at this point:
New Blow for Boeing After Debris Found in 737 Max Fuel Tanks
2020-02-19 14:04:37.139 GMT
By Alan Tovey, Industry Editor
(Telegraph) -- Boeing’s troubled 737 Max has suffered another
blow after debris was found in the fuel tanks of planes put in
storage while the model remains grounded due to safety fears.
The firm found the so-called foreign object debris while doing
maintenance on aircraft grounded since March after the second of
two 737 Max crashes in five months that killed almost 350 people
It poses a serious safety risk to aircraft and can block fuel
supplies to engines causing them to cut out, or damage other
components as they move around in flight.
A Boeing spokesman said the discovery led to a “robust internal
investigation and immediate corrective actions in our production
system”.
All 737 Max planes in storage will be inspected to check for any
other debris.
Airlines that have already received 737 Max planes that had been
in storage for more than a year are also being advised to check
fuel tanks as part of new procedures.
The discovery is just the latest in a spate of problems with the
737 Max since it was grounded, including a series of damning
emails between Boeing staff before the crashes that labelled the
aircraft as “designed by clowns and supervised by monkeys” .
The two crashes that led to the grounding occurred in October
2018 and March last year.
Both are being linked to the MCAS software system on the
aircraft, which compensates for the Max’s more powerful engines.
This pushes the nose down if it detects that the aircraft is
flying up too steeply and could stall. It is thought MCAS was
malfunctioning and sending planes into a dive from which pilots
struggled to recover.
Boeing is developing modifications to counter the problem but
initially kept building dozens of 737 Max planes every
month despite the grounding - forcing it to store them in its
Seattle car park after running out of space elsewhere.
Production was temporarily halted in January .
Boeing expects the crisis to cost it $18bn (£14bn). This includes
compensation pay-outs for airlines that have received planes
which remain grounded, and those which have had to cancel
services due to non-delivery.
Boeing has said it hopes to return the 737 Max to service in
mid-2020, but many doubt this target can be met.
-0- Feb/19/2020 14:04 GMT
Increasingly, the only competitive edge Boeing ever had was
U.S. EXIM Bank: Finance Guarantees & Insurance for US Exporters
40% of all loans and 60% of all guarantees are for Boeing.
For the Brits on the forum- will the boeing 737 fly before the cross rail goes live?
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