After the failure during the Alaska Airlines flight, the boss of Boeing recognizes an “error”

by time news

2024-01-10 02:07:42
The Alaska Airlines plane which lost a door in flight, in a hangar at Portland International Airport (Oregon), January 9, 2024. MATHIEU LEWIS-ROLLAND / AFP

The CEO of Boeing, Dave Calhoun, recognized on Tuesday January 9 a ” error “ after the stalling of a door during an Alaska Airlines flight, which resulted in dozens of 737 MAX 9 planes from the American manufacturer being kept on the ground.

” We will approach [ce dossier] starting by recognizing our mistake”, declared the manager during a meeting at the group’s factory in Renton (Washington State), according to quotes sent by a Boeing spokesperson. Dave Calhoun promised to address the issue “transparently, every step of the way”.

He said he would rely on the American civil aviation regulatory authority (FAA), “to ensure that all aircraft allowed to fly are safe and to ensure that this event never happens again”. “All the details are important”, he insisted, claiming to have been marked by the images of the Alaska Airlines flight, which had to turn around on Friday after a door was torn off. The boss of the aircraft manufacturer did not specify what he meant by ” error “.

Read also: Article reserved for our subscribers Crash avoided on Alaska Airlines flight: Boeing under pressure after the reliability of the 737 Max is called into question The Boeing 737 Max 9 which carried out Alaska Airlines flight 1282, in Portland (Oregon) , January 8, 2024. NTSB / AFP

171 planes temporarily prevented from flying

Some 171 of the 218 aircraft of this model in service are affected by the flight suspension ordered Saturday by the agency. On Monday, the United company, which owns the first fleet of 737 MAX 9s in the world (79 aircraft), indicated that it had discovered “bolts that needed to be tightened” during checks on the condemned doors of its 737 MAX 9, the same as the one torn off Friday during the Alaska Airlines flight. Locking certain doors is offered by Boeing to its customers when the number of existing emergency exits is already sufficient in relation to the number of seats in the aircraft. In addition to the 737 MAX 9, this device already exists on other Boeing models, notably the 737-900ER, launched in 2006 and which has not experienced any similar incidents since.

Read also: Checks on Boeing 737 MAX reveal loose equipment on Alaska Airlines and United aircraft

Also on Monday, Alaska Airlines also revealed that it had detected “poorly secured equipment” on some of its devices of this type, after preliminary inspections. The reasons for the failure that occurred on Friday have not yet been established and the American Transportation Safety Agency (NTSB) is continuing its investigations. Its president, Jennifer Homendy, announced Monday evening that she had not found any bolts among the elements that came off the Alaska Airlines plane on Friday. New research will allow “determine if the bolts were there”she continued.

The FAA announced Tuesday, in a statement sent to Agence France-Presse, that “all Boeing 737-9s with an obstructed door [resteraient] on the ground as long as [l’agence] will not have established that they can be used again”. The regulator specified that Boeing had modified the instructions on Tuesday allowing the complete inspection of the door, frame and fasteners, after receiving feedback concerning the first instructions communicated on Monday. “Passenger safety, not speed [d’exécution des inspections]will determine the timetable for returning the 737 9 MAX to service »added the FAA.

The door of the malfunctioning Alaska Airlines plane, found in a private garden in Portland, Oregon, on January 8, 2024, in a photo published by the US Transportation Safety Agency. NTSB/AP

Nearly 1,500 flights canceled

“We are still awaiting inspection and maintenance instructions from Boeing, and validation of these procedures by the FAA”a écrit Alaska Airlines on his account. “Until then, the fleet (of 737-9s) will remain on the ground. » The Seattle (Washington State) company had to cancel more than 100 flights on Tuesday due to the shutdown of some of its aircraft. Since Saturday, Alaska Airlines and United have had to cancel a total of nearly 1,500 flights.

This new setback, which follows a series of others in recent years, comes as Boeing was recovering its head and managed to improve its production rates at the end of 2023. After having delivered only 15 737 planes MAX in September, its lowest monthly total in two years, then 18 in October, the Arlington (Virginia) aircraft manufacturer climbed to 46 in November, then 44 in December, according to figures released Tuesday.

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“I think Airbus and Boeing, and certainly Boeing, need to significantly improve their quality control”declared the boss of the European company Ryanair, Michael O’Leary, in an interview published Tuesday by the Financial Times. Already a major customer of Boeing, Ryanair ordered, last May, 300 737 MAX 10 planes, a model which has not yet been certified by the FAA.

Also read the decryption: Article reserved for our subscribers Airbus and Boeing record order records but struggle to deliver planes

The World with AFP


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