• happybadger [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    7 months ago

    Boeing in general has lost all credibility with me. Emirates made their plane order conditional on having their engineers go to the production line and babysit the Boeing engineers. I don’t trust a complex machine made like toddlers drawing hand turkeys with the help of an adult. I wouldn’t fly on one of their planes unless it was accidentally booked or they undergo nationalisation/complete restructuring.

  • casmael@lemm.ee
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    7 months ago

    Ahh yes the 737: ‘Michael Caine edition’ (“you were only supposed to blow the ________________”)

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    7 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Now the executive director of airline watchdog group Foundation for Aviation Safety, he served as a squadron commanding officer among other leadership roles during a 30-year Naval career, followed by 10 years at Boeing – including three as a senior manager in production support at Renton itself, working on the 737 Max project before its launch.

    Weeks after the Alaska incident, Boeing CEO David Calhoun told investors on a quarterly call: “We will cooperate fully and transparently with the FAA at every turn… This increased scrutiny, whether it comes from us or a regulator or from third parties will make us better.”

    It added: “We have been hard at work strengthening our safety culture and rebuilding trust with our customers, regulators, and the flying public… We have made fundamental changes to our company… and continue to look for ways to improve.”

    Damning its “broken safety culture,” DeFazio said after the 2020 investigation that “Boeing – under pressure to compete with Airbus and deliver profits for Wall Street – escaped scrutiny from the FAA, withheld critical information from pilots, and ultimately put planes into service that killed 346 innocent people.”

    Over the summer of 2018, he sent several messages up the chain at Boeing, having noticed what he now says was an “unstable production line.” In emails which he has since shared publicly, Pierson warned of his concerns that the intense pressure to get planes out of the factory was leading exhausted workers to cut corners.

    It is also reviewing employee training and qualifications, increasing its onsite presence at Max manufacturing facilities, and looking at “how Boeing transfers unfinished work from suppliers to its production lines,” a spokesperson told CNN.


    The original article contains 3,953 words, the summary contains 279 words. Saved 93%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!