Flutterby™! : Crash Course

Next unread comment / Catchup all unread comments User Account Info | Logout | XML/Pilot/etc versions | Long version (with comments) | Weblog archives | Site Map | | Browse Topics

Crash Course

2019-09-19 19:08:15.133161+02 by Dan Lyke 0 comments

Crash Course: How Boeing's managerial revolution created the 737 MAX disasters

Indeed, most of Boeing’s response to the MAX disasters has involved disseminating a kind of misinformation and doubt that makes the crashes look more complex than they really are. First Boeing issued, then instructed the FAA to circulate, a terse directive to the aviation community essentially copying-and-pasting the 737 flight manual’s instructions for handling a runaway stabilizer—a rare (but terrifying, and well-understood) situation in which the plane’s horizontal stabilizer doesn’t respond to a pilot’s commands. Then, when the airlines informed pilots about MCAS, they dispatched executives to talk pilots off the ledge about the deadly software—explaining, in the words of a Boeing vice president Mike Sinnett to the American Airlines pilots’ union, that Boeing simply didn’t want to “overload the crews with information that’s unnecessary.” ...

Contrast to the Boeing apologia that The New York Times published yesterday, which feels particularly disingenuous because the Ethiopian pilots had followed the Boeing recommended procedures for the misbehaving MCAS.

[ related topics: Music Cool Science Invention and Design Aviation Software Engineering Current Events Community New York Woodworking ]

comments in ascending chronological order (reverse):