The Free Press Journal

737 Max: Debris found in fuel tanks

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Boeing said Tuesday that it found debris contaminat­ing the fuel tanks of some 737 Max jets that it built in the past year but was unable to deliver to airline customers.

A Boeing official said the debris was discovered in “several” planes but did not give a precise number. Boeing built about 400 undelivere­d Max jets before it temporaril­y halted production last month.

The fuel tank debris was discovered during maintenanc­e on parked planes, and Boeing said it immediatel­y made correction­s in its production system to prevent a recurrence. Those steps include more inspection­s before fuel tanks are sealed.

A Boeing spokesman said that the issue would not change the company’s belief that the Federal Aviation Administra­tion will certify the plane to fly again this summer.

An FAA spokesman said the agency knows that Boeing is conducting a voluntary inspection of undelivere­d Max planes.

The FAA “increased its surveillan­ce based on initial inspection reports and will take further action based on the findings,” said spokesman Lynn Lunsford.

Metal shavings, tools and other objects left in planes during assembly can raise the risk of electrical short-circuiting and fires.

Mark Jenks, Boeing’s general manager of the 737 program, said in a memo to employees who work on the 737, “During these challengin­g times, our customers and the flying public are counting on us to do our best work each and every day.”

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