Boston Herald

Boeing Max crash report due

More details expected in Ethiopian incident

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When air safety investigat­ors release an interim report on the crash of an Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 Max sometime before Tuesday, they are likely to place the blame on the jet’s automated flight control system as well as on the pilots and their training, but it’s unclear yet which side will bear the brunt.

Experts in the U.S. are waiting to see if a transcript of the cockpit voice recorder is released, saying it will be used to train pilots across the globe on what to do when a software glitch causes an inflight emergency. The transcript may not come until the final report, which is expected later this year.

The crash on March 10, 2019, that killed 157 people came almost five months after a similar Max owned by Lion Air crashed off the coast of Indonesia, killing 189. After the Ethiopia crash, aviation authoritie­s across the globe grounded the Max until Boeing proves it has fixed the flight control software.

The crash forced Chicagobas­ed Boeing to post its first annual financial loss in more than two decades, and shined a floodlight on the U.S. Federal Aviation Administra­tion, which allows employees of aircraft makers to make key decisions in the process that permits planes to fly.

Criticism has also been directed at Ethiopian Airlines’ pilots.

“It was pretty clear from the get-go they really didn’t understand what was happening to the airplane,” said William Waldock, a safety science professor at EmbryRiddl­e Aeronautic­al University. “When they tried to correct, they actually made it worse.”

Last week, a U.S. House committee said a “culture of concealmen­t” at Boeing and poor federal oversight contribute­d to both Max crashes.

At the root of the crashes is Boeing’s software called MCAS, an acronym for Maneuverin­g Characteri­stics Augmentati­on System. It automatica­lly lowers the plane’s nose to prevent an aerodynami­c stall. Initially, pilots worldwide weren’t told about the system, which Boeing said was needed because the Max had bigger, more powerful engines that were placed further forward on the wings than previousge­neration 737s.

Still, Boeing’s big selling point for the plane was that it was essentiall­y the same as older 737s and therefore little pilot training was needed to switch to the new aircraft.

 ?? AP FILE ?? STILL GROUNDED: Plane wreckage is scattered where the Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 Max 8 crashed in March 2019. When investigat­ors release a report on the crash they are expected to blame the jet’s automated flight control system and the pilots and their training.
AP FILE STILL GROUNDED: Plane wreckage is scattered where the Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 Max 8 crashed in March 2019. When investigat­ors release a report on the crash they are expected to blame the jet’s automated flight control system and the pilots and their training.

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