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Yes! Yes! Yes! Boeing 737 MAX Chow Ang Moh Southwest Airline Orlando Airport EMERGENCY LANDING, FAA:Temporaly Ground 737 MAX! Huat! Crash pse! Die Pse

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http://www.fox35orlando.com/news/lo...ency-landing-at-orlando-international-airport


Southwest Boeing 737 Max makes emergency landing at Orlando International Airport





Posted Mar 26 2019 04:08PM EDT

Updated Mar 26 2019 04:28PM EDT

ORLANDO, Fla. (FOX 35 ORLANDO) - A Southwest plane that was on its way to be grounded had to make an emergency landing at the Orlando International Airport on Tuesday.
A Southwest Boeing 737 Max took off from Orlando International Airport after 2:30 p.m on Tuesday. Airport officials said that it experienced a malfunction and had to return to Orlando for an emergency landing.

Officials went on to say that there were only two passengers, a pilot, and a co-pilot on board.
The plane, Southwest Flight 8701, was heading to Victorsville, California to be grounded, airport officials said. President Trump previously ordered that all Boeing 737 Max 8 and 9 aircrafts be grounded after one crashed in Nairobi, killing 157 people.
Six of those planes, including five Southwest planes, were grounded at the Orlando International Airport. Southwest says that they are committed to safety during this time.
More on the Boeing 737 Max




https://www.usatoday.com/story/trav...n-united-grounding-boeing-737-max/3140180002/

Boeing 737 Max grounded at Southwest, American and United: 6 things travelers need to know
Dawn Gilbertson, USA TODAY Published 2:59 p.m. ET March 13, 2019 | Updated 9:31 a.m. ET March 14, 2019

President Trump announces the FAA and Dept. of Transportation will ground all Boeing 737 Max 8 and 9 aircraft following recent crashes of the model. USA TODAY

CONNECTTWEETLINKEDINCOMMENTEMAILMORE
With President Trump issuing an emergency order immediately grounding the Boeing 737 Max fleet in the United States in the wake of two fatal crashes, travelers on Southwest, American and United are going to be impacted.
Southwest Airlines, which has more Max planes (34) than any U.S. carrier, has issued a travel advisory allowing travelers to change their flights without penalty, with certain restrictions. The airline used the plane on about 160 of its 4,000 daily flights.
"Our goal is to operate our schedule with every available aircraft in our fleet to meet our customers' expectations during the busy spring travel season," Southwest said in a statement.
A Southwest flight from Oakland to Newark landed at 7:10 p.m. EDT, the final Max flight by a U.S. carrier until the grounding is lifted. American and United's last Max flights landed earlier Wednesday.
American Airlines said it is working to rebook customers as quickly as possible.
United said it expects minimal impact to its operation by using spare planes and rebooking affected travelers on other flights.
United’s statement on the FAA grounding pic.twitter.com/CfMNC7AkI4
— United Airlines (@united) March 13, 2019
Here are 6 things travelers need to know
1. The grounding is effective immediately.
2. No one knows how long the planes will be out of service. The last fleet grounding, of the Boeing 787 Dreamliner in 2013, lasted more than three months.
3. A small percentage of flights will be affected. Just 4 percent of Southwest's daily flights are Max 8; American has 90 Max 8 flights a day out of 6,700 flights, and United has 40 daily flights on the bigger Max 9, out of 4,700 daily flights.
8253c632-c7c9-4ab1-a2a9-9283c78e0e86-USAT_Dec_17-27.jpg

A Southwest Airlines Boeing 737 Max 8 jet lands at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport in December 2017. (Photo: Jeremy Dwyer-Lindgren, special for USA TODAY)

4. Southwest's Max 8 flights are spread throughout the country. American's Max 8 flights are concentrated into and out of Miami.United has a heavy concentration of Max 9 flights in Houston and Los Angeles.
A week of Boeing 737 Max routes by carrier

Boeing 737 Max: How many of those planes fly for Southwest, American, United, and where?
5. If your flight is affected, the airline likely will automatically rebook you on another flight at no cost. After the FAA ordered airlines to ground their Boeing 787s in 2013, United immediately shifted passengers scheduled on its six 787s to other flights.Southwest recommends travelers go to southwest.com to rebook, cancel or check flight status because its call centers are jammed.
6. If your flight is canceled, you are eligible for a refund.
More: How to tell if you're booked on a Boeing Max 8




https://www.npr.org/2019/03/13/7029...oeing-737-max-8-flight-controls-he-wasnt-alon









Business

FAA Grounds Boeing 737 Max Planes In U.S., Pending Investigation


5:33






March 13, 201912:43 PM ET

Bill Chappell
Twitter

Laurel Wamsley
Twitter

gettyimages-1130231650_custom-30365f1feea63a9027fe74b9f7a6a06bc113351b-s800-c85.jpg


A Boeing 737 Max 8 flown by Southwest Airlines sits at the gate at Baltimore Washington International Airport on Wednesday. Per the FAA order, Southwest said it has removed its 34 Max 8s from service.
Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images

Updated at 5:48 p.m. ET

The Federal Aviation Administration says it is temporarily grounding all Boeing 737 Max aircraft operated by U.S. airlines or in U.S. territory.

The announcement Wednesday afternoon follows decisions by many other countries to ground the planes after 157 people died in Sunday's crash of an Ethiopian Airlines 737 Max 8.

"The grounding will remain in effect pending further investigation, including examination of information from the aircraft's flight data recorders and cockpit voice recorders," the FAA said in a statement. "The agency made this decision as a result of the data gathering process and new evidence collected at the site and analyzed today. This evidence, together with newly refined satellite data available to FAA this morning, led to this decision."

The flight recorders from Flight 302 were being flown to France on Wednesday night, FAA Acting Administrator Daniel Elwell said. The data from the boxes has not yet been pulled out by investigators.

"Ethiopia has the capability to read boxes, but these are too damaged," Elwell said. "There is special equipment that is capable of reading data off damaged boxes, and we're going to get the boxes to a country where that can be done as soon as possible."

The emergency order is effective immediately. Any Boeing 737 Max 8 and Max 9 planes that were in flight when the order was issued "may proceed to and complete their soonest planned landing" — but they were not permitted to take off again. The order remains in effect until the FAA rescinds or modifies it.

The FAA says it made the decision on the basis of new information it discovered in the course of investigating wreckage from the Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302. The agency says there are 74 Boeing 737 Max 8 and Max 9 planes registered in the U.S., and 387 worldwide.

In a statement Wednesday, Boeing said it "continues to have full confidence in the safety of the 737 MAX."

"However, after consultation with the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), and aviation authorities and its customers around the world, Boeing has determined — out of an abundance of caution and in order to reassure the flying public of the aircraft's safety — to recommend to the FAA the temporary suspension of operations of the entire global fleet of 371 737 MAX aircraft."

For days, the FAA had said the planes are safe to fly. Major U.S. airlines such as Southwest also expressed confidence in the plane.

Southwest said in a statement following the order that it has removed its 34 Max 8s from service, noting that the aircraft account for less than 5 percent of its daily flights. The airline said that while it remains confident in the planes, it supported the actions of the FAA and other regulators that are investigating the Ethiopian Airlines crash.

American Airlines said it had been informed earlier Wednesday that the entire Boeing 737 Max fleet would be grounded. The emergency order will affect 14 of the airline's planes, which account for about 40 flights a day.

The FAA said Monday that it would require Boeing to improve how the 737 Max flight control systems work, along with other design changes.

After Sunday's crash, Ethiopian Airlines grounded its four remaining 737 Max 8 planes. Dozens of countries, including Germany and China, also grounded their airlines' 737 Max 8s. In some places, such as India, Australia and the European Union, aviation authorities have banned the entire 737 Max family of planes from their airspace.

Canada took action Wednesday, with Transport Minister Marc Garneau announcing restrictions barring "any air operator, both domestic and foreign," from flying the Boeing 737 Max 8 and 9 through Canadian airspace. Air Canada has taken delivery of 23 of the 737 Max planes, according to Boeing.


Africa
FAA To Order Changes In Boeing 737 Max Jets After Ethiopian Airlines Crash

Despite previous reassurances in the U.S. about safety, concerns have continued to mount.

Peter Goelz, a former managing director of the National Transportation Safety Board, told NPR on Wednesday morning that he was beginning to be concerned about the safety of the 737 Max 8.

"Yesterday was the first time I started to really have concerns myself, because I've worked with the British investigators and regulators," he said. "I've also worked with the German investigators. And I have the highest regard for them. These are not folks that would make haphazard judgments. So, I am concerned that some of the finest regulatory and investigative groups have now called for the grounding."

Goelz said the FAA — which has sent a team of investigators to the crash site in Ethiopia — is "data-driven" and doesn't make decisions on anecdotal evidence. "They really have a close working and regulatory relationship with Boeing," he said.

The U.S. aviation system is essentially governed through cooperative and voluntary relationships between the government and manufacturers, Goelz said. "There are not enough inspectors on the payroll to really have a 'Gotcha!' oversight. So they cooperate very closely. And it's a relationship that encourages the admittance of mistakes, it's a relationship that has given us a very great system. But in times like this, it's a relationship that certainly people question."

Those questions include speculation about whether Boeing executives might have tried to influence the Trump administration in an effort to tamp down safety concerns about the 737 Max 8 — the fastest-selling plane in Boeing's history, with more than 5,000 ordered.

The FAA's grounding order affects 737 Max 8s and 9s. Boeing's Max 7 is still being tested and hasn't entered service yet, and the Max 10 is in development.

Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg has spoken directly to Trump about the crash, according to Reuters, which notes that the two men have also spoken several times in the past — including negotiations over the price of the new Air Force One. The news agency also notes that acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan was a longtime Boeing manager. And Nikki Haley, Trump's former U.N. ambassador, has been nominated to join Boeing's board.

U.S. pilots criticized Boeing in the wake of the disaster in October, in which 189 people died when an Indonesian Lion Air flight crashed. The pilots said the plane-maker had not provided enough information or training about a critical aspect of its new flight control system, as NPR's David Schaper reported in November.

boeing-737max-ethiopian-airlines-4d8a2f6509c793dd126cc1a3aef9e2f321f6c28d-s800-c85.jpg


Relatives of the 157 people who died in Sunday's crash of a Boeing 737 Max 8 were allowed to visit the site of the disaster Wednesday.
Baz Ratner/Reuters

The pilot of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 reported having flight control problems with the Boeing 737 Max 8 in the minutes before it crashed, airline CEO Tewolde GebreMariam says, providing new details about the disaster that killed 157 people on Sunday.

Pilot Yared Getachew, who had more than 8,000 flight hours of experience, "was having difficulties with the flight control" and requested a return to the airport in Addis Ababa, GebreMariam told CNN, citing recordings of communications between the plane and air traffic controllers.



Clearance for an immediate return was granted. But the plane didn't make it back, crashing just six minutes after takeoff and stoking concerns about the Max 8 passenger jet — which was involved in another deadly crash under similar circumstances in Indonesia less than five months ago.

The investigation into the Ethiopian crash is still in its early stages, and experts have warned against drawing conclusions, despite similarities between the two deadly disasters.

In both disasters, flight tracking data shows the pilots struggled to keep their aircrafts' noses up and maintain altitude — an issue that U.S. regulators sought to address late last year, sending an emergency directive for all Boeing 737 Max 8 and Max 9 planes and warning of an "unsafe condition" that could lead to "excessive nose-down attitude, significant altitude loss, and possible impact with terrain."

The Federal Aviation Administration ordered changes to the planes' flight manuals and procedures in November — and Ethiopian Airlines says it followed those guidelines.


Business
Boeing 737 Max, Involved In 2 Crashes, Is Fastest-Selling Plane In Company's History

"There was an AD [airworthiness directive] released by Boeing" that was circulated to the airline's pilots, GebreMariam said, referring to the emergency airworthiness directive that came out shortly after the Lion Air crash.

"There was also a briefing on the AD," the CEO said. "So yes, the pilots were well-briefed on the airworthiness directive."

Several U.S. pilots who reported having trouble controlling Boeing 737 Max planes early in their flights used NASA's Aviation Safety Reporting System to flag issues they encountered.

"In two cases, pilots flying in the U.S. late last year had their planes pitch down unexpectedly after departures. Both times, the crew disengaged the autopilot and were able to keep flying safely," NPR's Russell Lewis reports. "In a third report, a pilot complained that the Boeing 737 MAX's flight manual was inadequate and 'almost criminally insufficient.' "

On Tuesday, the Allied Pilots Association, which represents American Airlines' 15,000 pilots, issued a statement saying the union "remains confident in the Boeing 737 Max and in our members' ability to safely fly it." The group said its pilots "have the necessary training and experience to troubleshoot problems and take decisive actions on the flight deck to protect our passengers and crew."

While the union endorsed the continued use of the 737 Max, it added, "The flying public should also be aware that American Airlines' Boeing 737 Max planes are unique."

"The two dozen 737 Max aircraft in the American Airlines fleet are the only ones equipped with two AOA [Angle of Attack] displays, one for each pilot, providing an extra layer of awareness and warning," the union said.

Those displays could be crucial in avoiding a sudden downward pitch, which Boeing and the FAA have acknowledged as a risk in the airworthiness bulletin that was issued shortly after the crash of Lion Air Flight 610.

The airworthiness directive said Boeing had found that the automated anti-stall system on its 737 Max 8 and Max 9 models can be triggered by a sensor reporting an erroneously high angle of attack — meaning the system believes the nose is too high and the plane is stalling, even though it's not.

The problem presents "a potential for repeated nose-down trim commands," the directive states, noting, "This condition, if not addressed, could cause the flight crew to have difficulty controlling the airplane" and possibly resulting in a crash.
 

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This Came AFTER FAA Approved Software Update from Boeing, I want to see the new Software CRASH a few jets in USA! YES 911!



https://gizmodo.com/boeing-software-updates-to-fix-anti-stall-system-tentat-1833521139









Business

FAA Grounds Boeing 737 Max Planes In U.S., Pending Investigation


5:33






March 13, 201912:43 PM ET

Bill Chappell
Twitter

Laurel Wamsley
Twitter

gettyimages-1130231650_custom-30365f1feea63a9027fe74b9f7a6a06bc113351b-s800-c85.jpg


A Boeing 737 Max 8 flown by Southwest Airlines sits at the gate at Baltimore Washington International Airport on Wednesday. Per the FAA order, Southwest said it has removed its 34 Max 8s from service.
Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images

Updated at 5:48 p.m. ET

The Federal Aviation Administration says it is temporarily grounding all Boeing 737 Max aircraft operated by U.S. airlines or in U.S. territory.

The announcement Wednesday afternoon follows decisions by many other countries to ground the planes after 157 people died in Sunday's crash of an Ethiopian Airlines 737 Max 8.

"The grounding will remain in effect pending further investigation, including examination of information from the aircraft's flight data recorders and cockpit voice recorders," the FAA said in a statement. "The agency made this decision as a result of the data gathering process and new evidence collected at the site and analyzed today. This evidence, together with newly refined satellite data available to FAA this morning, led to this decision."

The flight recorders from Flight 302 were being flown to France on Wednesday night, FAA Acting Administrator Daniel Elwell said. The data from the boxes has not yet been pulled out by investigators.

"Ethiopia has the capability to read boxes, but these are too damaged," Elwell said. "There is special equipment that is capable of reading data off damaged boxes, and we're going to get the boxes to a country where that can be done as soon as possible."

The emergency order is effective immediately. Any Boeing 737 Max 8 and Max 9 planes that were in flight when the order was issued "may proceed to and complete their soonest planned landing" — but they were not permitted to take off again. The order remains in effect until the FAA rescinds or modifies it.

The FAA says it made the decision on the basis of new information it discovered in the course of investigating wreckage from the Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302. The agency says there are 74 Boeing 737 Max 8 and Max 9 planes registered in the U.S., and 387 worldwide.

In a statement Wednesday, Boeing said it "continues to have full confidence in the safety of the 737 MAX."

"However, after consultation with the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), and aviation authorities and its customers around the world, Boeing has determined — out of an abundance of caution and in order to reassure the flying public of the aircraft's safety — to recommend to the FAA the temporary suspension of operations of the entire global fleet of 371 737 MAX aircraft."

For days, the FAA had said the planes are safe to fly. Major U.S. airlines such as Southwest also expressed confidence in the plane.

Southwest said in a statement following the order that it has removed its 34 Max 8s from service, noting that the aircraft account for less than 5 percent of its daily flights. The airline said that while it remains confident in the planes, it supported the actions of the FAA and other regulators that are investigating the Ethiopian Airlines crash.

American Airlines said it had been informed earlier Wednesday that the entire Boeing 737 Max fleet would be grounded. The emergency order will affect 14 of the airline's planes, which account for about 40 flights a day.

The FAA said Monday that it would require Boeing to improve how the 737 Max flight control systems work, along with other design changes.

After Sunday's crash, Ethiopian Airlines grounded its four remaining 737 Max 8 planes. Dozens of countries, including Germany and China, also grounded their airlines' 737 Max 8s. In some places, such as India, Australia and the European Union, aviation authorities have banned the entire 737 Max family of planes from their airspace.

Canada took action Wednesday, with Transport Minister Marc Garneau announcing restrictions barring "any air operator, both domestic and foreign," from flying the Boeing 737 Max 8 and 9 through Canadian airspace. Air Canada has taken delivery of 23 of the 737 Max planes, according to Boeing.


Africa
FAA To Order Changes In Boeing 737 Max Jets After Ethiopian Airlines Crash

Despite previous reassurances in the U.S. about safety, concerns have continued to mount.

Peter Goelz, a former managing director of the National Transportation Safety Board, told NPR on Wednesday morning that he was beginning to be concerned about the safety of the 737 Max 8.

"Yesterday was the first time I started to really have concerns myself, because I've worked with the British investigators and regulators," he said. "I've also worked with the German investigators. And I have the highest regard for them. These are not folks that would make haphazard judgments. So, I am concerned that some of the finest regulatory and investigative groups have now called for the grounding."

Goelz said the FAA — which has sent a team of investigators to the crash site in Ethiopia — is "data-driven" and doesn't make decisions on anecdotal evidence. "They really have a close working and regulatory relationship with Boeing," he said.

The U.S. aviation system is essentially governed through cooperative and voluntary relationships between the government and manufacturers, Goelz said. "There are not enough inspectors on the payroll to really have a 'Gotcha!' oversight. So they cooperate very closely. And it's a relationship that encourages the admittance of mistakes, it's a relationship that has given us a very great system. But in times like this, it's a relationship that certainly people question."

Those questions include speculation about whether Boeing executives might have tried to influence the Trump administration in an effort to tamp down safety concerns about the 737 Max 8 — the fastest-selling plane in Boeing's history, with more than 5,000 ordered.

The FAA's grounding order affects 737 Max 8s and 9s. Boeing's Max 7 is still being tested and hasn't entered service yet, and the Max 10 is in development.

Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg has spoken directly to Trump about the crash, according to Reuters, which notes that the two men have also spoken several times in the past — including negotiations over the price of the new Air Force One. The news agency also notes that acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan was a longtime Boeing manager. And Nikki Haley, Trump's former U.N. ambassador, has been nominated to join Boeing's board.

U.S. pilots criticized Boeing in the wake of the disaster in October, in which 189 people died when an Indonesian Lion Air flight crashed. The pilots said the plane-maker had not provided enough information or training about a critical aspect of its new flight control system, as NPR's David Schaper reported in November.

boeing-737max-ethiopian-airlines-4d8a2f6509c793dd126cc1a3aef9e2f321f6c28d-s800-c85.jpg


Relatives of the 157 people who died in Sunday's crash of a Boeing 737 Max 8 were allowed to visit the site of the disaster Wednesday.
Baz Ratner/Reuters

The pilot of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 reported having flight control problems with the Boeing 737 Max 8 in the minutes before it crashed, airline CEO Tewolde GebreMariam says, providing new details about the disaster that killed 157 people on Sunday.

Pilot Yared Getachew, who had more than 8,000 flight hours of experience, "was having difficulties with the flight control" and requested a return to the airport in Addis Ababa, GebreMariam told CNN, citing recordings of communications between the plane and air traffic controllers.



Clearance for an immediate return was granted. But the plane didn't make it back, crashing just six minutes after takeoff and stoking concerns about the Max 8 passenger jet — which was involved in another deadly crash under similar circumstances in Indonesia less than five months ago.

The investigation into the Ethiopian crash is still in its early stages, and experts have warned against drawing conclusions, despite similarities between the two deadly disasters.

In both disasters, flight tracking data shows the pilots struggled to keep their aircrafts' noses up and maintain altitude — an issue that U.S. regulators sought to address late last year, sending an emergency directive for all Boeing 737 Max 8 and Max 9 planes and warning of an "unsafe condition" that could lead to "excessive nose-down attitude, significant altitude loss, and possible impact with terrain."

The Federal Aviation Administration ordered changes to the planes' flight manuals and procedures in November — and Ethiopian Airlines says it followed those guidelines.


Business
Boeing 737 Max, Involved In 2 Crashes, Is Fastest-Selling Plane In Company's History

"There was an AD [airworthiness directive] released by Boeing" that was circulated to the airline's pilots, GebreMariam said, referring to the emergency airworthiness directive that came out shortly after the Lion Air crash.

"There was also a briefing on the AD," the CEO said. "So yes, the pilots were well-briefed on the airworthiness directive."

Several U.S. pilots who reported having trouble controlling Boeing 737 Max planes early in their flights used NASA's Aviation Safety Reporting System to flag issues they encountered.

"In two cases, pilots flying in the U.S. late last year had their planes pitch down unexpectedly after departures. Both times, the crew disengaged the autopilot and were able to keep flying safely," NPR's Russell Lewis reports. "In a third report, a pilot complained that the Boeing 737 MAX's flight manual was inadequate and 'almost criminally insufficient.' "

On Tuesday, the Allied Pilots Association, which represents American Airlines' 15,000 pilots, issued a statement saying the union "remains confident in the Boeing 737 Max and in our members' ability to safely fly it." The group said its pilots "have the necessary training and experience to troubleshoot problems and take decisive actions on the flight deck to protect our passengers and crew."

While the union endorsed the continued use of the 737 Max, it added, "The flying public should also be aware that American Airlines' Boeing 737 Max planes are unique."

"The two dozen 737 Max aircraft in the American Airlines fleet are the only ones equipped with two AOA [Angle of Attack] displays, one for each pilot, providing an extra layer of awareness and warning," the union said.

Those displays could be crucial in avoiding a sudden downward pitch, which Boeing and the FAA have acknowledged as a risk in the airworthiness bulletin that was issued shortly after the crash of Lion Air Flight 610.

The airworthiness directive said Boeing had found that the automated anti-stall system on its 737 Max 8 and Max 9 models can be triggered by a sensor reporting an erroneously high angle of attack — meaning the system believes the nose is too high and the plane is stalling, even though it's not.

The problem presents "a potential for repeated nose-down trim commands," the directive states, noting, "This condition, if not addressed, could cause the flight crew to have difficulty controlling the airplane" and possibly resulting in a crash.


https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...aw-737-max-software-approval-agency-head-says


Bloomberg




Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg

politics
FAA Directly Oversaw 737 Max Software Approval, Agency Head Says
By
Alan Levin
and
Ryan Beene

March 27, 2019, 2:57 AM GMT+8

  • Agency plans revamp of company approvals of new aircraft
  • Senate hearing Wednesday to examine FAA process, 737 crashes

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U.S. aviation regulators were directly involved in the review and approval of the anti-stall system on Boeing Co.’s grounded 737 Max aircraft that has been involved in two fatal crashes, the chief of the Federal Aviation Administration plans to tell Congress Wednesday.


The FAA is also revamping how it oversees companies such as Boeing that have been granted authority to use their own employees to sign off on aircraft designs, the Transportation Department’s inspector general will also testify to a Senate panel, according to written statements obtained by Bloomberg News.



The 737 Max’s Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System, or MCAS, caused a Lion Air jet to repeatedly dive on Oct. 29 until pilots lost control and it crashed. An Ethiopian Airlines 737 Max followed a similar flight path before it slammed into the ground on March 10. The two crashes killed 346 people.



“FAA engineers and flight test pilots were involved in the MCAS operational evaluation flight test,” Elwell said in the remarks prepared for a Senate hearing on Wednesday. “The certification process was detailed and thorough, but, as is the case with newly certified products, time yields more data to be applied for continued analysis and improvement.”


Related: Congress Revisits Role It Gave Boeing to Certify 737 Jet Safety
The FAA is ordering Boeing to make revisions to the system so that it’s not as likely to cause pilots to crash in a malfunction. The application for the update reached FAA on Jan. 21 and it has been tested by FAA pilots in simulators and in flights, Elwell said. The agency expects to approve the system soon.

Boeing said in a statement it will monitor the hearing Wednesday and “continues to support the ongoing accident investigations, and is working with the authorities to evaluate new information as it becomes available.”
By July, the FAA will institute a new approach for overseeing aircraft certification work performed by company employees on the agency’s behalf, a shift that represents a “significant change in its oversight approach,” Calvin Scovel, the DOT’s inspector general, said.
The change comes in response to a 2015 report by Scovel’s office that found FAA’s oversight of certification work delegated to companies was not focused on the broader aircraft systems and practices at companies that presented the highest risk, according to his remarks.

National Transportation Safety Board Chairman Robert Sumwalt, in his prepared remarks, said his agency, which conducts aviation accident investigations and is assisting in the 737 probes, is reviewing how Boeing certified MCAS.
The FAA and Boeing face multiple reviews of how the plane, which was grounded March 13, was approved, including a possible criminal investigation led by the U.S. Justice Department’s Criminal Division. Elwell promised to cooperate in the probes.
The testimony was earlier reported by Reuters.
 

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http://news.trust.org/item/20190326201731-pnpwf/


ANALYSIS-Boeing 737 MAX software fix: easy to upload, harder to approve

by Reuters

Tuesday, 26 March 2019 20:29 GMT




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* 737 MAX software fix can be installed in an hour per jet

* Global certification may leave jets parked for months

* FAA hegemony challenged by global regulators

By Eric M. Johnson, David Shepardson and Allison Lampert

SEATTLE/WASHINGTON/MONTREAL, March 26 (Reuters) - Boeing engineers armed with laptops and thumb drives will be able to upload a crucial software fix for the 737 MAX anti-stall system in about an hour. That's the easy part.

Before Boeing's workhorse of the future can resume flying, the upgrade must first be approved by the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and then by wary regulators around the globe who have grounded it in the wake of two deadly crashes.

Regulators in China, Europe and Canada have signaled they will not rubber stamp an FAA decision to allow the planes back into the air but conduct their own reviews.

With the FAA under pressure for its role in certifying the newest 737, and other regulators challenging its leadership of the airline safety system, Boeing's money-spinning jet could remain parked for months.

"We are guessing this thing's not going to be put to bed until the July or August time frame," said Charlie Smith, chief investment officer at Fort Smith Capital Group, which holds shares in Boeing.

The world's largest planemaker has been working on the upgrade for its MCAS stall-prevention system since October's Lion Air crash, when pilots are believed to have lost a tug of war with software that repeatedly pushed the nose down.

Acting FAA Administrator Dan Elwell told the U.S. Senate Tuesday in written testimony that the agency will agree to allow the 737 MAX to return to service "only when the FAA's analysis of the facts and technical data indicate that it is appropriate."

Boeing formally submitted a proposed MCAS software enhancement to the FAA for certification on Jan. 21, Elwell's testimony said.

Prior to certification, the FAA was "directly involved" in the review of the MCAS system but "time yields more data to be applied for continued analysis and improvement."

Boeing's flagship new single-aisle jet was grounded globally after a second crash in Ethiopia this month prompted concerns over possible similarities.

As a first step toward resuming flights and unfreezing deliveries, Boeing plans to provide more than 200 airlines and regulators with details on software and training on Wednesday.

Once the new software is approved, adding it will only take an hour per plane, according to an FAA official. But the overall task could stretch on far longer.

The FAA and Boeing will have to redo some analyses - including a formal functional hazard assessment - because they are making changes to a system that was already certified.

After the installation, there will be ground testing and flight tests, though how long these take could vary widely.

"Clearly there is pressure to get the airplanes ungrounded but there is tremendous pressure to make sure it was done right," the FAA official said.

"The last thing in the world you want is to have the thing hurried and then find problems with it."

Boeing and the FAA declined to comment.

FAA CHALLENGED

For decades, nations large and small followed the FAA's lead, but this month many ignored its initial declaration after the second crash that there was "no basis to order grounding the aircraft."

The agency stood alone among top regulators. First China, then Singapore, Britain and Canada banned flights, before U.S. President Donald Trump announced the MAX would be grounded.

Now, the FAA and Boeing must run the gauntlet of increased overseas scrutiny as they try to unground the jet - with China once again in a position to undo the regulatory pecking order.

Toughening its public stance, China said on Tuesday it had stopped accepting applications to certify individual MAX jets.

Canada, Europe and Turkey have all suggested they will take whatever time is needed to check the software even after the FAA approves it - a move that would normally set a global lead.

The shift in regulatory power poses a challenge to Boeing's efforts to quickly resolve the crisis, experts said.

Increased precautions by global regulators could also have a broad impact on an aviation system that relies on "reciprocity" between the United States, Canada and Europe in recognizing each other's expertise in certifying a plane.

Having a regulator such as the FAA do the heavy lifting to certify a plane reduces costs and time, since agencies abroad can validate the results and not have to duplicate them.

That global system of trust, which helps limit costs and keep flying safe, could be at risk from any perception that the United States failed to act, said Teal Group analyst Richard Aboulafia.

"It just makes the system, innovation and the development of new products all the more expensive."

Mike Daniel, a former FAA accident investigator, said the crash revealed weaknesses in Boeing's relations with regulators and airlines abroad.

777X CERTIFICATION CONCERN

The FAA's acting head will tell a Senate panel on Wednesday the agency's oversight approach must "evolve" too.

But in Canada, Transport Minister Marc Garneau told Reuters Ottawa had already gone further than the FAA following the first crash in October and was ready to move the bar higher again.

"So we don't always do things exactly the same. It has to pass the sort of safety threshold from our point of view. And there's nothing wrong with that," he said.

Meanwhile, the fallout may spread beyond the 737 family.

Certification could be delayed for the larger Boeing 777X, for which Lufthansa is a launch customer, as European regulators give it more a stringent review, the German airline's CEO said.

"Overall, foreign authorities will be more thorough in accepting American certifications. I think that for me is one of the outputs of these terrible events in Indonesia and Ethiopia already," Chief Executive Carsten Spohr told reporters. (Reporting by Eric M. Johnson in SEATTLE, David Shepardson and Jeff Mason in Washington, Allison Lampert in MONTREAL, Tuvan Gumrukcu in ANKARA, Stella Qiu in BEIJING, Brenda Goh in SHANGHAI, Jamie Freed in SINGAPORE, Tracy Rucinski in CHICAGO, Alwyn Scott in NEW YORK and Tim Hepher in PARIS; Writing by Eric M. Johnson, Tim Hepher; Editing by)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
 

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https://www.theatlantic.com/technol...ax-8-safe-how-faa-tested-its-software/584848/

Technology
The FAA Rigorously Tested the Boeing 737’s Software

So how did a problem slip through?
Alexis C. Madrigal Mar 14, 2019

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Joshua Roberts / Reuters

Two Boeing 737 Max 8 airplanes have crashed under similar circumstances in the past six months, one in October in Indonesia and the other in Ethiopia last week. These were new planes, and both had a control system installed that has been implicated in the Indonesian crash, and that might have played a role in the most recent disaster.

The system, known as the Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System (MCAS), has one very specific purpose. When flying in manual mode, the MCAS uses data from an “angle of attack” sensor to push the nose of the plane down if the plane’s orientation seems to be approaching the point when the plane would stall, which is a very dangerous condition. The software was designed to compensate for a new instability that resulted from some small physical-design modifications.
If the MCAS malfunctions, there is a procedure to cut the software out of the loop. But it requires throwing a separate switch, not merely pulling up on the plane’s control stick. If the switch isn’t flipped, the MCAS will keep nosing the plane down after five seconds. Back in November, as pilots and airline-industry observers mulled over the Indonesian crash, they fingered this “counterintuitive” system as part of the problem. Leeham, an aerospace news service, also noted that the novel behavior of the MCAS “was described nowhere” in the aircraft’s or pilot’s manual. This was a problem, Leeham wrote, because pilots had been told that an earlier version of the 737 and the Max 8 were the same, and could be flown interchangeably.

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Only after the Lion Air crash did Boeing put out an advisory about the software. My colleague James Fallows has noted that American pilots have also experienced the problem.
Read: Here’s what was on the record about problems with the 737 Max
What makes the situation troubling, whether or not the system is ultimately implicated in the Ethiopian Air tragedy, is that the problems that could result from this system are not impossible to foresee.
The MCAS relies on sensors that can derive the angle of attack, which a Boeing publication notes is a very complex measurement. Erroneous or mismatched readings could lead to serious trouble. And that’s not normally how the software systems installed on planes work.
Once the problems with the system came to light last year, Southwest almost immediately took steps to address the problem and Boeing announced an update to the MCAS system, which the company had been planning with the Federal Aviation Administration.

“The FAA says it anticipates mandating this software enhancement with an Airworthiness Directive no later than April,” Boeing said. “We have worked with the FAA in development of this software enhancement.”
So, upon review, the FAA and Boeing decided that a software update should be mandatory for the plane. This kind of post-facto decision making would not be surprising in most other realms of software development. After all, Apple has issued five iOS updates since October.
The FAA has extremely strict regulations. This makes sense: It regulates tubes full of people flying in the sky, and any problems could be catastrophic. The stakes are higher than they are with, say, an iPhone app. Every component of every plane must go through a certification process, which MCAS did.
As planes have become much more dependent on computers over the past few decades, the industry is facing the tricky problem of how to certify these systems—and how to train pilots to handle their increasingly inscrutable failures. The FAA runs the Aircraft Certification Service, which “is concerned with the approval of software and airborne electronic hardware for airborne systems (e.g., autopilots, flight controls, engine controls).” It’s important to understand that aircraft makers don’t submit a form to check a box; the FAA is deeply involved.

My colleague James Somers described precisely how software is evaluated under this safety regime. “The agency mandates that every requirement for a piece of safety-critical software be traceable to the lines of code that implement it, and vice versa,” Somers wrote. “So every time a line of code changes, it must be retraced to the corresponding requirement in the design document, and you must be able to demonstrate that the code actually satisfies the requirement.”
Read: The coming software apocalypse
In the United States, the current process has worked remarkably well. Across all the millions of flights by American airliners, there was exactly one passenger death from 2010 to 2019.





At the same time, as the pilot Mac McClellan points out, the new flying machine increasingly removes “the pilot as a critical part of the system and relies on multiple computers to handle failures.” While pilots are still trained to handle all manner of flight failures, they just don’t have to with the big planes, which create triply redundant systems to ensure the safety of passengers, no matter what the pilots do. That’s why McClellan’s post is provocatively titled “Can Boeing Trust Pilots?”

One way to see the MCAS problem is that the system took too much control from the pilots, exacerbated by Boeing’s lack of communication about its behavior. But another way, McClellan suggests, is to say that the software relied too much on pilot action, and in that case, the problem is that the MCAS was not designed for triply redundant automatic operation.
So much remains to be seen about the two crashes and the 737 Max 8. The planes are being grounded across the world, even here in the United States, where authorities had held out. And now the workhorse of the American commercial-airline industry is about to come under increased scrutiny.
If this problem—which everyone now acknowledges is a problem, whether or not it contributed to the Ethiopian crash—could sneak through the FAA’s testing, what other surprises might lurk in the software?

We want to hear what you think about this article. Submit a letter to the editor or write to [email protected].



https://edition.cnn.com/2019/03/13/politics/boeing-737-max-8-software/index.html


Wall Street Journal: Software fix to Boeing 737 Max 8 planes delayed in part by government shutdown

By Veronica Stracqualursi, CNN

Updated 2113 GMT (0513 HKT) March 13, 2019



Washington (CNN)US officials say the recent government shutdown played a part in the delay of Boeing's software update for its 737 Max aircraft, which has been grounded by airlines and countries around the world after two deadly accidents in the past five months, the Wall Street Journal reported.
Boeing announced Monday it had been working on a software fix for the 737 Max aircraft over "the past several months and in the aftermath" of Lion Air Flight 610 that went down in late October over the Java Sea off Indonesia, killing 189 passengers. The process was underway before the Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 crash over the weekend, which killed 157 people and also involved a 737 Max. Both flights crashed minutes into their journeys.
The circumstances of the crashes remain under investigation.
Boeing, which said it was working with the Federal Aviation Administration "on development, planning and certification of the software enhancement," said the fix will be on 737 Max planes no later than April.


Pilots complained about the 737 Max in a federal database

But the company's software update had initially been expected in early January, the Journal reported.
Citing people familiar with the details, the Journal reported that discussions between the FAA and Boeing about the software fix dragged on, in part because of "differences of opinion about technical and engineering issues."
Boeing and FAA officials also couldn't agree on how extensive the software enhancement should be, the newspaper reported. US officials also said the recent government shutdown, the longest in US history, delayed work on the update for five weeks, the Journal noted.
Later on Wednesday, acting FAA Administrator Daniel Elwell denied that the shutdown played a role.
"We just got confirmation that the shutdown did not cause any delay in work on the software -- the software addition to the MAX," Elwell said.
Sen. Richard Blumenthal, who sits on the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation committee, said the shutdown "absolutely aggravated and exacerbated the failures of the FAA and insisted on a quicker time table for installing new software dealing with the sensors."
"This problem is not a technological equivalent of rocket science," the Connecticut Democrat told reporters on Capitol Hill Wednesday. "They had the new software. They knew of the problem with the sensors. The airline should be held accountable, but the FAA has a responsibility to act right away."
The FAA was one of the agencies affected by the government shutdown, which began on December 22 and spanned 35 days. The agency had to recall thousands of its aviation inspectors from furlough over safety concerns.
The FAA determined that the delay in the update was acceptable because its experts and Boeing deemed there was no imminent safety threat, an unnamed source briefed on the discussions told the Journal.
Boeing declined to comment to CNN about the Wall Street Journal's reporting.
President Donald Trump announced on Wednesday that the US would be grounding 737 Max 8 and 9 planes effective immediately.
The FAA and Boeing say the software upgrade that's due in April will give pilots greater control in case problems emerge with the planes' safety systems.
Boeing said the company plans to include an update to the Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System (MCAS) flight control law.
"The enhanced flight control law incorporates angle of attack (AOA) inputs, limits stabilizer trim commands in response to an erroneous angle of attack reading, and provides a limit to the stabilizer command in order to retain elevator authority," Boeing said.
The software fix will also include updates to pilot displays, operation manuals and crew training.
A new flight control system
The maneuvering characteristics augmentation system is a new feature to Boeing's Max planes. It's a system that automatically lowers the nose of the plane when it detects from its external angle of attack sensors that the aircraft is flying too slowly or steeply, and at risk of stalling.
AOA sensors send information to the plane's computers about the angle of the plane's nose relative to the oncoming air to help determine whether the plane is about to stall.
The pilots on the Lion Air flight had repeatedly fought to override the MCAS, which pulled the plane's nose down more than two dozen times, according to a preliminary report released in November by Indonesia's National Transportation Safety Committee.
The report said the system was responding to incorrect data transmitted by an AOA sensor, which had proved faulty on earlier flights and had been replaced.
Lion Air's operational director claimed Boeing's operational manual for the Max 8 didn't contain adequate information about the new MCAS system. Boeing Chief Executive Dennis Muilenburg told Fox Business Network at the time that the information was available as part of the training manual.
A week after the Lion Air crash, Boeing warned airlines about how to address erroneous readings related to the plane's external sensors.
This story has been updated.
CNN's Fredreka Schouten, Aaron Cooper, Annie Grayer, Chris Isidore, Kara Fox, Euan McKirdy, David Goldman, Jethro Mullen and Charles Riley contributed to this report.
 

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Boeing is DEAD MEAT!

Now selling the whole firm nobody will buy either! Can strike-off from public listing and court order bankruptcy liquidation!
 

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Boeing is DEAD MEAT!

Now selling the whole firm nobody will buy either! Can strike-off from public listing and court order bankruptcy liquidation!
Boeing involved a lot of defence contracts. Lockheed Martin would be interested. The civilian part can be sold off to Chinese linked companies.
 

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EVEN FUCKING ENGINE ARE FUCKED UP!

https://edition.cnn.com/2019/03/26/us/boeing-737-max-emergency-landing/index.html

A Boeing 737 Max 8 made an emergency landing after an engine problem
By Dave Alsup and Emanuella Grinberg, CNN

Updated 0025 GMT (0825 HKT) March 27, 2019






(CNN)A Boeing 737 Max 8 aircraft from the fleet that was grounded after two deadly crashes made an emergency landing in Florida on Tuesday.
No passengers were aboard Southwest Airlines Flight 8701, which was being ferried from Orlando International Airport to Victorville, California, for short-term storage during the grounding, the airline said.


Changes coming at FAA after crashes, watchdog says

Just before 3 p.m. Tuesday, the two pilots aboard the flight reported "a performance issue with one of the engines shortly after takeoff," the airline said.
"The crew followed protocol and safely landed back at the airport."
The global fleet of 737 Max jets was grounded indefinitely on March 13 after two fatal crashes involving the aircraft in March and October.
It is not clear if Tuesday's emergency landing was related to suspected problems with the aircraft. An investigation into the crashes focuses on an automated anti-stall system and not engine problems.
190326170536-boeing-737-max-emergency-landing-screengrab-exlarge-169.jpg


A Southwest Airlines flight made an emergency landing at Orlando International Airport on Tuesday.
The landing and the runway shutdown it caused did not impact other traffic, an airport spokeswoman said.
Southwest said the aircraft will be moved to its Orlando maintenance facility for a review. The Federal Aviation Administration is investigating.
The Trump administration said it grounded the fleet in light of information gathered at the site of the March 10 crash of an Ethiopian Airlines flight. Before then, administration officials had said the planes were safe, despite concerns raised after a Lion Air flight crashed in October.


Boeing is in crisis, but it is doing just fine in its race with Airbus

The causes of the crashes have yet to be determined. But the focus has been on an automatic safety feature which may have forced the nose of each plane lower when it incorrectly believed the plane was in danger of going into a stall.
Boeing and the FAA said they are working on an upgrade of the planes' software to deal with the safety feature.
Southwest has 34 of Boeing's 737 Max jets. Its pilots were among those from three American carriers who tested recent software changes intended to decrease the chances of triggering the Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System, or MCAS.
CNN's Chis Isidore and Greg Wallace contributed reporting to this story.
 

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