Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Transportation Businesses

Boeing Wanted To Wait Three Years To Fix Safety Alert on 737 Max (latimes.com) 188

An anonymous reader quotes the Associated Press: Boeing Co. planned to wait three years to fix a non-working safety alert on its 737 Max aircraft and sped up the process only after the first of two deadly crashes involving the planes. The company acknowledged that it originally planned to fix a cockpit warning light in 2020 after two key U.S. lawmakers disclosed the company's timetable Friday...

The feature, called an angle of attack or AoA alert, warns pilots when sensors measuring the up-or-down pitch of the plane's nose relative to oncoming air might be wrong. The sensors malfunctioned during a Lion Air flight in Indonesia in October and an Ethiopian Airlines flight from Addis Ababa in March, causing anti-stall software to push the planes' noses down. Pilots were unable to regain control, and both planes crashed, killing everyone aboard -- 346 people in all. It is not clear whether either crash could have been prevented if the cockpit alert had been working... Boeing and the head of the FAA both say the alert is not critical for safety. Boeing says all its planes, including the Max, give pilots all the flight information -- including speed, altitude and engine performance -- that they need to fly safely.

The pilots' union at American Airlines expressed unhappiness about the matter, however, and said Boeing's assurance about the cockpit alert was a factor in the union standing behind Boeing after the first Max crash, in October. Jason Goldberg, an American Airlines pilot and union spokesman, said Boeing told pilots that the alert could pinpoint a faulty sensor even on the ground, before takeoff. "That is one of the things that made us confident initially to make the statement that we were happy to continue to fly the aircraft," he said. "It turned out later that that wasn't true."

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Boeing Wanted To Wait Three Years To Fix Safety Alert on 737 Max

Comments Filter:
  • by fustakrakich ( 1673220 ) on Sunday June 09, 2019 @10:50PM (#58737602) Journal

    They killed 346 people. When will charges be brought?

    • by Joe_Dragon ( 2206452 ) on Sunday June 09, 2019 @10:55PM (#58737614)

      make them wait 3 years in jail pretrial with no bail

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Sunday June 09, 2019 @11:16PM (#58737660) Journal

      If corporations are people, then Boeing should get the death penalty.

      • by Type44Q ( 1233630 ) on Monday June 10, 2019 @06:42AM (#58738382)
        Corporations are machines... it's the sociopaths at the controls who need to be dealt with... but even if they're not, anyone who sets loose a destructive, autonomous 'machine' (be it comprised of metal parts or organic) - even if all it does is tell lies (i.e. as its marketing people have been instructed), they need to be dealt with.

        People need to be directly responsible for the 'systems' they set loose upon us, creations, be it a pizza delivery robot or a massive, faceless company.

        • The word 'creations' was supposed to get edited-out; I'll have to have a word with my secretary...
      • by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Monday June 10, 2019 @10:45AM (#58739408)

        If corporations are people, then Boeing should get the death penalty.

        Really? Please find me a single example of a company that makes transportation related products (cars, planes, trains, boats, roads, bridges, rails, etc) that does not have a body count due to their products.

        Maybe you shouldn't be so quick to execute people and/or companies without thinking through what you are doing. Consequences are one thing but you've pretty much lost the plot if you think terminating Boeing as an organization will solve any real world problems relating to this fiasco. Yes it seems to have been some stupid decisions, probably with a profit motive kicker. If we killed companies every time that happened we would have no cars, no trains, no aircraft and no boats.

        • If corporations are people, then Boeing should get the death penalty.

          Really? Please find me a single example of a company that makes transportation related products (cars, planes, trains, boats, roads, bridges, rails, etc) that does not have a body count due to their products.

          Maybe if we "killed" a few of those companies in the past, Boeing's management would have taken the hint and fixed this problem instead of pushing it out.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Sunday June 09, 2019 @11:23PM (#58737682)

      They are to big to be punished. Even if they find intent (so far it just looks like criminally negligent homicide), i.e. some people knew this would cause crashes, then some low-level engineer will be sent to jail and that was it.

      • by PolygamousRanchKid ( 1290638 ) on Monday June 10, 2019 @06:14AM (#58738328)

        They are to big to be punished.

        More like too strategic to be punished.

        Boeing is a corporate jewel for the US. And the US military is very close to Boeing.

        And if folks are not buying Boeing, they will be buying Airbus . . . which is EU . . . can't have that.

      • by Type44Q ( 1233630 ) on Monday June 10, 2019 @06:47AM (#58738398)

        some low-level engineer will be sent to jail and that was it.

        Him?? He's already in jail; he thought 'whistleblower protection' was a thing and now they've got him for child porn.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Monday June 10, 2019 @06:55AM (#58738420) Homepage Journal

        Japan has corporate responsibility laws to handle this. The company can be ordered to shut down for a period of time, doing no more than the minimum amount of maintenance necessary to keep facilities from falling into disrepair.

        There was some financial company that was ordered to shut down for a month last year. All the staff had to be paid during that time.

        Alternatively a massive fine works. % of global turnover scales nicely.

        • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 ) on Monday June 10, 2019 @07:55AM (#58738610)

          Japan has corporate responsibility laws to handle this. The company can be ordered to shut down for a period of time, doing no more than the minimum amount of maintenance necessary to keep facilities from falling into disrepair.

          There was some financial company that was ordered to shut down for a month last year. All the staff had to be paid during that time.

          Alternatively a massive fine works. % of global turnover scales nicely.

          Even if the US had corporate responsibility laws, it would most definitely carve out exceptions for Boeing and other similar companies for "national security" reasons, since Boeing is a huge defense contractor. They are too embedded to ever receive any meaningful consequences.

          • Even if the US had corporate responsibility laws, it would most definitely carve out exceptions for Boeing and other similar companies for "national security" reasons, since Boeing is a huge defense contractor. They are too embedded to ever receive any meaningful consequences.

            Yeah, so break them up.

            The Sherman Anti-Trust Act was passed in 1890. It's tailor made to deal with situations like this. Boeing civilian needs to be ripped out of Boeing military. I'd go so far as to say Boeing military aircraft should be independent of Boeing all other military contracting. It should be at least three companies, and if the non-aircraft military contracting side is still "too big to punish", break it in half too. Any company too big to be effectively punished is too big to exist, peri

    • by Richard_at_work ( 517087 ) on Monday June 10, 2019 @02:41AM (#58737992)

      It's amazing that people are going bat shit over the MAX issues when Boeing has done this before...

      Americans Airlines Flight 585. USair Flight 427. Copa Airlines Flight 291. China Southern Fkight 3943. SilkAir Flight 185.

      Hundreds dead, and for more than a decade Boeing refused to accept they had an uncommanded rudder deflection problem due to an issue with the PCU. Finally they were forced to after the FAA and NTSB amassed enough independent evidence.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        The press release was wrong. It was sensor(singular) not plural. It tuns out this sensor is used on other planes and is reliable - very. However the wiring and interface may be defective - covered up for now - we don't know.
        All this is just wrong on multiple levels - be very glad I am not on the jury. Even the terrorists are unhappy - Boeings management has made them redundant by designing a plane that takes more dives than an Italian soccer player.

      • It's amazing that people are going bat shit over the MAX issues when Boeing has done this before...

        Americans Airlines Flight 585. USair Flight 427. Copa Airlines Flight 291. China Southern Fkight 3943. SilkAir Flight 185.

        Hundreds dead, and for more than a decade Boeing refused to accept they had an uncommanded rudder deflection problem due to an issue with the PCU. Finally they were forced to after the FAA and NTSB amassed enough independent evidence.

        Let's shut down all of the companies that have caused deaths due to negligence!

        https://www.nytimes.com/1974/1... [nytimes.com]
        https://www.theglobeandmail.co... [theglobeandmail.com]
        https://www.straitstimes.com/a... [straitstimes.com]

        Wait, why is everyone walking everywhere now?

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        Well, if I wanted to bring up everything about them, my post would have been longer than Tolstoy's book.

        Our problem is that we let so-called "important" people get away with murder. We let corruption permeate the entire system, perhaps out of our own greed for some of that bacon the politicians all promise us. No corporate charter should protect the decision makers from the consequences. Our reaction to these things is weak and ineffective, and so it will happen again and again.

    • by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Monday June 10, 2019 @02:47AM (#58738004)

      They killed 346 people. When will charges be brought?

      I agree! I mean remember in 2008 when we threw all those banking CEOs in jail for causing th...oh wait. Nevermind.

      I almost forgot. We don't actually punish corporations for bad behavior anymore.

    • No kidding, these people are evil and greedy

    • They killed 346 people. When will charges be brought?

      I can't speak for other countries, but in the USA, likely never. Did any Americans die in the crashes? If not, then that makes it even less likely. Those weren't American companies flying the planes either. Plus, technically speaking, Boeing was aware of the problem and tried to fix it. The fact that the fix may have led to the crashes is interesting, but unless there is hard proof that Boeing knew crashes were likely, they aren't technically at fault for trying to fix something and finding out late

      • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 ) on Monday June 10, 2019 @07:49AM (#58738588)

        They killed 346 people. When will charges be brought?

        Plus, technically speaking, Boeing was aware of the problem and tried to fix it. The fact that the fix may have led to the crashes is interesting, but unless there is hard proof that Boeing knew crashes were likely, they aren't technically at fault for trying to fix something and finding out later the fix was bad.

        Except they knew their fix was bad, and their response was "eh, we'll fix it later". It wasn't until a second plane fell out of the sky and their planes started getting grounded that Boeing decided to put a rush on the fix.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by ooshna ( 1654125 )

      The people who first certified it didn't do anything. Its the higher ups at Boeing who penny pinched only having a single sensor and whoever headed the software side of things that didn't think telling the pilots about changes to the code.

    • They killed 346 people. When will charges be brought?

      Sigh... It's amazing how ready people are to condemn others without thinking through the consequences. Let's assume for argument that this was an honest error by an engineering team and there is no paper trail of fraud or other serious malfeasance. Do you REALLY want to set the precedent of throwing engineers in jail for failures in their product designs? Seriously? Because you're going to have an extremely hard time convincing people to be engineers if that is the case. I'm not going to sign off on an

      • They decided to use a single sensor to save money. That is not an honest error. It was gamble at the roulette table. At the very best it's 346 counts of negligent homicide. The engineer doesn't have to go to jail, unless he committed fraud and lied about system reliability to the poor saps upstairs. Find the guy who signed it off, or put pressure on the engineer. That probably happened up in the front office.

        It is absolutely disgraceful that there will be no punishment for this.

        • No, cluestick, when designs are getting oversight by the government, it is a failing of oversight when this happens.

          Blaming the engineers is a false accusation, and you should go to prison for making it.

          The simple answer is to restore the level of oversight that existed for decades, and when somebody starts blathering about "deregulation," punch them in the nose.

    • Bringing charges against people may feel like justice, but it goes counter to a good safety culture. A good safety culture in a company requires open communication, and a frank discussion of deficiencies and problems so they can be identified and corrected. Creating a culture of recrimination with immediate reprisal for errors only leads to the situation in the Russian segment of the International Space Station where a contractor tried to cover a mistaken drill hole rather than reporting the incident.

      Charg

  • by Anonymous Coward

    c6gunner said the plane was perfect and only pilot error could bring one down, so naturally they thought there was no rush for extra safety features.

  • by JoeyRox ( 2711699 ) on Sunday June 09, 2019 @10:54PM (#58737612)
    The fact they failed to recognized the significance of the AoA safety alert system by originally scheduling its fix with a three-year schedule tells me management is making decisions based on sales, marketing, P&L, and everything else but sound engineering expertise and data.
    • Can we talk about the fact that in one case the AoA sensor was repaired and re-certified according to Boeing's documentation?

      Either there was some fraud in the maintenance, or Boeing's procedure to re-certify needs to be investigated.

  • at ALL the airlines... Im sure this is not a fluke.
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Airbus screwed up massively with the A380 that was extremely expensive to develop and now almost nobody wants it. Too large. They did not, so far, screw up on safety, and now they probably will not for a long, long time.

      • You mean much like the 747, which nobody wants and is going out of production. See, four engine jumbos aren't the most efficient way to move passengers any more.

      • The A380 has forced Airbus to develop a lot of engineering solutions that came in handy for the A350, so that was not completely in vain.

        • by gweihir ( 88907 )

          The A380 has forced Airbus to develop a lot of engineering solutions that came in handy for the A350, so that was not completely in vain.

          No argument.

  • by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Sunday June 09, 2019 @11:14PM (#58737654) Journal

    The CEO should resign. It's a pattern of delay and denial, not just one incident.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      You are far to generous. The CEO is paid to direct the company. With a pattern of gross safety violations as bad as this one, he is responsible for a mass-killing. That should put him at the very least behind bars for the rest of his life. That is what "responsibility" means. If he cannot do the job, then he should not have taken it.

    • The CEO should resign but does not recognise the situation as a reason to do so.
      This confirms the bias inside Boeing.
      The company is rotten to the core.
      • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

        The problem is not Boeing. The problem is that we have a specific certification system designed to find critical flaws. And now, it's fairly clear that the system missed one.

        The system needs to be fixed. Boeing is a part of the system. So is FAA and other aviation authority bodies.

        • The certification system in use currently misses loads of things - have people already forgotten the battery fires on the 787 and that aircrafts subsequent grounding at the start of this decade?

          Every aircraft has Air Worthiness Directives issued, every single one. The certification system cannot catch everything, such a system would result in a process that was so long and so expensive that commercial airlines wouldn't be viable.

          • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

            Battery fires didn't bring a single plane down in a catastrophic way. The main reason they got blown as far out of proportion as they did was because civil aviation is remarkably safe.

    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      To be fair, Muilenburg has no way of keeping that kind of watch over the Boeing commercial division. Back in the days when Boeing corporate offices were located in Seattle, the executives could keep a close eye on operations. And pull the plug pretty quickly when some engineering or manufacturing managers proved to be fuck-ups. But when they moved to Chicago, the locals adopted that old Chinese saying: "The emperor is far away and the mountains are high."

      Perhaps a better solution would be to split Boeing i

      • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

        To be fair, Muilenburg has no way of keeping that kind of watch over the Boeing commercial division.

        All discovered potential safety problems on production products should end up on his desk to be reviewed and debated by his staff, and a paper-trail created of the decisions and related reasoning. If they are not doing that, then he's running the shop wrong.

        If underlings ignored that process, then he'd at least have a paper trail that they ignored it. It would have covered his ass also.

  • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Sunday June 09, 2019 @11:16PM (#58737658)

    And in this case, also a culture of business far over safety. It seems the fatal combination of greed, incompetence and arrogance was strong at work here.

    If what they did does not constitute at the very least criminally negligent homicide on a mass-scale, then I do not know what does.

  • by Revek ( 133289 ) on Sunday June 09, 2019 @11:22PM (#58737680)

    We constantly let these people get away with this. None of them will face jail time for murdering all those people. They knew it was a problem and instead of doing the right, ethical thing they decided to let it go unreported. When they start putting them in jail for killing people, for covering their asses will be the turning point for this country. We are not there yet.

  • Boeing Commercial Airplanes (BCA) is a division of the Boeing Company. Boeing Commercial Airplanes is located in Renton, an inner-ring suburb of Seattle, situated 11 miles (18 km) southeast of downtown Seattle.

    But look what is going on in Seattle in the documentary "Seattle is Dying": https://youtu.be/bpAi70WWBlw [youtu.be]

    I have no more questions.

Dennis Ritchie is twice as bright as Steve Jobs, and only half wrong. -- Jim Gettys

Working...