December 2019.Dickson — who flew F-15 fighters in the Air Force before
serving as a pilot and an executive at Delta Air Lines — foreshadowed the
agency’s decision to clear the Max to fly again with comments in September,
after he climbed into the cockpit of a Max for a two-hour test flight. “I liked
what I saw on the flight,” Dickson declared that day. Some relatives of
passengers who died in the Ethiopian crash dismissed Dickson’s flight as a
stunt to benefit Boeing. In recent weeks, European regulators also signaled
their likely approval of Boeing’s work. Regulators in Canada and China are
still conducting their own reviews. Relatives say it’s too soon, and they and
their lawyers say Boeing and the FAA are withholding documents. Naoise Ryan, an
Irish citizen whose husband died in the Ethiopian crash, said the Max is “the
same airplane that crashed not once but twice because safety was not a priority
for this company.”
^ Hopefully the737
Max is safe otherwise the few people that are flying right now are in trouble
and the airline industry will be even more worse off than it already is. ^
https://www.newsnationnow.com/business/faa-poised-to-clear-boeing-737-max-to-fly-again/
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