New quality glitch to delay some Boeing 737 MAX deliveries
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[February 05, 2024] By
Tim Hepher and Valerie Insinna
(Reuters) -Boeing Co said on Sunday it will have to do more work on
about 50 undelivered 737 MAX airplanes, potentially delaying some
near-term deliveries, after its supplier Spirit AeroSystems discovered
two mis-drilled holes on some fuselages.
Boeing confirmed the findings in response to a Reuters query after
industry sources said an "edge margin", or spacing problem, had been
found in holes drilled on a window frame on some jets.
Boeing, which has been under fire from regulators and airlines since the
Jan. 5 blowout of a door plug on a 737 MAX 9, said safety was unaffected
and existing 737s could keep flying.
"This past Thursday, a supplier notified us of a non-conformance in some
737 fuselages. I want to thank an employee at the supplier who flagged
to his manager that two holes may not have been drilled exactly to our
requirements," Boeing Commercial Airplanes CEO Stan Deal said in a
letter to staff referring to Spirit, which is the sole 737 fuselage
supplier.
"While this potential condition is not an immediate flight safety issue
and all 737s can continue operating safely, we currently believe we will
have to perform rework on about 50 undelivered airplanes," Deal said in
the letter, first reported exclusively by Reuters.
Spirit spokesperson Joe Buccino told Reuters that as part of its
360-degree quality management program, a member of its team identified
an issue that did not conform to engineering standards.
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"We are in close communication with Boeing on this matter," he said.
Deal said Boeing plans to devote several "factory days" this week at the
Renton 737 plant outside Seattle to work on the mis-aligned holes and
finish off other outstanding work. Such days allow teams to pause normal
work and attend to specific tasks without shutting production.
The amount of rework time is expected to be finalized in coming days.
It is the latest effort by Boeing to tighten its operations after the
blowout on an Alaska Airlines jet threw the spotlight on quality
controls.
Investigators, who have been examining whether the bolts on the Alaska
Airlines door plug were missing or badly fitted, are expected to issue
an interim report this week.
At the same time, Boeing has asked a major supplier, which it did not
identify, to halt shipments until jobs have been completed to
specification, Deal said.
"While this delay in shipment will affect our production schedule, it
will improve overall quality and stability."
Boeing said parts that already conform to the right specification can
continue to be shipped.
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) had no immediate comment.
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The production line for the Boeing P-8 Poseidon maritime patrol
aircraft is pictured at Boeing's 737 factory in Renton, Washington,
U.S. November 18, 2021. REUTERS/Jason Redmond/File Photo
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QUALITY DEFECT
The U.S. regulator has ordered Boeing to cap 737 production at the
current rate of 38 jets a month for an undefined period while it
addresses quality lapses, deferring the increases in production
needed to meet rising demand for new jets.
So far, Boeing has said it will keep buying parts from suppliers at
previously planned higher rates in order to cushion the impact they
face from the freeze in production growth.
The 737 MAX checks focus on potentially sloppy positioning of two
holes on a window frame assembly supplied by Spirit, a condition
known as "short edge margin," the industry sources said.
Edge margins, or the gap between a fastener and the edge of a metal
sheet, have to meet strict specifications designed to minimise the
risk of metal fatigue over the long term.
In the past, the FAA has occasionally ordered inspections for cracks
resulting from fastener holes being mis-drilled.
As of Friday, the "non-conformance" or quality defect had been found
in 22 fuselages out of 47 inspected up to that point, spread between
Boeing and Spirit, and may exist in some 737s in service, the
sources said.
The findings came to light in a routine notification known as a
Notice of Escapement, in which suppliers notify Boeing of any known
or suspected quality slip, the sources said.
Such quality reports are common in aerospace but the discovery comes
as Boeing and its best-selling jet are under the microscope
following the Alaska Airlines emergency.
The U.S. planemaker last month urged suppliers to intensify checks
and told them it is "imperative" that they meet quality
requirements, according to a memo seen by Reuters.
People familiar with the matter said Boeing and Spirit have yet to
come with an agreed position on how many of the mis-drilled holes
have to be addressed, and how many of the errors are so slight that
the fuselages can be used "as is".
Spirit, spun off from Boeing in 2005, is due to unveil earnings on
Tuesday.
Boeing 737s are assembled in Renton outside Seattle from fuselages
shipped by train from Sprit in Wichita, Kansas.
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(Reporting by Tim Hepher in Paris and Valerie Insinna in Washington;
Additional reporting by David Shepardson in Washington; Editing by
Tom Hogue, Gerry Doyle and Jamie Freed)
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