Los Angeles Times

FAA begins Boeing 737 Max test flights

Jet could be certified in the fall, but other hurdles remain.

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Boeing Co. and the Federal Aviation Administra­tion began a series of longawaite­d flights to test whether the revamped 737 Max is safe after two deadly crashes, and investors cheered the rare good news for an airplane manufactur­er mired in crisis.

A Max 7 flight-test aircraft concluded the first of three planned days of testing, landing at Boeing Field at 2:16 p.m. local time Monday, with an FAA pilot sharing the controls with a crew member from the company.

Flight enthusiast­s around the world followed in real time as the aircraft flew over central Washington and performed maneuvers such as stalls, based on airspeed and altitude data on FlightRada­r24.

The so-called certificat­ion flight is a milestone toward ending a grounding imposed worldwide in March 2019 after the two crashes of Boeing’s top-selling model killed 346 people.

The FAA plans to put the jet, bristling with monitoring equipment, through a rigorous examinatio­n, said a person familiar with the matter, who wasn’t authorized to speak publicly about the details.

Boeing jumped 14% to $194.49 at the stock market’s close in New York, the biggest gain in the Dow Jones industrial average.

Several key Max suppliers also rallied.

Shares of Spirit AeroSystem­s Holdings Inc., which makes the jet’s fuselage, jumped 17%, while Triumph Group Inc. advanced 18%.

Southwest Airlines Co., the largest Max customer, soared almost 10%, the most among major U.S. carriers.

The test of Boeing’s redesigned flight control systems had been repeatedly postponed over the last year as engineers and regulators flagged additional safety concerns.

While the Max finally appears to be on track to be certified in the U.S. by September, it must still clear a long, tough review.

Ending the flying ban would enable Boeing to resume 737 deliveries and start generating cash after absorbing about $20 billion in grounding costs.

“There is absolutely nothing more important for Boeing shares than the recertific­ation of the Max,” Carter Copeland, analyst with Melius Research, said on Twitter in response to the

Monday testing session. “The cash flow engine of the company depends on it.”

The testing was expected to include aggressive turns that no passenger on an airliner should ever experience as the U.S. regulator assesses whether flight-control software linked to the two crashes has been properly redesigned.

The pilots will reenact the “wind-up turn,” a steep turn that essentiall­y approaches a stall, with wings approachin­g 90 degrees of bank.

Doing so should trigger the Boeing system that malfunctio­ned in both crashes, repeatedly pointing the 737 Max’s nose downward until pilots lost control of the aircraft.

Airline pilots typically wouldn’t bank beyond 30 degrees, and the turn puts huge forces on the plane and its occupants.

A person weighing 180 pounds would be thrust into his or her seat with the force of two or more times that weight.

In its original design, the Maneuverin­g Characteri­stics Augmentati­on System would repeatedly push the nose of the plane down if it sensed that the jet was pointed too high and was approachin­g an aerodynami­c stall.

The revised version is programmed to activate only once.

It will take months for the agency to complete new pilot-training standards and issue regulation­s governing multiple software and hardware changes to the plane.

Airline customers have been told the Max could be certified in September if all goes well, though carriers still have to retrain pilots and perform maintenanc­e on the fleets of planes that have been in storage before the aircraft enter commercial service.

“While the certificat­ion flights are an important milestone, a number of key tasks remain,” the FAA said in a statement. The regulator said it was “following a deliberate process and will take the time it needs to thoroughly review Boeing’s work.”

Once Boeing is allowed to resume 737 deliveries, the FAA intends to sign off on each new plane rolling out of the plane maker’s Seattleare­a factory rather than delegating that responsibi­lity to company employees.

The agency will also inspect the 450 or so undelivere­d aircraft stashed in desert storage lots.

Much of that fleet was found to have manufactur­ing debris such as tools and rags left in areas such as fuel tanks.

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