I wonder if anyone has found the door yet? They were (mostly) over land when everything went pear shaped.
I’m sure some enterprising urban outdoorsman in Portland has got a new roof for his tent.
I wonder if anyone has found the door yet? They were (mostly) over land when everything went pear shaped.
The Max 9 is different from the -900, but they both have the same issue I would suspect as they both have the "optional" rear door.Anyone know if the fuselage on the Max9 is the same as the -900? I'm scheduled outbound -900 and return Max9 next week. Both seat maps are the same. They swapped the -900 in for the Max9 on the outbound.
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What’s different?Realize the engines are different. Wondering about the fuselage. I "thought" they were different but the seating is identical.
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No clue. That's why I'm asking.What’s different?
OK, here's the story on the "door" apparently. The airframe is designed with another set of exits between the over-wing and rearmost door. If you run your 737-900 in all economy configurations, you need that door to meet the evacuation requirements. If you run in a multi-class arrangement, you've reduced the passenger count to a point where it is not needed and it is replaced with a non-operable plug. This means you can maintain the seatpitch through that area where the door would have been.
Raffle for time to first lawsuit, anyone?
Huh? Not sure your conclusion at this time, makes sense. Many engineering failures are a result of cycle times.
The New York Times reports 145 flights. Link to NYT article.I wonder how many pressurization/depressurization cycles this airplane had undergone prior to the accident flight.
This was a dummy plug that should have been bolted in place, not a latching door.Someone has to have placed the latching device in the wrong position for this aircraft to fail at this early a time. It has to be intentional, or stupidity.
This was a dummy plug that should have been bolted in place, not a latching door.
I like 8:15 am could be a long line.Is 8am monday morning taken?
South Carolina product?
Anyone else a tad concerned about the frantic Pilot's voice on the radio with ATC?...not sure "WE'RE ABOUT TO GO DOWN" might have been the best choice of words...
I heard "we would like to go down" IOW requesting a lower altitude. The frantic sound is from talking into an oxygen mask. It makes communication difficult enough just in the simulator.Anyone else a tad concerned about the frantic Pilot's voice on the radio with ATC?...not sure "WE'RE ABOUT TO GO DOWN" might have been the best choice of words...
South Carolina product?
East Coast or west coast?Is 8am monday morning taken?
Lots of luck was involved here… no doubt about it!Lucky the door didn’t impact any of the empennage control surfaces on it’s departure. Also lucky the door didn’t harm anyone on the ground.
Explosive decompression is not defined by the well being of the passengers.Clickbait. If “everyone is alright” it wasn’t an explosive decompression.
I think the “ Stirring the Pot” emoji is a clue to his intention.Explosive decompression is not defined by the well being of the passengers.
That said, at the altitude this reportedly happened (16,000 feet), I doubt they were at a psid that would have been truly explosive.
The correct phraseology is “we are descending, get everyone out of our way…”I heard "we would like to go down" IOW requesting a lower altitude. The frantic sound is from talking into an oxygen mask. It makes communication difficult enough just in the simulator.
Those seat cushions are attached to the frame with Velcro.Yet was strong enough to completely remove the upper seat back cushion from the seat, as well as the shirt from a nearby child.
I would hope that the Boeing employee(s) who assembled this door in the fuselage will be identified and fired.
Work assignments and time reports will point the way, and there should be an actual signature/initials on an assembly completion form.
If it is an A&P, the FAA should revoke the certificate.
We do not need this person working on any class of aircraft.
It may be that the original fitting was correctly done, and a crew installing the interior unlatched the door while doing their work, but that should also be possible to determine, and blame properly documented. Aircraft assembly at the factory is well documented, and the NTSB/Boeing inspections should determine whether the latches were partially secure, with the interior in place, or they were never properly installed.
This specific Boeing was delivered to Alaska early in November, so two months of flights before failure.
It has been posted elsewhere that it's a fuselage plug installed at the factory. This is almost surely 100% on Boeing.
The fuselage was built by Spirit AeroSystems, not Boeing.Fairly new plane too.. right? October or November? Gotta say McDonnell, I mean Boeing, ain't inspiring confidence!
Having a decompression and using the mask during an event does add some adrenaline to the system. I noticed it was a bit of excitement on her part, but will give it a pass. As others have pointed out, her choice of words were different than what you heard.Anyone else a tad concerned about the frantic Pilot's voice on the radio with ATC?...not sure "WE'RE ABOUT TO GO DOWN" might have been the best choice of words...
every definition of explosive decompression I can find includes lung damage.Explosive decompression is not defined by the well being of the passengers.
That said, at the altitude this reportedly happened (16,000 feet), I doubt they were at a psid that would have been truly explosive.