What happened to Mr Forkner?
Lack of training?Pro-tip: don’t fly third-world airlines.
Lack of training?
Neither accident crew followed the existing procedures for a runaway stabilizer. Both accident crews took numerous actions which worsened their situation and eventually led to loss of control.It does mention that...
This is not true. The airplane does not meet certification requirements without MCAS due to the stick forces at very high AoA. Even with a separate type rating, it needed MCAS.The crux of the problem is that Boeing placed band-aid over band-aid to make it fly like a 737-200. It would have been a MUCH better airplane, without all the workarounds..........and should have required a new type rating.
This is not true. The airplane does not meet certification requirements without MCAS due to the stick forces at very high AoA. Even with a separate type rating, it needed MCAS.
Does it say where that 10 sec time came from?It mentions that Boeing's analysis showed that if actions were not taken within 10 seconds the plane would be unrecoverable.
No, it's not. It is to meet certification requirements regarding increasing pitch control forces as AoA increases. Without MCAS, the larger engine nacelles, mounted farther forward, produce enough nose-up moment from lift, that it masks the nature increase in stick forces at very high AoAs.It most certainly is true. MCAS is there to simulate a 737-200
No, it's not. It is to meet certification requirements ...........
Boeing's customers did not want to wait for, nor pay for, a clean sheet design. They would have bought Airbus instead. Boeing can't build and sell an airplane that their customers don't want.The 737-MAX would/should have never been designed the way it was.....with the MCAS band-aids. It would have/should have been a clean sheet. Nope.....MCAS was quite definitely a band-aid.
Take a guess at the cost difference for a total design/development/cert program between a clean-sheet design and a mod to an existing airplane. *Then* take a guess at the difference in operating costs between a jet with a (new) type rating and no (new) type rating required. Same mission both airplanes. Add the two differences and see if you can guess how many customers wanted a clean sheet design. Show your work.The 737-MAX would/should have never been designed the way it was.....with the MCAS band-aids. It would have/should have been a clean sheet. Nope.....MCAS was quite definitely a band-aid.
It WOULD have been designed and certified correctly had it been designed by the engineers in Seattle rather than the paper pushers in Chicago.
The 737-MAX would/should have never been designed the way it was.....with the MCAS band-aids. It would have/should have been a clean sheet. Nope.....MCAS was quite definitely a band-aid.
Take a guess at the cost difference for a total design/development/cert program between a clean-sheet design and a mod to an existing airplane. *Then* take a guess at the difference in operating costs between a jet with a (new) type rating and no (new) type rating required. Same mission both airplanes. Add the two differences and see if you can guess how many customers wanted a clean sheet design. Show your work.
Nauga,
who doesn't work for free
Boeing's customers did not want to wait for, nor pay for, a clean sheet design. They would have bought Airbus instead.............
Looks to be about an hour long. Anything new in it? Summary?Frontline also did a series on the Max. It was very interesting.
Airbus is designed by engineers.............not accountants. The 800MAX will NEVER be a good airplane.
Let's see: Boeing allowed MCAS to exceed the original scope of "airplane modelling", they sold planes with a single AoA sensor, with woefully inadequate warning should that part fail, charged thirty grand if you wanted a backup, and allowed MCAS to operate based on the data from a single point of failure.I wonder who funded that documentary? Seemed like nothing but a hit job on Boeing while ignoring every other contributing factor.
Or the fact that Airbus and its former entities are extensively subsidized by multiple governments in the development of new aircraft. Always helps when the accountants are public employees than private employees. Remove those subsidies and it is doubtful there would be many new Airbus airplane or helicopter designs.
Let's see: Boeing allowed MCAS to exceed the original scope of "airplane modelling", they sold planes with a single AoA sensor, with woefully inadequate warning should that part fail, charged thirty grand if you wanted a backup, and allowed MCAS to operate based on the data from a single point of failure.
Yeah, both of the crashes were potentially avoidable, with proper training and proper reactions. Then again, Sully could have made it back to a runway.
I have no issue hammering "third world" airlines, but the cards were stacked against them.
Keeping your own money is not a subsidy in my world.And boeing isn’t heavily subsidized through tax breaks?
Boeing would be out of business without preferential gubmint treatment.
Keeping your own money is not a subsidy in my world.
This will get me banned, but the highest earners and corporations pay the vast majority of income taxes. Vast. Look it up. The press will point out a few that get free rides (like hammering on Elon Musk) without knowing the details.Preferential treatment is.
I wish I could be a billionaire or huge corporation when I grow up so I don’t have to pay taxes.
Actually the case against the US and Boeing wasn’t on the tax side but on the US paying exorbitant costs for military equipment from Boeing which was labeled as “subsidies” by the EU. However, from a money standpoint what the US paid for military equipment pales in comparison to what EU companies receive in annual government subsidies.And boeing isn’t heavily subsidized through tax breaks? Boeing would be out of business without preferential gubmint treatment.
You speak emotionally not logically.Airbus is designed by engineers.............not accountants. The 800MAX will NEVER be a good airplane.
Let's see: Boeing allowed MCAS to exceed the original scope of "airplane modelling", they sold planes with a single AoA sensor, with woefully inadequate warning should that part fail, charged thirty grand if you wanted a backup, and allowed MCAS to operate based on the data from a single point of failure.
Yeah, both of the crashes were potentially avoidable, with proper training and proper reactions. Then again, Sully could have made it back to a runway.
I have no issue hammering "third world" airlines, but the cards were stacked against them.
Let's see: Boeing allowed MCAS to exceed the original scope of "airplane modelling", they sold planes with a single AoA sensor, with woefully inadequate warning should that part fail, charged thirty grand if you wanted a backup, and allowed MCAS to operate based on the data from a single point of failure.