Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Transportation

Boeing Has So Many Grounded 737 Max Planes Waiting To Be Fixed They're Parking Them in the Employee Parking Lot (jalopnik.com) 129

An anonymous reader shares a report: You may recall that, thanks to an issue with faulty sensors in the Boeing 737 Max flight control systems, those planes have been grounded after multiple crashes were found to be related to the issue. Grounded planes are, by definition, not in the air, and as such need to be stored, on the ground, somewhere. In the case of Boeing's Renton Factory in Washington state, there's so many grounded planes that some of that ground has to be taken from Boeing's employee parking lots. [...] Seattle's King 5 News has some very comprehensive aerial footage of the factory, which gives a sense of just how many of these planes are parked at Boeing's factory right now.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Boeing Has So Many Grounded 737 Max Planes Waiting To Be Fixed They're Parking Them in the Employee Parking Lot

Comments Filter:
  • Towed (Score:5, Funny)

    by 605dave ( 722736 ) on Tuesday June 25, 2019 @12:29PM (#58822066) Homepage

    I hope they put the little parking stickers on the cockpits' windows so they don't get towed.

    • Screwed the Pooch (Score:5, Insightful)

      by sycodon ( 149926 ) on Tuesday June 25, 2019 @12:46PM (#58822178)

      Boeing has screwed the pooch from every angle.

      1. They implemented a system that has access to the primary flight control services independent of the already well tested and understood FBW system. A bolt on in effect.

      2. They did this would any kind of redundancy or fail safes. Their FBW systems employ the same kind of triple (even quadruple) redundancy used by the Space Shuttle. The AOA sensor system consisted exactly one sensor.

      3, They obfuscated the existence of this system and the procedures to manage it. They felt the pilots, "didn't need to know".

      Hubris on the part of the engineers? Disdain for enhanced safety on the part of the management?

      Who knows?

      • by DickBreath ( 207180 ) on Tuesday June 25, 2019 @01:05PM (#58822286) Homepage
        When in doubt: blame management.

        Engineers could do things like this. But managers seem much more likely to have forced engineers to compromise on safety to save costs.

        It wasn't engineers who decided to launch Challenger in cold weather -- they warned against it.
        • Looks to me like the whole organization from top to bottom was involved in this tragedy, wilfully or not. For example, the MCAS control algorithm with its blatant disregard of limits is on the engineers. Management wouldn't even know how to fuck up that software so badly.

          But if you are trying to say that the guys who need to do time for this are mainly management, I'm with you. That's where the obvious money grubbing corruption lies.

        • Re:Screwed the Pooch (Score:5, Interesting)

          by mea_culpa ( 145339 ) on Tuesday June 25, 2019 @03:39PM (#58823524)

          From what has leaked out, it's looking like everyone that worked on this system didn't know what it was for. They weren't allowed to see beyond their given task or how it fit in the bigger picture.

          This is horrifying.

        • by mjwx ( 966435 )

          When in doubt: blame management.

          Engineers could do things like this. But managers seem much more likely to have forced engineers to compromise on safety to save costs.

          It wasn't engineers who decided to launch Challenger in cold weather -- they warned against it.

          Pretty much this.

          I'm sure Engineers told managers the larger engines wouldn't fit the current 737 (root cause of the problem). Management said do it or start looking for another job.
          I'm sure the test pilots said the engines are too high and far forward so it won't fly like a current 737 and couldn't use the same type certification (reason why MCAS was implemented). Management told engineers to fudge the input or start looking for another job.
          When it came to certification, the FAA just took Boeing's wor

      • by EvilSS ( 557649 )
        OK but did they put the little parking sticker in the cockpit window, that's the important question here.
        • I believe it's all digital now. They have a person with a smartphone app that just registers all the identifications. The parking enforcement vehicle has a camera that reads the id's off the plane. Once cars are autonomous, the parking enforcement officer will have to work as a flight systems engineer.
      • by aaarrrgggh ( 9205 ) on Tuesday June 25, 2019 @07:04PM (#58824680)

        You are incorrect on a number of levels, most notably the fact that the 737 is not a fly-by-wire aircraft. I suggest you read the recent Seattle PI article about what happened.

        Essentially, the system was initially designed to only engage in a high-speed turn maneuver with low authority, and all the hazard assessments were based on that condition. It was vetted for this case and considered to be very effective. During flight testing, they discovered another low-speed region that needed additional nose-down attitude, which required greater authority and could not use the high-g turn safeties, so they were removed, and the maximum trim was increased.

        It appears that Boeing did not do flight tests to validate the FAA assumption of diagnosing a trim problem within three seconds with a failed AOA sensor. Testing appears to have been done by simulation only.

      • A few minor additions:

        1: The 737 actually isn't flown by an FBW system as it's from before they became commonplace and Boeing avoided putting one into newer model as it would have been expensive and added considerably to type certification training for pilots transferring over to newer models. Lacking fly-by-wire controls is the actual reason why MCAS was tacked on the way it did as the kinds of handling characteristics that MCAS was made to mitigate are usually handled by the plane's fly-by-wire system.
  • by bit trollent ( 824666 ) on Tuesday June 25, 2019 @12:33PM (#58822082) Homepage

    Looks like Boeing's decision to change FAA regulations to allow for self-certification didn't work out well combined with their decisions to produce and sell unsafe airplanes.

    It's nice to see a physical manifestation of the consequences or unbridled greed and corruption every once in a while.

    Meanwhile Airbus is producing airplanes under European regulations and they don't have to ground the entire fleet of their newest plane. Interesting....

    • by jeff4747 ( 256583 ) on Tuesday June 25, 2019 @12:40PM (#58822138)

      The thing I don't particularly get is the solution they chose to their engineering problem.

      The problem: 737 is short. This is good in the sense that it's an easier sale to less-developed places where they're going to service the plane from a ladder. But it's short enough that you can't fit the bigger, more fuel-efficient engines under the wings.

      So they put the engines higher and further forward, which then required their fucked-up software to compensate.

      Why not address the problem more directly? Put taller landing gear on the 737MAX so it's tall enough to fit the engines? It could still be shorter than the Airbus.

      • The thing I don't particularly get is the solution they chose to their engineering problem.

        The problem: 737 is short. This is good in the sense that it's an easier sale to less-developed places where they're going to service the plane from a ladder. But it's short enough that you can't fit the bigger, more fuel-efficient engines under the wings.

        So they put the engines higher and further forward, which then required their fucked-up software to compensate.

        Why not address the problem more directly? Put taller landing gear on the 737MAX so it's tall enough to fit the engines? It could still be shorter than the Airbus.

        The amazing thing is they put out this dog's breakfast of an airplane, with an unstable airframe, and a bad software solution to keep it in the air....

        To save money. I wonder how much money they have saved since the inevitable has happened, and they are sitting on the tarmac, rotting?

        • Rotting they are, but there's a nice big tax deduction behind those "losses", if not an outright bailout in a few years. They'll have to time that after the elections probably. It's all insured by, guess who

      • by Aighearach ( 97333 ) on Tuesday June 25, 2019 @01:03PM (#58822278)

        Landing is dangerous, and raising the center of balance on the ground would make that worse.

        The thing about this software compensating for a design flaw is bullshit you're repeating because it is popular on the internet, it is not a real thing.

        The software compensates for a minor problem that lots of planes experience, it is a lot more analogous to an automated cruise control braking feature with a bug that accidentally creates a new hazard state. The increased need for the software is about the increased power of the engines, not anything about being poorly positioned.

        • by ilguido ( 1704434 ) on Tuesday June 25, 2019 @01:56PM (#58822662)
          Whatever the case, they put that software in to sell the 737 NEO as a drop-in replacement for the older 737s, so that pilots do not need retraining. In reality, pilots do need retraining and really that may not be enough. However

          The increased need for the software is about the increased power of the engines, not anything about being poorly positioned.

          Sources? By the way, I never heard about the "poorly positioned" part. Usually they say that engines are "differently positioned", so the airplane behaves differently and pilots should need full retraining, unless you use that botched software relying on one sensor.

        • by bobbied ( 2522392 ) on Tuesday June 25, 2019 @03:12PM (#58823276)

          The increased need for the software is about the increased power of the engines, not anything about being poorly positioned.

          Um, not exactly.. The issue IS with the size of the engines and that they are positioned further forward. This creates an increase in lift as the angle of attack goes up (nose up) and because the engines are forward it creates a nose up tendency as AOA increases. The FAA requires that the pilots must feel an increase in control pressure as they approach a stall, but with this nose up tendency at high AOA's the MAX didn't meet the requirement. So, Boeing "fixes" this minor problem with a system that applies nose down trim input when the AOA is high and the pilots are flying manually. This is great, a long as the system is getting good AOA information, or if the pilots are trained to recognize the problem and deal with it by using the trim controls to fix the trim then flipping the "STAB TRIM" switches to "CUT OUT"

          Boeing's issue was to rely on existing pilot training as sufficient, not using the additional sensor information to cross check the AOA sensor, and failing to document all this prior to the first crash (which they DID document before the second one). There is nothing really wrong with the MAX's design overall, and this one edge case failure mode will be dealt with in a couple of ways. First, pilots will be trained how to deal with the possible failure of the MCAS system, not just this one failure mode, but others. Second, the "AOA Disagree" indicator will now be standard in the primary display, instead of a separately priced option. Third, the MCAS will now cross check other available sensor data and be a bit more careful about when and how much it applies nose down trim. The MAX will be recertified and flying by the time winter rolls around, again.

          Further, the FAA will likely review Boeing's self certification ability and process controls. Some heads will roll, perhaps in both the FAA and Boeing ranks and likely past decisions on aircraft certification will be reviewed and reconsidered as necessary. But in the end Boeing aircraft will be MUCH safer and the process will be much tighter. Which to me, is more important than the specific issue with the MAX. It scares me that something seemingly this obvious slipped through both Boeing's process and FAA oversight and didn't get caught before 2 aircraft crashed. But this is NOT the first time we've lost aircraft to design flaws that looked obvious in hindsight. It will happen again, I just hope it's a long time before it does.

        • How did this get modded to +5? I'm not aware of any other airplane in the world where the flaps are not big enough to prevent a stall without adjusting the elevator? They don't let us blind people fly the planes, only work on the software. But for the aircraft which I've encountered, standard operating procedure for a stall is to push down hard on the stick and that corrects the stall. Its only the 737 MAX where this won't work and you have to adjust the elevator as well. So the issue seems more than r
          • Well, you're wrong about a bunch of it, you're just repeating what others on the internet are already repeating.

            The problem the new software addresses isn't a specific thing about this aircraft, that's the part you're confused about. This is just one of the difficult parts of flying. Stalling is a real risk in various circumstances. Boeing attempted to improve safety with an automated tool. The tool turned out to be way more hazardous than the problem it was designed to address.

            What you and others are sayin

        • by Agripa ( 139780 )

          Landing is dangerous, and raising the center of balance on the ground would make that worse.

          They did make the landing gear taller while fitting it into the existing space because of handling during landing and takeoff.

          https://www.geekwire.com/2018/... [geekwire.com]

          • The difference is that they did a bunch of engineering to determine the correct height, they didn't just glance at it and redesign it like the person above claims is better.

      • by whoever57 ( 658626 ) on Tuesday June 25, 2019 @01:16PM (#58822378) Journal

        They were not trying to solve an engineering problem.

        They were trying to solve a cost and profitability problem. Specifically, the cost of re-certifying pilots and the opportunity to charge more for an upgrade.

        They should have got the aircraft certified in a way that would have required re-training the pilots. This would have increased the costs of the aircraft for their buyers, which would have ultimately resulted in a profit hit for Boeing.

        The solution that they adopted flowed naturally from the cost and profit issues above.

        • They were trying to solve a cost and profitability problem. Specifically, the cost of re-certifying pilots and the opportunity to charge more for an upgrade.

          I'd expect taller landing gear would have also not required a re-certification. Plane still handles the same way, just ends up slightly taller when sitting on the ground. But I'm not a pilot that's mostly an assumption.

        • "They were not trying to solve an engineering problem.

          They were trying to solve a cost and profitability problem."

          Welcome to actual engineering.

      • That would have been a better solution, but also much more costly. Taller gear means more space needed for it, which means major changes to the airframe. It also means less commonality with existing 737s which would mean pilots would need training to fly on the new aircraft. Instead Boeing minimized the changes so they could claim 'this is just another 737' which made certification cheaper and meant pilots could convert with minimal training.

        • We're not talking about a large change in the height through. I'd expect it would fit with losing a little bit of the hold. Flight characteristics should be nearly the same, except it touches the ground from a few feet higher on landing....which strikes me as just as minor as the changes they did make. (Disclaimer: not a pilot)

          So I'd expect they'd be able to ram through a similar self-certification that they did, at the cost of slightly different landing gear parts...on a plane with already slightly diff

          • No. The main gear retracts toward each other, it looks like they're only separated by the keel. So in order to lengthen it, they'd have to move the attachment points outwards, which means a major change to the wing structure.

            • Or retract in a different direction (eg forward instead of inward), which presumably also requires significant structural changes depending on what's in that direction from the landing gear.

      • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 ) on Tuesday June 25, 2019 @02:15PM (#58822842)

        Put taller landing gear on the 737MAX so it's tall enough to fit the engines?

        Airplanes are designed to pretty tight tolerances. You can't just stick longer landing gear on them because there has to be space for it to retract.

        Boeing realized the 737 design was at the end of it's life and started looking at doing the redesign that would lead to a 737-like plane with things like more ground clearance, but they needed a competitor for the A320 right away so they decided to try and squeeze out another generation of 737.

        Then they did it again.

      • Put taller landing gear on the 737MAX so it's tall enough to fit the engines?.

        THEY DID... The landing gear IS taller on the 737MAX. I believe the nose gear is 9" longer. But there is MORE to this than just putting the aircraft on stilts and moving the engines down and back, A lot more. Engineering an aircraft is an exercise in making tradeoffs and the engine placement in this case was done in consideration of a whole pile of issues, the least of which is the needed MCAS system, or so they thought.

      • Put taller landing gear on the 737MAX

        That's a major structural redesign. If you just make the struts longer, the wheels will collide in the middle when they retract. So you have to move the pivot points outboard and change all the internal load-bearing members that transfer the load to the wing spar. Probably have to make the spar bigger too, because the new attach points will have more leverage from the wing root.

      • The 737 was designed to be easy loading, without needing expensive equipment to access the cargo bay. This led the aeroplane to be low to the ground.

        Now Airbus comes in with a more fuel efficient version of its A320, partly via an an engine with a larger diameter. Since the plane had space to put a larger engine under the wing there wasn’t any real change to the center of mass, relative to the center of pressure. Because there were basically no handling changes, pilots didn’t need retraining.

        Now

      • by mjwx ( 966435 )

        The thing I don't particularly get is the solution they chose to their engineering problem.

        The problem: 737 is short. This is good in the sense that it's an easier sale to less-developed places where they're going to service the plane from a ladder. But it's short enough that you can't fit the bigger, more fuel-efficient engines under the wings.

        So they put the engines higher and further forward, which then required their fucked-up software to compensate.

        Why not address the problem more directly? Put taller landing gear on the 737MAX so it's tall enough to fit the engines? It could still be shorter than the Airbus.

        Two reasons, 1. cost, 2. they market the 737 as being able to use airports without boarding infrastructure.

        You can't just stick taller landing gear onto an aircraft, at the very least you need to redesign the wing box and nose section they go into. That means money, Airbus blindsided Boeing with the A320neo, so they wanted the MAX out the door as fast and cheaply as possible.

        An arguably legacy, but sometimes still used feature of the 737 is that is can land at regional airports without boarding gates,

    • Because there are absolutely no EU corporations that have sidestepped regulations in order to make a buck when the regulation was "too hard" to comply with.

      Certainly not Volkswagen AG and basically every one of their subsidiary brands that used the "clean" diesel motor.

      Your undeserved smugness is showing.

    • Meanwhile Airbus is producing airplanes under European regulations and they don't have to ground the entire fleet of their newest plane. Interesting....

      Type groundings, in which all aircraft of one model have to be taken out of service, are very rere here too. But they can happen in either place. Remember the Comet?

  • Hmm . . . .

    Can we use them to house the homeless; especially if this lockdown goes into the cold months of winter??-

    • If this goes into the cold months of winter 2037, then yes.
      • Can we use them to house the homeless; especially if this lockdown goes into the cold months of winter?

        If this goes into the cold months of winter 2037, then yes.

        Or zombies [wikipedia.org]. That dead guy (literally) named "R" will appreciate it. .

  • They have lots of time. They should be checking the damn things for bogus parts.

    Big (and very old) business gets a big coverup [nbcbayarea.com]

  • by ghoul ( 157158 ) on Tuesday June 25, 2019 @12:38PM (#58822118)

    Boeing tried hard including bribing a US Senator to state in Congress that the problem was with foreign pilots and not American planes but noones buying it.

    • I am surprised that there might be limits to what you can bribe a senator to do.

      I am convinced that we're getting a new press secretary to replace the previous one who quit -- because someone asked her to tell a lie so big that even she wouldn't tell it.

      So a crime so big that no bribe can fix it?
      • by ghoul ( 157158 )

        Oh the Congressman (Sorry it was a Congressman not Senator) did go ahead and spout the bullshit [aopa.org] in Congress.

        Its just that noone believes him

        Bribery will buy you a Congressman who will tell lies for you but not all Congressmen are believed when telling lies

        • Congresspersons come much cheaper than Senators - that comes with more availability due to district size, and more frequency of elections.

          Average winning house candidate balance two weeks before election: $1.8 million
          Average winning senate candidate balance two weeks before election: $10.4 million. Does not include outside spending in the Citizens United era which brings the cost up to around $19.4 million.

          Source: https://www.opensecrets.org/ne... [opensecrets.org]

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      to state in Congress that the problem was with foreign pilots and not American planes

      psst, hey, don't give the orange guy ideas

    • The coverup that is working is about counterfeit parts. You can bet these sensors fit into that category.

      • by ghoul ( 157158 )

        Its a bad design to give suicide authority to a computer based upon a part that is well known in the industry to fail. Before the max this part was only an indicator and pilots flew all the time with broken AoA sensors. Now its a mission critical part with no redundancy but its reliability is still the same

  • If they don't get their act together I suspect a lot of the land reserved for their employee parking may soon become available for other uses after Boeing is forced to lay off employees due to a drop in production demand for the Max.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    the "parking lot" in question is in front of the giant final assembly buildings. to park there you're required to leave your car unlocked and keys in the vehicle. So anytime an aircraft needs to come out, others move your car. failing that, a forklift is brought in and the vehicle moved. Unless you're a big enough supervisor, and then you got crew in the back of this unmoved truck pushing up on the wing to get the motor nacelle to clear by an inch or two. As a contractor, I didn't even bother to park there

  • Someone should put a clamp on the tire.
  • by schwit1 ( 797399 ) on Tuesday June 25, 2019 @01:20PM (#58822396)

    Just like the diesel scandal, Boeing should pay for all airline associated costs and lost revenue or buy back the planes.

    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      Just like the diesel scandal, Boeing should pay for all airline associated costs and lost revenue or buy back the planes.

      Airlines don't want to give the planes back, they want them back in the air.

      Its not like you can pop down to Dave's Quality Airliners and get a new 180 seater fly away with 2K down on a 48 month contract... You need to order them months in advance and I'm talking more than 12 in some cases. Airbus's order books are closed for the A320 family as well. 150-200 seat airliners are in huge demand at the moment and there is no way Airbus can supply the market alone, so almost everyone wants to see the 737 back

  • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Tuesday June 25, 2019 @01:32PM (#58822484)
    Don't you just hate it when someone takes up 50 spaces in the parking lot -- ya, I counted them.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/22683/boeing-reportedly-blocks-competitor-from-israeli-air-force-tanker-competition

    https://www.theverge.com/2019/3/22/18275736/boeing-737-max-plane-crashes-grounded-problems-info-details-explained-reasons

    A couple months after Boeing turned down Israel's request for refueling tankers Boeing jets started having computer problems and crashing in muslim countries. The result messed up Boeing's MAX jet program and resulted in layoffs. But now Israel has their Pegasus refueli

  • Rumor is Steve Jobs used to park his Learjet such.

    Somebody stuck a sticker on it: "Park Different"

  • by az-saguaro ( 1231754 ) on Tuesday June 25, 2019 @01:59PM (#58822694)

    Regardless how this all spins out for Boeing and the MAX, seeing that parking lot gave me an idea for how they can monetize the situation for awhile. Food planes. Like food trucks but with wings. It will get people coming far and wide to sample gourmet airplane food. A Starbucks plane as well, and rock and grunge bands in the background - a happening food fest. Washington State's new Air and Entertainment Park.

    Okay, it's a stupid idea, but here's a real question. What if the plane remains grounded or uncertified, or even if certified customers renege or don't buy? What then does Boeing do with those already built units? Scrap them? Repurpose them for something kitschy like food planes or office space or classrooms or a theme hotel? Redesign and selectively rebuild parts of the wings and engines (would the FAA even allow that)? Last I heard, they keep building them in anticipation of ultimately fulfilling orders, but is that a fool's errand?

    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      It's Seattle. Homeless shelters.

    • Boeing’s business model is such they don’t lose money. 1/3 cost up front, 1/3 when construction begins, 1/3 on delivery. The plane is over cost to manufacture before building starts. Cancel an order? No refund. So ‘slots’ are sold privately to cut losses.
    • It doesn't have wings, but this is pretty close to your idea:

      Airplane Restaurants and Hotels around the World Slideshow [thedailymeal.com]

      (scroll all the way down)

      One of the coolest aspects of the Space Shuttle Caf is that it is a DC 3 airplane licensed to drive on the street. The Space Shuttle Cafe is a mobile commercial food kitchen that was built from a DC-3 airplane fuselage that was built in 1944 and flew during the last year of World War II. It is painted black and white in the Space Shuttle theme.

      The fuselage on wheels was moved in 2001 after it had sat in a field for about 10 years. Over four-and-a-half-years, the owners completely stripped it down to the frame. put in a new motor and built the completely self-contained commercial kitchen.

      The Space Shuttle Cafe is used for serving food at car shows, airshows, and local community events around southern California. The Space Shuttle Cafe also does private catering and school events. After being in the food service business for about 20 years and operating the Space Shuttle Cafe for about the last seven years, the owners have decided to slow down and semi-retire. The Space Shuttle Caf is for sale for $150,000.

    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      Regardless how this all spins out for Boeing and the MAX, seeing that parking lot gave me an idea for how they can monetize the situation for awhile. Food planes. Like food trucks but with wings. It will get people coming far and wide to sample gourmet airplane food. A Starbucks plane as well, and rock and grunge bands in the background - a happening food fest. Washington State's new Air and Entertainment Park.

      Not so much of a joke. Old airliners are sometimes turned into attractions. Restaurants, hotels, et al. The only reason it's not as wide spread is that it's expensive and they have a very distinctive foot print that isn't regularly found with the way we design our cities.

  • Look at the ones parked out in the desert. The one's at Boeing are probably ones that have not yet been delivered. In fact, some of them are BRIGHT GREEN. They haven't even been painted yet. Assembly line continues, then once the software is approved, it will be loaded. But, still, that's a lot of planes.
  • by PPH ( 736903 )

    Because Boeing can get permission to ferry airplanes between airports with the shitty MCAS software. Just not carrying passengers.

    I see lots of green (unpainted) planes parked everywhere. The potential MCAS fix will only involve new software. And, at worst, rewiring the horizontal stabilizer cutout switch logic. Nothing that would prevent them from being painted and otherwise completely finished. What I think I see here is cancelled orders. You can't paint a plane (and install interiors) until you know who

    • by jrumney ( 197329 )
      I think the main problem for Boeing is that they've had deliveries on hold for 3 months now, and the planes at their plant are backing up. A lot were still only partially painted - they are the ones that were scheduled to be there, but there are also a lot of finished planes among them, that were probably scheduled to go out to customers who now refuse to take delivery until the issues are resolved. Pretty soon they'll have to halt the production line if they are running out of space to put them, which is
      • by PPH ( 736903 )

        A painted plane takes up as much space as a green one. But parking them unfinished is going to seriously mess up the production schedule once they have to go back and perform out of sequence work. Furthermore, if the MCAS fix is quickly implemented (software and maybe some minimal h/w mods), having them ready to deliver is going to clear the backlog (and get payments rolling in) much faster. And if they finish them and can get a conditional airworthiness certificate, they can fly them to off site storage an

  • Solution: park those prehistoric Max 8 deathtrap airframes in a landfill. Solved.

  • I like how the video shows the unpainted aircraft have the rudders painted in the final livery, but the vertical stabilizers are still just primer...
  • Heh, a friend of mine was driving by the other day, saw the airplane parked in the employee lot, and he thought he was hallucinating.

"All the people are so happy now, their heads are caving in. I'm glad they are a snowman with protective rubber skin" -- They Might Be Giants

Working...