Marin Independent Journal

Probe details key questions in Boeing mishap

- By Niraj Chokshi and Mark Walker

Investigat­ors have identified several questions as they try to get to the bottom of what caused a part of a Boeing 737 Max 9 plane to be blown out in midflight Friday, including about how a critical component was installed. Their work is expected to carry on for weeks.

The questions include whether Alaska Airlines, which operated the flight from Portland, Oregon, appropriat­ely handled pressuriza­tion warnings aboard the plane, including two in the two days before the blowout. The investigat­ion, led by the National Transporta­tion Safety Board, is also focusing on the installati­on and inspection of the piece of the plane that was ripped out — a plug where an emergency exit door would have been if the jet had more seats.

“I think investigat­ors are going to be focused on the manufactur­ing process of this particular airplane,” said Jeff Guzzetti, a former investigat­or for the NTSB and the Federal Aviation Administra­tion. “How was this door plug installed or who installed it?”

The door was initially installed by Spirit AeroSystem­s, which makes the body for the 737 Max and other aircraft. Investigat­ors said they were looking into whether any work had been carried out on the door or in that area of the plane since it entered service in November.

United Airlines said Monday afternoon that it had found some loose bolts in door plugs on its Max 9 planes during preliminar­y inspection­s that began over the weekend. The airline said it was still waiting for final FAA approval of the process to begin required inspection­s.

The airline said it had carried out its own inspection­s on most of its Max 9 planes, a process that involves removing two rows of seats and a “sidewall liner,” since Saturday. Each inspection involves five United technician­s working for several hours.

Jennifer Homendy, chair of the NTSB, said investigat­ors had a great deal of work to do, including inspecting the plug, which was recovered from a backyard in Portland. The board will also examine a plug that remained intact on the other side of the plane, interview flight crews and passengers, review maintenanc­e records and repair logs, and conduct laboratory analyses of parts from the plane.

Investigat­ors are also likely to look into whether the installati­on of wireless internet equipment on the plane by a contractor, AAR, between Nov. 27 and Dec. 7 played any part in the pressuriza­tion problems, which emerged after that work was complete. In a statement, AAR said Monday that it “did not perform any work on or near any midcabin exit door plug of that specific aircraft.”

While no serious injuries were reported, the accident could have been far more catastroph­ic, especially if the plane — which had taken off 10 minutes earlier and made an emergency landing back in Portland — had been at a higher altitude, experts said. Homendy said Sunday night that the passengers had included three babies and four unaccompan­ied children between the ages of 5 and 17.

Anthony Brickhouse, a professor of aerospace safety at Embry-Riddle Aeronautic­al University, said a blowout at a cruising altitude of more than 30,000 feet could have been disastrous. “We could have been looking at a situation where more of the structure could have come off and would have been looking at a situation where passengers who weren't strapped in properly would have been blown out because the forces would have been so tremendous,” he said.

Pressuriza­tion starts to affect most commercial planes around 8,000 feet, said Brickhouse, who previously investigat­ed aviation accidents for the safety board. Not properly controllin­g the air entering and leaving the cabin can lead to altitude sickness, or hypoxia, among passengers and the crew.

Hypoxia, a condition

that develops when the brain is deprived of oxygen, can happen on planes without appropriat­e pressuriza­tion when they begin flying above 10,000 feet or suffer rapid decompress­ion, the FAA says. This is why flight attendants tell passengers to use dropdown masks in the event of rapid decompress­ion, Brickhouse said.

The episode has led to hundreds of flight cancellati­ons, particular­ly at Alaska and United Airlines, the two largest operators of the Max 9. The FAA ordered inspection­s of Max 9 planes with configurat­ions similar to the affected jet's, and both airlines parked their Max 9 jets as they awaited further instructio­ns on how to carry out those inspection­s.

Those instructio­ns arrived Monday, though Alaska and United had said they were waiting on additional approval from the

FAA to begin inspection­s.

In a statement, the FAA said the required inspection­s would focus on the plugs, door components and fasteners.

“Our teams have been working diligently — with thorough FAA review — to provide comprehens­ive, technical instructio­ns to operators for the required inspection­s,” Stan Deal, CEO of Boeing's commercial plane unit, and Mike Delaney, the chief aerospace safety officer, said in a message to employees of that unit Monday.

Other airlines with Max 9 planes are outside the United States, such as Copa Airlines of Panama, Turkish Airlines and Icelandair. The European Union's aviation safety agency announced Monday that the Max 9 jets operating in Europe were not grounded because they had a different configurat­ion.

The FAA previously said it would take four to eight hours to inspect each plane. Inspecting the nearly 200 Max 9 planes in the United States, according to the aviation agency, could take a few days.

Aviation regulators and Boeing said the inspection­s were unique to the Max 9 and not other versions of the Max jet. The Max 9, along with the more popular Max 8, was grounded for nearly two years after two crashes of the Max 8 in 2018 and 2019 killed 346 people.

Federal authoritie­s investigat­ing the incident are also looking into what set off pressuriza­tion warnings on the damaged plane during three recent flights. Alaska Airlines workers reset the system, and the plane was put back into service, though the airline restricted it from being used on flights to destinatio­ns such as Hawaii, Homendy said.

In a statement, Alaska said it could not answer many outstandin­g questions about the plane and what had led to the blowout without approval from the safety board. The airline said it had asked the NTSB to share more informatio­n and would do so if allowed. In such investigat­ions, parties are typically restricted in what they can share publicly.

Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun, planned to host a companywid­e safety meeting Tuesday to discuss the company's response to the episode and reaffirm its commitment to safety. Boeing is still working to secure approval of the smaller Max 7 and larger Max 10.

Boeing shares closed down about 8% Monday, and shares of Spirit AeroSystem­s closed down 11%.

 ?? NATIONAL TRANSPORTA­TION SAFETY BOARD VIA AP ?? National Transporta­tion Safety Board investigat­or John Lovell examines the fuselage plug area of Alaska Airlines Flight 1282on Sunday in Portland, Ore. A panel blew out Friday shortly after the flight took off from Portland.
NATIONAL TRANSPORTA­TION SAFETY BOARD VIA AP National Transporta­tion Safety Board investigat­or John Lovell examines the fuselage plug area of Alaska Airlines Flight 1282on Sunday in Portland, Ore. A panel blew out Friday shortly after the flight took off from Portland.

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