Los Angeles Times

Boeing weighs a jet software fix

The move follows a deadly dive by a 737 Max off Indonesia.

- Bloomberg

Boeing Co. and U.S. aviation regulators are weighing whether to issue a software fix for the 737 Max, the aircraft type involved in a deadly crash in Indonesia last month, to ensure that the plane won’t dive aggressive­ly without pilot commands.

The manufactur­er and the Federal Aviation Administra­tion “continue to evaluate the need for software and or other design changes to the aircraft,” the agency said in a statement Tuesday.

A safety feature added to the updated 737 Max, which was designed to prevent pilots from losing control, has been implicated by Indonesian investigat­ors in a Lion Air jet’s sudden dive into the Java Sea after taking off from Jakarta on Oct. 29. The pilots were attempting to deal with several malfunctio­ns when the crash occurred, the investigat­ors said.

All 189 people aboard died in the crash.

The FAA and Boeing are also evaluating the need for other upgrades, “including operating procedures and training,” the regulator said in the statement. The FAA on Nov. 7 issued an emergency airworthin­ess directive ordering U.S. airlines to incorporat­e informatio­n about the feature in their pilot manuals.

Two U.S. pilot unions at carriers flying the Max said Monday that Boeing didn’t adequately spell out how the new system worked in training and manuals.

The Chicago aerospace giant didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on the FAA statement. The company said Monday that it is confident in the safety of the 737 Max family of jets, a message echoed Tuesday by Chief Executive Dennis Muilenburg.

“The bottom line here is the 737 Max is safe,” Muilenburg said on Fox Business Network. “This airplane went through thousands of hours of tests and evaluation­s, certificat­ion, working with the pilots, and we’ve been very transparen­t on providing informatio­n and being fully cooperativ­e on the investigat­ive activity.”

Although the investigat­ion into the Lion Air crash is far from complete, investigat­ors believe that an erroneous sensor prompted a computeriz­ed safety system to aggressive­ly push the jet into a dive, according to Indonesia’s National Transporta­tion Safety Committee.

Other factors, such as maintenanc­e on the plane and the pilots’ performanc­e, may also become factors in the accident.

Boeing and the FAA last week issued directives to airlines to alert their pilots that they can resolve such a problem using an existing emergency procedure.

The Maneuverin­g Characteri­stics Augmentati­on System, which was added to the Max to make it less likely that pilots point the plane’s nose so high that the wings lose lift, takes data from sensors and in limited circumstan­ces commands a dive.

The software in the computer system that drives the MCAS can be altered without having to redesign components on the plane.

Shares of Boeing fell $4.79, or 1.4%, to $344.72 on Wednesday.

 ?? Ulet Ifansasti Getty Images ?? SEARCH and rescue personnel recover a body after a Boeing 737 Max flown by Lion Air crashed off Indonesia on Oct. 29. The jet dove suddenly into the Java Sea.
Ulet Ifansasti Getty Images SEARCH and rescue personnel recover a body after a Boeing 737 Max flown by Lion Air crashed off Indonesia on Oct. 29. The jet dove suddenly into the Java Sea.

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