Los Angeles Times

Boeing is told to redo 737 Max plan

- By Alan Levin Levin writes for Bloomberg.

Regulators overseeing changes on Boeing Co.’s 737 Max rejected an audit of how the software was being developed, prompting the company to make revisions and possibly slowing the return of the jetliner to service, according to a person familiar with the action.

The issue with Boeing ’s audit was brought up in recent days at a meeting in a Collins Aerospace Systems facility in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, attended by officials from the Federal Aviation Administra­tion and the European Aviation Safety Agency, the person said.

Boeing and Collins — a United Technologi­es Corp. division that developed computer automation on the 737 Max — are making changes to a safety feature on the jet that was involved in two fatal crashes of the plane that killed a total of 346 people. As a result of testing in recent months, Boeing is also undertakin­g a more complex revision of how the flight computers on the plane function.

Full audit results are required before final simulator tests of the changes can be conducted. Depending on how long it takes to satisfy FAA and European regulators, it might push back a certificat­ion flight test and regulators’ decision on lifting the flight ban by days or even weeks.

Boeing said it provided technical documents to regulators “in a format consistent with past submission­s” but “regulators have requested that the informatio­n be conveyed in a different form, and the documentat­ion is being revised accordingl­y.” “While this happens we continue to work with the FAA and global regulators on certificat­ion of the software for safe return of the Max to service.”

European Aviation Safety Agency spokeswoma­n Janet Northcote said that after the Iowa meeting, her agency’s executive director, Patrick Ky, said: “We think there is still some work to be done.”

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