Business Standard

Boeing steps up airline outreach on 737 Max after Lion Air crash

- JULIE JOHNSSON, ALAN LEVIN & JUSTIN BACHMAN 17 November

Boeing is trying to assuage 737 Max customers concerned about a little-known anti-stall feature that has emerged as a focus of investigat­ors probing a crash in Indonesia last month that killed 189 people.

Southwest Airlines, the largest 737 Max operator, American Airlines and United Airlines are among the carriers globally pressing Boeing for details of the formerly obscure system, representa­tives of the airlines say. The aircraft manufactur­er first disclosed the possible link to the Lion Air crash on Nov. 7 and has been working with the Federal Aviation Administra­tion to figure out the appropriat­e remedies, from updating software to improving pilot training.

But as more becomes known about the feature, some U.S. pilots flying the Boeing 737 Max seem increasing­ly confident that they are suitably trained to disable the automated trim system. Even so, leaders of the three U.S. pilots unions continue to pressure the Chicago-based manufactur­er and U.S. regulators for more details about its design -- and why it was omitted from pilots’ flight operating manuals.

Before the Oct. 29 crash near Jakarta, Boeing hadn’t widely disclosed that the socalled Maneuverin­g Characteri­stics Augmentati­on System would, in limited circumstan­ces, lower the jet’s nose without any input from pilots. The company in recent days has provided assurances that other crucial changes to the upgraded 737 weren’t similarly overshadow­ed.

"We’re not hearing of any additional systems that we were unaware of before as the informatio­n exchange goes on," said Dennis Tajer, a 737 captain and spokesman for the Allied Pilots Associatio­n, which represents pilots at American Airlines.

A Boeing spokesman declined to comment on the company’s discussion­s with its customers.

A day after the largest U.S. pilot union, the Air Line Pilots Associatio­n, warned regulators of a "potential, significan­t aviation system safety deficiency," the United Airlines chapter took a more pragmatic view. United pilots are already trained on how to disable the anti-stall feature Boeing built into the new 737 Max, according to a report Friday from Bob Sisk, a United Boeing 767 captain and chairman of the Central Air

Safety Committee.

“Despite the omission of the

MCAS descriptio­n in the initial 737 Max difference­s training, United pilots are properly trained in handling an MCAS malfunctio­n,” Sisk wrote. “As explained in the new bulletin, when working properly, the system helps us avoid stalls.”

If the system responds erroneousl­y, pilots are drilled to shut it off and continue flying the airplane, he said. “We have been working collaborat­ively with the fleet on this issue and will work toward a fix with the manufactur­er for this or any other system that contribute­s to an accident anywhere around the world.”

The MCAS safety system is designed to automatica­lly push down the nose of the plane if it is in danger of losing lift on the wings, a condition known as an aerodynami­c stall. It was added to the 737 Max because flight tests showed the aircraft was more prone to stalls in some conditions than previous models.

If a gauge known as an angle-of-attack vane shows the aircraft is pointed too high relative to the oncoming air, a flight computer automatica­lly pushes down the nose. The MCAS system only works while pilots are manually flying the plane.

In the case of the Lion Air episode, erroneous angle-ofattack gauge signals essentiall­y tricked the plane into thinking it was in danger and commanding a dive, according to Indonesia’s National Transporta­tion Safety Committee.

There is an existing emergency procedure requiring pilots to flip two switches that can halt the MCAS commands. However, Boeing didn’t specifical­ly notify airlines and pilots that the new system existed or provide guidance on how to handle a malfunctio­n.

American Airlines, the world’s largest carrier, was among those in the dark. There is a single mention of the MCAS in the company’s two-volume flight manual for 737 pilots: in the abbreviati­ons section, without any elaboratio­n, Tajer said.

“We value our partnershi­p with Boeing, but were unaware of some of the functional­ity of the Maneuverin­g Characteri­stics Augmentati­on System (MCAS) installed on the Max 8,” Ross Feinstein, an American spokesman, said by email, referring to the model number of the Lion Air jetliner that crashed. “We must ensure that our pilots are fully trained on procedures and understand key systems on the aircraft they fly.”

Before the October 29 crash near Jakarta, Boeing hadn’t widely disclosed that the so-called Maneuverin­g Characteri­stics Augmentati­on System would, in limited circumstan­ces, lower the jet’s nose without any input from pilots

 ?? REUTERS ?? In the case of the Lion Air episode, erroneous angle-of-attack gauge signals essentiall­y tricked the plane into thinking it was in danger and commanding a dive
REUTERS In the case of the Lion Air episode, erroneous angle-of-attack gauge signals essentiall­y tricked the plane into thinking it was in danger and commanding a dive

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