Kuwait Times

Boeing 737 MAX ready to take off

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NEW YORK: Boeing’s 737 MAX plane could take its first test flight today, a crucial step for the survival of the company’s star model that has been grounded for 14 months. Two sources close to the case told AFP Friday the flight could take place early the following week.

Neither Boeing nor the Federal Aviation Administra­tion confirmed the flight when asked for comment on Sunday. “We continue to work diligently on safely returning the 737 MAX to service. We defer to the FAA and global regulators on the process,” a Boeing spokespers­on said.

The MAX has been grounded globally since March 13, 2019, following an Ethiopian Airlines crash that killed 157 people. That catastroph­e came just a few months after a Lion Air MAX crash that killed 189 people.

The troubling similariti­es between the two accidents, both of which occurred shortly after takeoff, along with the pilots’ inability to regain control of the plane, led global aviation authoritie­s to ground the model indefinite­ly.

For months, the US aviation giant has been struggling to get its medium-haul aircraft — whose sales were its main

source of revenue before the grounding — back into service.

The model’s anti-stall flight system, the MCAS, was partially to blame for both crashes. But other technical malfunctio­ns, including one involving electrical wiring, were subsequent­ly detected during the aircraft’s modificati­on process, slowing down its recertific­ation. For weeks, Boeing has been awaiting the green light from authoritie­s to conduct test flights to prove the modificati­ons provide maximum safety.

Boeing Field

Civil aviation authoritie­s cannot approve the modified model until they have examined how it performs in flight. They will also look at the thousands of data points collected during the flights.

For this reason, three days of test flights have been planned, according to the New York Times. They will take off from Boeing Field, just outside Seattle, the manufactur­er’s birthplace in the northweste­rn US state of Washington.

The weather is difficult to predict, but forecasts show Monday will be partially cloudy, with little wind and a 10 percent chance of rain. According to the Times, an FAA pilot will be at the controls to test out the modificati­ons conducted on the plane, and a Boeing test pilot will also be on board. In general, test flights are meticulous­ly prepared for.

Delay after delay

A few months ago, Boeing anticipate­d the MAX would return to service in mid2020, around June. But the coronaviru­s pandemic, which resulted in travel restrictio­ns and lockdown measures to try and slow its spread, has upset the schedule.

According to The Seattle Times, European and Canadian aviation authoritie­s have demanded substantia­l new changes to the plane’s flight control system. The two regulators, along with the FAA “have agreed Boeing will be required to make these additional design changes... only after the MAX returns to service,” the newspaper reported.

When asked by AFP for further details, a Boeing spokespers­on said Friday that safety is the company’s top priority.

The spokespers­on also said that Boeing is committed to answering regulator questions and meeting all certificat­ion and regulatory requiremen­ts.

Boeing urgently needs to get the 737 MAX back in the air in order to pull itself out of a historic crisis.

The aircraft accounts for more than two-thirds of the company’s order book and is therefore crucial to the mid-term survival of the manufactur­er — which, like the entire aviation industry, is suffering from the effects of the coronaviru­s crisis.

At the end of April, Boeing released details on a downsizing plan to cut total headcount by 10 percent, or roughly 16,000 employees in all.

In March, credit ratings agency S&P downgraded its rating for Boeing to BBB from A-, moving it into a speculativ­e category. —AFP

 ?? —AFP ?? In this file photo, Boeing 737 MAX 9 airliners are pictured on the flight line at the Boeing Renton Factory in Renton, Washington.
—AFP In this file photo, Boeing 737 MAX 9 airliners are pictured on the flight line at the Boeing Renton Factory in Renton, Washington.

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