Did nobody slap it 3 times and say,"that baby ain't going anywhere!" After installation?
Old May Banker said:
Imagine being in the seat beside that.
bjorn said:
This is what happens when you change company culture focused of delivering best product to maximizing profit for shareholders
FTAG 2000 said:FTAG 2000 said:
Kind of looks like some dip**** pulled the handle on emergency door mid flight. 24 hour rule in effect
Talked to Boeing rep tonight (client). Confirmed this is an exit row window.
TBD if it blew out on its own or some drunk ass passenger pulled the red bar
It affects only 171 aircraft. Once they're inspected to make sure the door/plug is installed correctly and not defective, they will be able to fly again.Dan Scott said:
FAA orders grounding. That BA will impact the DOW Monday
Not sure that is true, per above on a.net it's a bit over 500 that have these plugs (737-900ER's and 7379max models that don't have the alternative high-density full blown exit door (pun sort of intended).Rapier108 said:It affects only 171 aircraft. Once they're inspected to make sure the door/plug is installed correctly and not defective, they will be able to fly again.Dan Scott said:
FAA orders grounding. That BA will impact the DOW Monday
The aviation geek discussion is here, though I'd note there is a high level of anti-Boeing attitude among that site (lot's of Europeans, plus some animus about labor unions/Boeing/McD etc).Quote:Quote:
N664US wrote:
Current potential scope of the door plugs is 578 frames (based on my quick counting from planespotters.net, likely +/- a couple considering I might've miscounted):
737-900ER: 377 in service with plugs, versus 127 with exits
--> operators with door plugs: AS, DL* (ex-Lion Air/Batik aircraft from ship 3931 up still have doors), LY, KE, TK, PS, UA, 7W, and 1 BBJ
737-9MAX: 201 in service with plugs, versus 18 with exits
--> operators with door plugs: AM, AS, CM* (appears to be in-progress converting doors to plugs, all counted as plugged here), TK, UA, and 2 BBJs
737-8MAX-200: none have door plugs, but 137 in service with exits
It also means the oldest aircraft with plugs is flying around likely 16 years old(N37413, a -924ER at UA), which leads to another question -- do these plugs get replaced at some point in a 737's service life?
Boeing used to have the likes of MD, Lockheed, General Dynamics, Curtiss, etc as competition to keep them in check. Now, they have all merged into one giant mega corp and, well, you see the result. Their only real competition now is Airbus, a de facto government run company that should have gone out of business decades ago. If those two ever start talking merger...look out.Its Not Rocket Surgery said:
I used to be a "if it ain't Boeing, I ain't going" person, but they are not the company they once were. There's an old joke that McDonnel Douglas bought Boeing with Boeing's money. Basically, the MD board of directors took all of the senior leadership positions at Boeing when Boeing bought them out. Which leads me to another old saying in the aviation industry, "Boeing builds aircraft, McDonnel Douglas builds profits." MD built some great aircraft over the years, but I think you can read between the lines on where corporate priorities headed after the two companies merged.
I cringed when they announced they were moving their global HQ from Chicago to Virginia. They should have gone back to Seattle and focused on engineering the best products in the world. Instead, it appears they went to DC to lobby their way out of their issues. Boeing absolutely has a huge place in my aviation loving heart, but I worry about where the company is headed (or will continue to head) in the future.
Dan Scott said:
FAA orders grounding. That BA will impact the DOW Monday
BREAKING NEWS: Federal officials have ordered the immediate grounding of some Boeing 737-9 Max jetliners after an Alaska Airlines plane suffered a blowout that left a gaping hole in the side of the fuselage. MORE: https://t.co/XQxra8SDj2 pic.twitter.com/0E0EErSJWG
— NEWSMAX (@NEWSMAX) January 6, 2024
depogs said:
More likely union thugs protecting bad workers .
Yeah, there was a lot of criticism that this was a de facto merger where the execs from the 'losing' company wound up running things. They all happened to have come up through GE/the Jack Welch school of management which…probably had some drawbacks.evan_aggie said:
Don't they normally merge where the acquiring company inserts most of their management?
inconvenient truth said:bjorn said:
This is what happens when you change company culture focused of delivering best product to maximizing profit for shareholders
No, this is what happens when you hire unqualified workers based on anything and everything other than their ability to preform the job.
Hth
nortex97 said:But it is historically true that McD had starved Douglas of new products for decades (pre-Jack Welch management). The basic DC-9 and DC-10 needed to be replaced/upgraded by the early 90's and they stuck with the same basic layout/wings etc.evan_aggie said:
Don't they normally merge where the acquiring company inserts most of their management?
Sad, really. The Max is almost universally considered a 'bridge too far' for the ancient Joe Sutter 737 design.
GAC06 said:
Supposedly the interior shows no sign of the plug door. Looks just like the rest of the windows with the same trim
Its Not Rocket Surgery said:nortex97 said:
Sad, really. The Max is almost universally considered a 'bridge too far' for the ancient Joe Sutter 737 design.
Yep, this (and product pressure from Airbus) is what led to MCAS on the 737 Max rather than a clean sheet design, and well, we all know the rest.
Ag with kids said:Air France 447 says hold my beer.Bubblez said:
Airbus is far superior than Boeing. No question about that now.
Boeing and American civil aviation has really lost their way.
Picard said:
Go woke, it broke
this is the reason Boeing sucks, tired of people on here who keep saying it's DEI or wokeIts Not Rocket Surgery said:
I used to be a "if it ain't Boeing, I ain't going" person, but they are not the company they once were. There's an old joke that McDonnel Douglas bought Boeing with Boeing's money. Basically, the MD board of directors took all of the senior leadership positions at Boeing when Boeing bought them out. Which leads me to another old saying in the aviation industry, "Boeing builds aircraft, McDonnel Douglas builds profits." MD built some great aircraft over the years, but I think you can read between the lines on where corporate priorities headed after the two companies merged.
I cringed when they announced they were moving their global HQ from Chicago to Virginia. They should have gone back to Seattle and focused on engineering the best products in the world. Instead, it appears they went to DC to lobby their way out of their issues. Boeing absolutely has a huge place in my aviation loving heart, but I worry about where the company is headed (or will continue to head) in the future.
TriAg2010 said:Its Not Rocket Surgery said:nortex97 said:
Sad, really. The Max is almost universally considered a 'bridge too far' for the ancient Joe Sutter 737 design.
Yep, this (and product pressure from Airbus) is what led to MCAS on the 737 Max rather than a clean sheet design, and well, we all know the rest.
I wouldn't say the 737 MAX was a bridge too far. There were no inherent reasons why the enhancements needed to keep up with the A320neo couldn't have been safely retrofitted to the 737. The problem was that Boeing cut corners during design and certification.
MCAS, for example, was motivated by the belief that grafting software onto the flight controls would be faster and cheaper than mechanical modifications.
bjorn said:
The plane was only 10 weeks old how is this on the maintenance people?
Aggie95 said:
You'd like to think a company workforce so bought into union mentality would have A LOT more pride in their work and craftsmanship. Instead, it's been about a decades worth of serious issues.
Bubblez said:Aggie95 said:
You'd like to think a company workforce so bought into union mentality would have A LOT more pride in their work and craftsmanship. Instead, it's been about a decades worth of serious issues.
The very European company Airbus is fully unionized and they are producing far higher quality aircraft than Boeing.
The unions aren't the problem
This isn't really accurate. The timeline to bring the Max into service was, ultimately, due to the management, the same as the NSA which was already on paper (not formally offered) to customers. Boeing didn't 'have to' do the Max, they chose to do so to preserve some market share of orders (not deliveries) within a tight 3 year period to preserve cash flows/dividends. It was ultimately a big strategic mistake. They also could have re-engined the NG before the A320NEO was launched. They were too comfortable, period.Logos Stick said:
They didn't cut corners. It was a long term versus short term decision with major financial implications for the company given the Airbus competition. They had to put a more fuel efficient engine on the 737. The newer engines were much larger. The larger size resulted in a different engine location. To compensate for the change in the aerodynamics of the plane, they created mcas. America Airlines was a big reason for Boeing revamping the existing 737 aircraft. When AA announced they were buying Airbus for the first time in their history, Boeing was forced to redesign the 737 for them and make it more fuel efficient. It was that or completely scrap the 737, a 50 year old model, and resign a new plane from the ground up.
American unions are a problem.Bubblez said:Aggie95 said:
You'd like to think a company workforce so bought into union mentality would have A LOT more pride in their work and craftsmanship. Instead, it's been about a decades worth of serious issues.
The very European company Airbus is fully unionized and they are producing far higher quality aircraft than Boeing.
The unions aren't the problem