Boeing scours idle 737 MAX plant for industrial snags
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[February 24, 2020] By
Eric M. Johnson
SEATTLE (Reuters) - Insiders note an
"eerie" calm at Boeing Co's <BA.N> 737 MAX factory, formerly a bustling
hub that has helped fuel the aviation industry's record growth over the
last two decades.
Weeks after halting production of the 737 MAX, which has been grounded
for almost a year over fatal crashes, Boeing is seizing on the lull to
conduct an overhaul at its Seattle-area factory to curb inefficiency,
improve quality and ease the plane's re-entry to the market, four people
familiar with the matter said.
Backed by engineers from roughly a dozen suppliers such as fuselage
maker Spirit AeroSystems <SPR.N> and robot maker Electroimpact Inc,
Boeing is fixing inventory management, upgrading automated tooling, and
addressing "high-defect" areas, three of them said.
Boeing is also working to reduce instances where workers leave tools,
rags and other debris inside jetliners as they build them, a problem at
multiple Boeing factories. On Friday, Boeing said it found "foreign
object debris" inside dozens of stored 737 MAX jets, and was
investigating the cause.
A Boeing spokesman said the company was using this time to work closely
with suppliers on a dozen initiatives to improve the overall health of
its production system.
"The objective is to ensure a healthy and stable system that is ready
for resuming production and increasing rates at the appropriate time,"
the spokesman, Bernard Choi, said.
While Boeing has long said the Renton plant is already the most
efficient in aviation, such longstanding problems were viewed as too
risky to address during years of helter-skelter production to meet
record jet demand.
Even before the 737 MAX grounding, the production of aircraft wings had
been partially automated by robots. But concerns that missteps might
harm deliveries, hurting profit, prevented a complete forensic study of
the decades-old plant, two of the people said.
Now, Boeing and other aerospace companies are focusing more attention on
improving production systems rather than adding to their already-bulging
order books. And for Boeing, the hushed MAX assembly lines have abruptly
brought that effort into sharper focus.
While production stability is expected to prevail over market share in
the short term, fine-tuning the plant could help determine the MAX's
market position over the long term.
Analysts say Boeing has historically led rival Airbus SE <AIR.PA> in
production technology, but the European group has made reversing this a
top priority under CEO Guillaume Faury.
"You have this duopoly with high barriers to entry and enormous backlogs
and no new product launches for years to come," said Teal Group analyst
Richard Aboulafia, referring to Boeing and Airbus. "The only thing left
to focus on is building jets and keeping costs down."
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Employees walk past a
Boeing 737 Max aircraft at Boeing's 737 Max production facility in
Renton, Washington, U.S. December 16, 2019. REUTERS/Lindsey
Wasson/File Photo
'HIGH-DEFECT' AREAS
Part of the effort involves reducing "high-defect" areas, or situations where
the quality of a part deviates from airline specifications - which can result in
costly rework.
If the defect is bad enough to require changes, Boeing must flag that the
airplane has been repaired and the airline customer pays less - akin to a
discount for a scratch on a new car, one of the people said.
"Defects and rework are a big deal, they are extremely parasitic to factory
efficiency and part quality," he said. "Now they have the down time, so this is
the time to deal with it."
Another initiative is redesigning kits, made up of tools and parts, to be
smaller and more manageable, said Choi, the Boeing spokesman. "Kitting"
eliminates a mechanic's need to search for the right tools.
While all manufacturers chase inefficiency, jet factories around the world have
been flat out for years without pauses for model switches seen in automotive
plants, for example, and any tinkering usually has to fit in alongside
full-speed narrowbody production.
The shutdown has therefore handed Boeing the chance to seize an industrial
opportunity out of its worst-ever crisis.
Even so, some issues are difficult to solve.
A high proportion of fuselages have been getting flagged on arrival for
unacceptable defects such as loose rivets, scratches, and construction errors,
which causes delays, a fifth person with direct knowledge of the matter said.
Even dents that are scarcely visible to the naked eye must be addressed before
the jet takes flight.
The people spoke on condition of anonymity because the work at Boeing is
confidential.
Spirit and Electroimpact declined to comment and referred questions to Boeing.
The 737 MAX is the company's lifeblood, bringing in some 40% of Boeing's profit
before the aircraft was grounded and deliveries frozen last March.
When the 737 MAX is approved to fly, potentially later this year, the planemaker
aims to progress cautiously, reaching a pre-grounding production rate of 52 jets
monthly in 2022, and bumping it up to 57 jets a month - which would equal its
record rate - in 2023, supplier sources said.
(Reporting by Eric M. Johnson in Seattle; Additional reporting Tim Hepher in
Paris and Tracy Rucinski in Chicago; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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