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re: New report reveals why Boeing's 737 Max has taken so long to return to service

Posted on 11/8/19 at 3:30 pm to
Posted by Cold Drink
Member since Mar 2016
3482 posts
Posted on 11/8/19 at 3:30 pm to
Whenever Southwest feels like Boeing is acting up they just send a couple lucky analysts to France for a free vacation to “check out the Airbus” and Boeing falls in line real quick
This post was edited on 11/8/19 at 3:31 pm
Posted by dallastigers
Member since Dec 2003
5743 posts
Posted on 11/8/19 at 3:59 pm to
quote:

Most modern, computerized aircraft -- such as more recent Boeing models and Airbus SE’s jets -- use three computer systems to monitor each other, Hansman and Lemme said.

By contrast, the 737 Max had two separate computers. One operated the flight systems and another was available if the first one failed, with the roles switching on each flight. But they interacted only minimally.

Boeing decided to make the two systems monitor each other so that each computer can halt an erroneous action by the other. This change is an important modernization that brings the plane more in line with the latest safety technology but raised highly complex software and hardware issues.


Wasnt 1 of the AOA sensors connected to one flight computer and the 2nd connected to the second flight computer?

Once they expanded MCAS beyond the high speed windup turn case to include use at slower speeds and more powerful & larger trim movements they also dropped sensors related to sensing higher speed or Gs to rely only on one AOA. Besides not keeping these sensors included for the high spend maneuver to only allow smaller trim movements at high speeds which may have helped Ethiopian flight would the original design of flight computers not communicating with each other be real reason they didn’t include using and comparing both AOA sensors. Change wasn’t even reported to FAA and just wondering if someone did a cost analysis of time and money involved or lost to include 2nd sensor and potential risk involved to not delay rollout to get this done and just wait until regular maintenance type software updates.

The excuse they used about failure rate of MCAS deeming need of only one sensor never made much sense when they had a second AOA sensor sitting there each flight unused (can’t remember exact terminology used about failure and number of sensors). It really was failure rate of sensor more than main MCAS and having only 1 in play that with a failure would also cause other warnings & stick shaker on top on and even before MCAS kicked in distracting pilots seemed kind of dumb. I remember reading one AOA connected to one computer and the other to 2nd computer and how they along with respective computers switched each flight, but I didn’t realize they were walled off from each other like this. I also don’t know if this wall effected how quickly or easily they could have updated software to include using both AOAs and still launched product at same time.
This post was edited on 11/8/19 at 5:11 pm
Posted by BuckeyeFan87
Columbus
Member since Dec 2007
25240 posts
Posted on 11/8/19 at 4:04 pm to
Plain and simple: if one of these goes down again due to a design flaw, those families are going to get paid.

I’d almost be more scared to put these planes back into the air if I were Boeing than I would be as a customer.
Posted by Jester
Baton Rouge
Member since Feb 2006
34387 posts
Posted on 11/8/19 at 4:31 pm to
quote:

Boeing fricked up here and the blame lies squarely on them. There is no defense for their willful negligence to cut corners and now they're losing billions as a result.


The FAA fricked it up royally, too.
Posted by Jester
Baton Rouge
Member since Feb 2006
34387 posts
Posted on 11/8/19 at 4:34 pm to
quote:

Doesn't a lot of this have to do with how hamstrung they are to actually create a new plane from the ground up due federal regulations and red tape, such that they are forced to instead try to continually update a 50+ year old design?


No, it's because Airbus pantsed them and they tried to cheat their way through certification to catch up. They got through, but had built a dangerously inferior product.
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