Kenneth_2003 said:
nortex97 said:
evan_aggie said:
nortex97 said:
I am curious if the UA Max9's involved also had IFE (WiFi) equipment installed separately, by AAR in OKC, or other BFE (buyer furnished equipment). Not trying to goal-tend for Boeing, just curious how that could be synced with what we know about the AS plane's maintenance history and the problems on it starting the day after it returned to service from OKC...
That are going to find this out in a couple of weeks or less. They may not p publicly answer for longer.
Thx, that is believable. A lot of folks think planes are always delivered like when you get your new car, but a lot of the 'finishing touches' on the inside are often provided later by the airlines' contractors. Not always though. It's simpler often to have Boeing/Airbus install the Zodiac seats/coffee makers etc. than having someone else do it, but as anyone who has dealt with a contractor at the house knows, not all prices are for the same level of work/quality.
I'd never really thought about where 3rd party stuff was installed. I guess I would have said at Boeing, but I would have been wrong. Especially if anything or any of that work required penetration of the pressure bulkhead.
I believe the sat comm blisters are between this door location and the aft portion on the wings.
It's actually all pretty complicated/convoluted. For instance, Delta buys a lot of their planes used/second hand, partly because they do all their own maintenance in house still and can take in planes and do the refitting/maintenance on them themselves. But after the United/Continental merger, even though the planes were painted alike, they had separate unionized crews manning them, different configurations, and separate rules/lists for seniority etc. So not every 737-900 at Delta may be operated/configured the same, even if it is a similar type, and interiors are also replaced as they age to make the plane 'feel' newer (and consistent) to customers.
Lots of airlines negotiate "bare" aircraft and negotiate engines, spare engines, APU's, tooling, training, buyer furnished equipment "BFE" like toilets, galleys, seats, floor mats etc. when ordering a fleet of 20 or more planes, then haggle with suppliers about said items separately, including installation locations/contractors. Typical lead time for BFE is 18-24 months, and Boeing/Airbus are generally out of delivery slots for 3+ years (they reserve some/have cancellations etc). Installation of larger items like galleys etc. (or WiFi systems requiring a lot of wiring/gear) is often best done through the exit doors/plugs. For cargo airlines like Fedex it can be even more complex, even for new builds (they famously had their
own separate aftermarket cockpit/flight systems installed on 767's for instance, old thread, but accurate, net).