American Airlines goes full throttle to restore Boeing MAX fleet
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[December 03, 2020] By
Tracy Rucinski
TULSA, Oklahoma (Reuters) - American
Airlines' maintenance team is scrambling to complete safety changes to
its fleet of Boeing 737 MAX jets ahead of a phased return to service,
while deliveries of new jets are set to begin as early as this week.
American's maintenance base, the largest in the world, has housed its 24
MAX planes during a 20-month safety ban that followed the second of two
fatal crashes for the aircraft in March 2019, forcing some 400 MAX jets
in service to be grounded.
It has handled some unexpected tasks while caring for the idled jets,
including evicting wildlife and custom-making tarps.
"Birds like to nest in things. Combating that has been rather
interesting," said Erik Olund, managing director of base maintenance in
Tulsa, Oklahoma, under the wing of a 737 MAX.
Following a Nov. 18 order from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)
detailing necessary changes for the jet to fly again, 260 American
Airlines' specialists divided into three shifts are working round the
clock, seven days a week to roll out two jets every seven to 10 days.
But as the aircraft returns during a pandemic that has crushed air
travel demand and left questions over customers' willingness to fly,
American is planning a phased re-introduction to its commercial
schedule.
"We don’t want to bring them out so fast that we’re not flying them
(...) and have to put them back into storage," said American's chief
operating officer David Seymour at the hangar, where the company hosted
media on Wednesday.
American is launching commercial service on Dec. 29 with a daily flight
between Miami and New York City and will gradually reintroduce the jets
as its 2,600 737 pilots cycle through a 2-1/2 hour-simulator training.
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An American Airlines
Boeing 737 MAX 8, on a flight from Miami to New York City, comes in
for landing at LaGuardia Airport in New York, U.S., March 12, 2019.
REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
It plans to take delivery of eight new 737 MAX jets from Boeing this
month that would already have the FAA-mandated system upgrades, Seymour
said. The first delivery could happen this week, and some of those new
jets may fly before the maintenance crew works through all 24 in Tulsa.
Boeing has a backlog of 450 jets parked at its own facilities that it
built during the grounding, when MAX deliveries were frozen.
"There’s a lot at stake here and nobody is going to rush this airplane
before it’s operationally ready or safe," Olund said.
Each plane will take an operational readiness flight and receive FAA
sign-off before flying passengers.
One of the early problems American's team encountered when the jets were
grounded was finding enough tarps to cover the engines. So the team made
the covers themselves in the floorboard shop, using foam and corrugated
plastic sheets.
Then, every 10 days mechanics would remove all of the covers, run the
engines, cycle the flaps and rotate the tires. They also moved wiring
bundles after a regulatory mandate in March and conducted a full sweep
of the fuel tanks to ensure no foreign objects.
All said, they spent 64,000 hours keeping the jets in shape during the
longest grounding in commercial aviation history.
(Reporting by Tracy Rucinski; Editing by Tim Hepher and Mark Potter)
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