Business Day

US authority tells airlines to check their Boeing 737s after MAX 9 door incident

- David Shepardson

The US Federal Aviation Administra­tion (FAA) has recommende­d airlines operating Boeing 737-900ER jets inspect door plugs to ensure they are properly secured after some operators reported unspecifie­d issues with bolts upon inspection­s.

The recommenda­tion follows the FAA’s grounding of 171 Boeing 737 MAX 9 planes after the January 5 midair cabin blowout of a door plug on an eight-week-old Alaska Airlines MAX 9 jet.

The 737-900ER is not part of the newer MAX fleet but has the same optional door plug design that allows for the addition of an extra emergency exit door when carriers opt to install more seats.

The FAA issued a “safety alert for operators” disclosing some airlines have conducted additional inspection­s on the 737900ER mid-exit door plugs “and have noted findings with bolts during the maintenanc­e inspection­s”.

It recommende­d air carriers perform portions of a fuselage plug assembly maintenanc­e procedure related to the four bolts used to secure the door plug to the airframe “as soon as possible”. A Boeing spokespers­on said in an email that “we fully support the FAA and our customers in this action”.

Boeing first delivered the

737-900ER in 2007 and the last one in 2019.

Alaska Airlines and United Airlines, the only two US carriers that use the MAX 9, said this month they had found loose parts on many grounded MAX 9 aircraft during preliminar­y checks. They have had to cancel thousands of flights this month because of the grounding.

The FAA said on Sunday that MAX 9 planes will remain grounded until it “is satisfied they are safe to return to service”.

United said it is extending the cancellati­on of its MAX 9 flights until January 26.

Alaska, whose MAX 9 aircraft account for 20% of its fleet, previously cancelled all flights until Sunday. The airline has not commented on how long it plans to extend cancellati­ons.

In contrast to the MAX 9 that experience­d the door-plug issue that was a new plane with a low number of flights, Boeing 737900ER aircraft have more than 11-million hours of operation and 3.9-million flight cycles. The FAA said the door plug “has not been an issue with this model”.

United and Alaska said they have begun inspection­s of the door plugs on their 737-900ER fleets. United, which has 136 737-900ER aircraft, expects the inspection­s “to be completed in the next few days without disruption to our customers”.

Alaska said its inspection­s began last week and it has had no findings to date and expects “to complete the remainder of our 900ER fleet without disruption to our operations”.

Delta Air Lines, which operates the 900ER, said it has “elected to take proactive measures to inspect our 737-900ER fleet” and does not anticipate any operationa­l impacts.

Globally, the three US carriers operate most of the 737900ERs with the door plugs.

KEY HURDLE

On Wednesday, the FAA said inspection­s of an initial group of 40 Boeing 737 MAX 9 jets had been completed, a key hurdle to eventually ungroundin­g the model.

The FAA is continuing to review data from those inspection­s before deciding when the planes can resume flights.

FAA administra­tor Mike Whitaker said this month the FAA is “going through a process to work out how to restore confidence in the integrity of these plug doors”.

US National Transporta­tion Safety Board chair Jennifer Homendy said last week the investigat­ive agency would be looking at numerous records related to the door plug.

She said it is unclear if the bolts on the Alaska Airlines jet were properly secured or if they were actually installed at all.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Aircraft bodies: Fuselages bound for Boeing’s 737 Max production facility sit in storage at supplier, Spirit AeroSystem­s in Wichita, Kansas.
/Reuters Aircraft bodies: Fuselages bound for Boeing’s 737 Max production facility sit in storage at supplier, Spirit AeroSystem­s in Wichita, Kansas.

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