U.S. FAA lays plan for Boeing 737 MAX's return; hurdles
remain
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[August 04, 2020] By
David Shepardson and Eric M. Johnson
WASHINGTON/SEATTLE (Reuters) - The U.S.
Federal Aviation Administration said on Monday it is proposing requiring
four key Boeing Co <BA.N> 737 MAX design and operating changes to
address safety issues seen in two fatal crashes that led to the plane's
grounding in March 2019.
The agency is issuing a proposed airworthiness directive to require
updated flight-control software, revised display-processing software to
generate alerts, a revision of certain flight-crew operating procedures
and changes in the routing of some wiring bundles.
While the measures align with those expected by Boeing and aerospace
analysts for months, the announcement comes after a series of delays and
sets in motion the final sequence of events that could lead to the FAA
lifting a grounding order on the plane later this year.
There are still a number of hurdles, including collecting public
comments on the changes for 45 days, and finalizing a new set of
pilot-training procedures. Transport Canada and Europe's EASA have their
own concerns.
Given the work left, it remains unclear whether U.S. flights will resume
before year-end.
Boeing shares closed 2.7% higher on Monday, while the Dow Jones
Industrial Average was up nearly 1%.
In response to the FAA's proposal, Chicago-based Boeing said it was
"continuing to make steady progress towards the safe return to service,
working closely with the FAA and other global regulators."
The FAA said in a separate 96-page report on Monday it "has
preliminarily determined that Boeing's proposed changes to the 737 MAX
design, flightcrew procedures and maintenance procedures effectively
mitigate the airplane-related safety issues." The airworthiness
directive seeks to require Boeing changes.
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Signage of The Boeing Company in Seattle, Washington, U.S. June 29,
2020. REUTERS/Karen Ducey
The crisis over the grounding of the once top-selling 737 MAX has cost the U.S.
planemaker more than $19 billion, slashed production and hobbled its supply
chain, with criminal and congressional investigations still ongoing.
The FAA's review has taken more than 18 months and included more than 40
full-time engineers, inspectors, pilots, and technical support staff. To date,
the FAA has conducted more than 60,000 hours of review, certification testing,
and document evaluation.
The agency is also proposing that 737 MAX operators conduct an Angle of Attack (AOA)
sensor system test and perform an operational readiness flight before returning
airplanes to service.
The changes are designed to prevent the erroneous activation of a key system
known as MCAS tied to both crashes, to alert pilots if two AOA sensors are
receiving conflicting data and to ensure flightcrew can respond to erroneous
stabilizer movement.
The FAA said the changes minimize "dependence on pilot action and the effect of
any potential single failure".
The wiring change will ensure the MAX complies with FAA's wire separation safety
standards.
(Reporting by David Shepardson in Washington and Eric M. Johnson in Seattle;
Editing by Tom Brown and Richard Pullin)
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