AviationObserver
Pre-Flight
- Joined
- Jan 5, 2024
- Messages
- 89
- Display Name
Display name:
AviationObserver
Here's Emergency Airworthiness Directive 24-02-51:
I think that is due to the emergency AD the FAA just issued. It essentially grounds ALL such aircraft until inspection is complete. Issued yesterday.AS just grounded all their Max 900s again. I’m guessing maybe they found something on one of their inspections?
Alaska Airlines’ decision not to ground Boeing jet despite warning signs comes under scrutiny
More than 140 Boeing planes are grounded while the airlines await instructions on how to inspect them.www.alaskasnewssource.com
I think that is due to the emergency AD the FAA just issued. It essentially grounds ALL such aircraft until inspection is complete. Issued yesterday.
Might be able to pick up some BA Stock at a discount come Tuesday....
AA and UA had already decided to ground before the FAA got around to it.I think that is due to the emergency AD the FAA just issued. It essentially grounds ALL such aircraft until inspection is complete. Issued yesterday.
Might be able to pick up some BA Stock at a discount come Tuesday....
not AA, they don't have any max 900's theirs are all max 800'sAA and UA had already decided to ground before the FAA got around to it.
https://wapo.st/48jWyaqI’m sure some enterprising urban outdoorsman in Portland has got a new roof for his tent.
I think that is due to the emergency AD the FAA just issued. It essentially grounds ALL such aircraft until inspection is complete. Issued yesterday.
In other words, AS didn't ground them, the FAA did.
Might be able to pick up some BA Stock at a discount come Tuesday....
I heard they added a "convertible" featureI fly 737 NGs and Maxes. It's complicated. I honestly like flying the Max for the same reason it's nice to drive a brand new car.
That is incredible. That center 4 bolt connection is gone... looks to be sheared... and where are the other bolts? Wow.FWIW, here's a photo of a door being inspected at United Airlines, with an inset showing the same area where the failed door was.
View attachment 124126
It's tough for Boeing to issue a service bulletin until they know what happened. I mean knowing what caused the plug to disassemble from the fuselage.
Previous flights had warning lights come on.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/01/08/...e_code=1.ME0.SI2W.KrCw87kHbSSD&smid=url-share
There are no MAX 900s or MAX 800s.not AA, they don't have any max 900's theirs are all max 800's
That's normal. There are a lot of things that can remove an airplane from ETOPS operations, repeating write-ups included.I think they are making more of this than what it is. I'm guessing this was an ETOPS 737 that could do long overwater flights. Due to a recurring warning, with the pressurization system, they took it off ETOPS temporarily.
If the plug was leaking enough air to generate the pressurization controller fail light it would have had to have been leaking a large volume of air which would have been heard by the passengers and flight attendants in the area. The light comes on when one pressurization controller fails and the system has switch to the alternate controller--there are two for redundancy.While the door could have had something to do with pressurization, it probably isn't likely.
What do you make of the latest report about loose bolts found on 5 united AC? If accurate, surprised they aren't safety wired and wonder why -900ng are not included in the inspections?There are no MAX 900s or MAX 800s.
The NG series is the 737-600. 737-700, 737-800, and 737-900.
The MAX series is the 737-7, 737-8, 737-9, and 737-10.
That's normal. There are a lot of things that can remove an airplane from ETOPS operations, repeating write-ups included.
If the plug was leaking enough air to generate the pressurization controller fail light it would have had to have been leaking a large volume of air which would have been heard by the passengers and flight attendants in the area. The light comes on when one pressurization controller fails and the system has switch to the alternate controller--there are two for redundancy.
There must be something different in the -900 system or they would have been included.What do you make of the latest report about loose bolts found on 5 united AC? If accurate, surprised they aren't safety wired and wonder why -900ng are not included in the inspections?
The plug looks to be intact.
View attachment 124162
That's the wrong side....The plug looks to be intact.
View attachment 124162
The plug looks to be intact.
I don't think the NTSB wants to show the back side of what failed, I am sure Boeing would like that front photo to be the only one around. I want to see a picture of the phone from the plane that fell 16,000 feet they found and still works.That's the wrong side....
Not erased - overwritten. Airplane sat long enough on the ground with the CVR running to overwrite the pertinent period.CVR was erased? I heard the excuse the CB wasn't pulled.
United finds loose bolts on plug doors during 737 Max 9 inspections
United Airlines has found loose bolts and other parts on 737 Max 9 plug doors as it inspects its fleet of Boeing jets following the Friday rapid depressurization aboard an Alaska Airlines jet of the same make, according to three people familiar with the findings.theaircurrent.com
supposed photo of loose bolts on the UA inspection.
Hard to tell from the different angles, but they might be from opposite corners.These two pictures don't look like the component is of similar design.