AviationObserver
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AviationObserver
I re-read your previous posts and what I found were not experiences, but opinions ("...eclipsed the MCAS issue in my opinion"). Some of us make the distinction.I merely shared my personal experiences on the topic. Whether you believe those experiences or not is totally on you.
As you wish, but statements such as that are sometimes evasions made by those who don't actually know what they are talking about. However, such a characterization seems quite at odds with what I have read in many of your posts to this forum--you seem to posses an impressive wealth of technical knowledge and your replies have been helpful to many (which is what I had hoped for).And will I spend my time and effort to recreate “reports/documents/findings” given to me by others to convince you?
I may already have researched the matter(s). I may also have direct experience with both Boeing and Airbus aircraft, including their design philosophies, technical architectures, operating characteristics, and blah blah blah. What I do not have is behind-the-scenes insider knowledge of their respective corporate clockworks, the ways in which their corporate culture and management ethos drive safety-related decisions that have a real-world impact on me and people I care about, who operate and travel on aircraft that Airbus and Boeing produce. I also do not have any insider knowledge of the ways and manner in which news media have been "controlled" with respect to their reporting of issues involving Airbus and its aircraft. These two issues seem to underlie comments you made in post #34, which is why I asked for some fact-based enlightenment.However, I did give you the basic premise of my point along with several examples to start your research into the matter, if it is important to you. But, yes, based on my years of researching aviation topics you will need to look beyond the first 2 pages on Google to get your "relevant" answers.
We can all be thankful for that.Nor am I going to rehash the MCAS here.
I would think pilots on an aviation forum might know the difference between a failure by an airframe builder and an incident precipitated by a possibly defective tire or maintenance issue.Tire falls off United flight departing SFO, crushing several vehicles in parking lot, company says
A tire fell off a United Airlines flight taking off from SFO to Osaka, Japan Thursday morning, officials confirmed. SKY7 was over a parking lot nearby, where it appears the tire hit and damaged cars.abc7news.com
Your assumption of causation is likely accurate, but given recent events this incident still reflects poorly on Boeing, even if unjustified.I would think pilots on an aviation forum might know the difference between a failure by an airframe builder and an incident precipitated by a possibly defective tire or maintenance issue.
Your assumption of causation is likely accurate, but given recent events this incident still reflects poorly on Boeing, even if unjustified.
It may be unjustified; we don't know. I linked the article about it thinking it was related to the subject of this thread and some readers may be interested in seeing it. I did not foresee a subset of readers who would prefer to not see it.If its unjustified, why give it attention?
If its unjustified, why give it attention?
two totally diffent systems, the airbus has no direct connection between sidesticks. it is completely computer driven. the sticks move independent of each other. if one stick is move aft and the other stick is moved forward they cancel each outer out. if they are moved in the same direction they add the input. both sticks moving at the same time will generate a "dual input" warning. pushing the red button will lock the other stick out.Boeing (and their 767 control scheme) say hi.
On the 767 (and probably others as well), if the two pilots apply opposite pitch commands beyond a certain force, a pin will shear, allowing them to move independently. At that point, Captain's pitch input drives the LH side horizontal stabilizer, and the FO's drive the R/H side. No annunciation is provided in the cockpit when that happens. See Egypt Air 990.
Prove it IS unjustified. Right now, we don't know.
Could it be just a maint issue? Yes.
Could MCAS have been just a human error? Yes, but we know it was Boeing being stupider than anybody gave them credit for. I don't think even the Boeing haters envisioned Boeing being that stupid.
Could the emergency plug have been some non-Boeing issue? Yes, but we now know that Boeing's QA is (and presumably has been) a bit lacking.
Back to the original question, though. Could this be a simple non-Boeing maint issue? Yes.
But is it? I, for one, will wait until the investigation comes back before confidently saying they're not at fault.
There are plenty of times that people/companies get bad reps for things beyond their control. That is not the case here. The question regarding Boeing of "We know about <MCAS, the door, a couple of other things>, what DON'T we know about?" is actually quite valid, and fairly earned.
Back to the original question, though. Could this be a simple non-Boeing maint issue? Yes.
But is it? I, for one, will wait until the investigation comes back before confidently saying they're not at fault.
Whoa. That’s a mighty bold statement. /s
I'll use common sense and state Boeing has absolutely no connection to or responsibility for a 777-200 that was placed in service in December 2001 losing a tire and wheel assembly.
Yeah, I'm really on the edge.Whoa. That’s a mighty bold statement. /s
I'll use common sense and state Boeing has absolutely no connection to or responsibility for a 777-200 that was placed in service in December 2001 losing a tire and wheel assembly.
Guilty until proven innocent?
FYI: doubtful there are any original rotatable components on a 23 year old transport aircraft and especially the wheels and tires. But from my viewpoint and experience I would be 100% confident Boeing has zero liability with this issue or any other similar issue. And yes, the wheels, tires, and brakes are individually tracked and are serviced on their own schedule and usually by an in-house "wheel and brake shop." And in some cases an operator may also lease tires and/or wheels which would be serviced by an outside 3rd party.How old were the actual components in play here?
FYI: doubtful there are any original rotatable components on a 23 year old transport aircraft and especially the wheels and tires. But from my viewpoint and experience I would be 100% confident Boeing has zero liability with this issue or any other similar issue. And yes, the wheels, tires, and brakes are individually tracked and are serviced on their own schedule and usually by an in-house "wheel and brake shop." And in some cases an operator may also lease tires and/or wheels which would be serviced by an outside 3rd party.
Or it could have been a mechanical failure vs a mechanic failure as well.Somehow the tech who installed the wheel, tire, bearing, whatever messed up. Absolutely.
Except in this case it would have been a Goodrich or Honeywell defect and not a Boeing defect.However, there is still that 0.000000000001 chance that somehow this is a new wheel that was defective from factory.
Except in this case it would have been a Goodrich or Honeywell defect and not a Boeing defect.
The lawyer on the other post (the lawsuit one ) might disagree with you on that one.But from my viewpoint and experience I would be 100% confident Boeing has zero liability with this issue or any other similar issue.
Wouldn't doubt it. But its been my experience that most plaintiff's attorneys disagree with most things to include the truth when appropriate to the cause.The lawyer on the other post (the lawsuit one ) might disagree with you on that one.
Wouldn't doubt it. But its been my experience that most plaintiff's attorneys disagree with most things to include the truth when appropriate to the cause.
Quite true. But then again, I never worked for any aviation plaintiffs. Based on what I was usually requested to provide, I always found it easier to substantiate the existing facts of the defendant’s side, then trying to establish the unknown facts of the opposing counsel's choice.It’s been my experience respective of side, counsel will find a way to support or disagree with whatever you’re willing to pay them to support or disagree with.
Curious that this is being reported mostly on UK news sites...from what I can tell, there's much less coverage in the U.S. Not sure what (if anything) to make of that...
This might be from the same news source--here is a quote I find literally incredible:NTSB's Homendy testified in front of Senate Commerce Committee recently...Boeing is being uncooperative...
View attachment 126366
Thank you, just put a hold on it on Libby.Seems pretty clear they're going to go with the "lost records are better than negligent work" strategy. They'll claim all the work that should have been done was done, and that their only sin was some paperwork.
If you haven't already read it...
View attachment 126636
FYI: and its not just the C-suite that has a financial stake. You'll find most union contracts have production bonuses as well, so even the people working on the hangar floor have "incentive" not to document f'ups.But another reason is financial, specifically accounting.