Kuwait Times

Turkish Airlines grounds Boeing 737 MAX 9 jets

Boeing hit by new headwinds in recent mid-flight scare

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ISTANBUL: Turkish Airlines said that it would ground five Boeing 737 MAX 9 jets in its fleet for inspection­s after a panel blew out of one of the planes in midair in the US, forcing an emergency landing. The Alaska Airlines scare over Oregon on Friday prompted the US Federal Aviation Administra­tion to order immediate inspection­s of around 171 of the jets operated worldwide.

A sealed-over door panel had opened and come off mid-flight, prompting the cabin to suddenly lose pressure. “In light of the incident with the Boeing 737 MAX 9 operated by Alaska Airlines, five Boeing 737 MAX 9 in the Turkish Airlines fleet have been recalled for checks as a security precaution,” the airline said in a statement.

They will be grounded “where they are to land”, it added. Alaska and United Airlines, which has the world’s largest fleet of 737 MAX 9s, have also grounded their planes for checks, leading to dozens of flight cancellati­ons. Aeromexico and Panamanian carrier Copa Airlines also said they had grounded the planes affected by the FAA order, while Icelandair said none of its 737 MAX 9s had the plane configurat­ion specified in the FAA grounding order.

New headwinds

A mid-air emergency in which a piece of fuselage came off a Boeing 737 MAX 9 jetliner as it flew over the US west coast dealt a new blow to the oft-beleaguere­d manufactur­er. However, the consequenc­es for Boeing are expected to be limited. The Federal Aviation Administra­tion has ordered the grounding of 171 planes of that model so they can be inspected.

That order came after a scary incident Friday in which a 737 MAX 9 operated by Alaska Airlines and carrying 177 people had to make an emergency landing because a sealed-over door panel ripped off during a flight from Portland, Oregon to Ontario in southern California. Spectacula­r video images of the incident, which showed a gaping hole in the side

of the plane, air rushing through the cabin, oxygen masks dangling and travelers observing city lights below them through the opening, were seen around the world. No one was seriously injured, however.

An investigat­ion by the National Transporta­tion Safety Board has just begun and it is not yet clear what went wrong on that flight, in which a mid-cabin door plug - a cover panel used to fill an unneeded emergency exit in planes with smaller seat configurat­ions - came off during flight. But it is the latest in a series of setbacks in recent years for Boeing. The worst were two crashes of 737 MAX planes, in October 2018 and March 2019, that caused the deaths of 346 people in total.

These accidents linked to software in a flight stabilizin­g system called the MCAS triggered the grounding of all 737 MAX planes for nearly two years. But Boeing had other woes, too, as it suspended delivery, several times over the course of two years, of its long-haul 787 because of manufactur­ing and inspection flaws. More recently it was the 737 MAX that again drew bad press. Last autumn defects were found in the plane’s rear bulkhead, which is a kind of partition. And in December a risk of bolts coming loose in the navigating system was found.

‘One-off anomaly’

The latest mishap could stem from the manufactur­ing of the door plug that came loose or bolts that were supposed to secure it, or from a quality control issue, said Scott Hamilton of the specialize­d aviation news outlet Leeham News. “If it’s indeed a quality assurance issue, whether it’s in Spirit or at Boeing, I would say it’s more than likely a narrow, quality assurance issue,” he said, referring to Spirit Aerosystem­s, Boeing’s main subcontrac­tor.

“I think this is more of a one-off anomaly than I would a systemic issue,” he said. “For me it is a very isolated problem,” added Michel Merluzeau, an aeronautic­s specialist with consulting firm AIR. “I do not

at all think it is a design problem.” He said evidence for this is the fact that the FAA ordered inspection­s that take just four to eight hours. “We should be back to normal in about a week,” said Merluzeau. He said this latest incident stems from supply chain and production problems that are currently affecting the commercial aviation sector, and also cited the impact of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

For instance in the spring of 2020, as the pandemic raged and the US economy largely went into lockdown, Boeing stopped making planes for nearly a month. As air travel fell off dramatical­ly, Boeing laid off around 30,000 workers. Boeing started hiring en masse again in 2022 but many experience­d workers did not return to the company. “You now have new people that have been hired, that have to go through what’s called a learning curve,” said Hamilton.

Merluzeau said “experience is something that is very important in this industry.” Unlike Boeing, its big competitor Airbus only shut down for a few days in 2020 and avoided mass layoffs, said Hamilton. Merluzeau said he did not see this latest incident having long term commercial impact on Boeing. “Boeing must handle the situation and as soon as possible provide guarantees to customers on the manufactur­ing of its planes so that people do not worry,” he said. Hamilton said “the Max 9 is, for the most part a US airplane,” with two thirds of the fleet operated by Alaska Airlines (65) and United (79).

“And their relationsh­ip with Boeing is pretty deep and pretty good,” said Hamilton, who thinks the blown door problem on Friday will mainly affect Boeing’s dealings with US regulators. Boeing recently requested a safety exemption in the 737 MAX 7’s certificat­ion process. The exemption would cover the engine anti-ice system, on which a defect has been identified. Hamilton said that if the probe of this mishap ends up pointing the finger at Boeing “it’s going to impact the FAA decision whether to grant an exemption.”— AFP

 ?? ?? MEXICO CITY: A Turkish airlines Boeing 787 Dream Liner plane waits at the gate at the Benito Juarez Internatio­nal Airport in Mexico City.
MEXICO CITY: A Turkish airlines Boeing 787 Dream Liner plane waits at the gate at the Benito Juarez Internatio­nal Airport in Mexico City.
 ?? ?? BUENOS AIRES: An Aerolineas Argentinas Boeing 737 MAX 8 lands at Jorge Newbery Internatio­nal Airport in Buenos Aires.— AFP photos
BUENOS AIRES: An Aerolineas Argentinas Boeing 737 MAX 8 lands at Jorge Newbery Internatio­nal Airport in Buenos Aires.— AFP photos

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