Kuwait Times

Behind the MAX crisis: Lax regulator, top-down culture

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Even before the Lion Air and Ethiopian Airlines crashes claimed 346 lives, Boeing flight tests had revealed problems similar to those encountere­d by pilots on the ill-fated 737 MAX flights. Company officials learned that its MCAS anti-stall system - which is at the center of both accidents - activated within minutes of takeoff, repeatedly pushing the nose of the aircraft down even when the plane was operating in normal conditions at lower speed. This discovery, recounted to AFP by two former Boeing engineers who spoke on the condition of anonymity, suggested that mastering the MCAS was important for safely flying the MAX.

The MCAS should have been closely vetted by regulators, and procedures for operating the system should have been included in plane manuals and highlighte­d during pilot training. But none of that happened. Before the Lion Air disaster in October, the MCAS was not even named in the official documents given to pilots. In the earliest documents submitted to the Federal Aviation Administra­tion, Boeing said the MCAS would only activate under abnormal conditions, such as a sudden turn at great speed.

Boeing later amended its documents to say MCAS could be activated at lower speeds, but maintained throughout that there were no significan­t safety changes compared with earlier models. FAA representa­tives were

present during a test flight when an MCAS problem occurred, according to a regulatory source, but approved the MAX without independen­tly studying or testing the flight system. Instead, regulators deferred on key aspects of certificat­ion to Boeing, allowed under a congressio­nally-mandated program begun in 2005 while the FAA faced budget pressure. In essence, Boeing chose the engineers who would inspect its planes in a process rubber-stamped by the agency.

Not grounded after 1st crash

The FAA had assessed the MAX as safe, and the plane lacked the degree of alteration­s from its predecesso­r, the NG, that would require significan­t additional pilot training. Yet the MCAS, short for the Maneuverin­g Characteri­stics Augmentati­on System, was added to the MAX, a more fuel-efficient model with a heavier engine and different aerodynami­cs. But following the Lion Air crash on October 28, 2018, the FAA acknowledg­ed it lacked full understand­ing of the MCAS, a government source told AFP. The agency did not realize it could be difficult for a pilot to regain control of the plane once MCAS was activated.

Instead of grounding the plane, the FAA on Nov 7 issued an “emergency” airworthin­ess order for MAX operators, calling for new procedures for pilots encounteri­ng the problem with MCAS. The agency also directed Boeing to correct the MCAS problem, while planes continued to fly, and that effort was still underway when the Ethiopian flight crashed five months later. “The 737 MAX certificat­ion program involved 110,000 hours of work on the part of FAA personnel, including flying or supporting 297 test flights,” an agency spokesman said. But amid renewed public scrutiny, including into the relationsh­ip between the FAA and Boeing, the timeline for returning the MAX to the skies remains cloudy. Boeing has threatened to halt production of the plane, putting thousands of jobs at risk while numerous probes investigat­e the MAX certificat­ion.

Boeing was under pressure when it began developing the MAX in 2011. Airbus had sprinted ahead of Boeing in the race for new single-aisle planes, a lucrative market, with its A320 Neo, while Boeing was hitting hurdles with other ventures, including the 787, which was running behind schedule. “They wanted us to control costs,” said an engineer, who described tensions between technical and managerial staff. “Everything was designed to stop an ability to communicat­e concerns upward,” said another engineer. — Reuters

 ??  ?? In this file photo taken on March 28, 2019, Southwest Airlines Boeing 737 MAX aircraft are parked on the tarmac after being grounded at the Southern California Logistics Airport in Victorvill­e, California. — AFP
In this file photo taken on March 28, 2019, Southwest Airlines Boeing 737 MAX aircraft are parked on the tarmac after being grounded at the Southern California Logistics Airport in Victorvill­e, California. — AFP

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