The Boston Globe

Boeing flags potential delays

Supplier finds another problem Some 737 Max fuselages at issue

- By David Koenig

Boeing discovered another problem in some of its 737 Max fuselages that may delay deliveries of about 50 planes in the latest quality gaffe to plague the giant aircraft manufactur­er.

Boing said late Sunday that an employee of a supplier alerted managers about improperly drilled holes. The head of Boeing’s commercial airplanes division said some planes that have not yet been delivered to airlines will need to be reworked, but he said the issue did not affect the safety of Max jetliners that are already flying.

The revelation of new quality issues involving Boeing planes came as another leading airline executive took aim at the manufactur­er.

The president of Emirates, a major internatio­nal airline based in Dubai, told the Financial Times he has seen a “progressiv­e decline” in Boeing standards, which he blames on management mistakes — including putting financial performanc­e over engineerin­g excellence.

“They have got to instill this safety culture which is second to none,” Tim Clark told the newspaper. “They’ve got to get their manufactur­ing processes under review so there are no corners cut, etc. I’m sure [Boeing chief executive] Dave Calhoun and Stan Deal [chief of Boeing’s commercial airplanes division] are on that ... this is the last chance saloon.”

Clark is the latest industry executive to criticize Boeing, adding to pressure on Calhoun, who became chief executive after Dennis Muilenburg was fired during the fallout from two deadly crashes involving Max 8 planes. In all, 346 people were killed.

The latest quality issue involves two holes that were incorrectl­y drilled in the window frames of some Max jets. The problem was reported by Spirit AeroSystem­s, a major supplier that provides Boeing with fuselages for the Max.

“While this potential condition is not an immediate safety issue and all 737s can continue operating safely, we currently believe we will have to perform rework on about 50 undelivere­d planes,” Deal said in a letter to employees.

Boeing and Spirit AeroSystem­s are facing intense scrutiny over the quality of their work after an Alaska Airlines 737 Max 9 was forced to make an emergency landing on Jan. 5 when a panel called a door plug blew out of the side of the plane shortly after takeoff from

Portland, Ore.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board is investigat­ing the accident, while the Federal Aviation Administra­tion investigat­es whether Boeing and its suppliers followed quality-control procedures.

The NTSB is expected to issue a preliminar­y report on the Alaska Airlines blowout this week.

Shares of The Boeing Co., already down 20 percent this year, slipped another 1.31 percent Monday.

Problems with Boeing jets have opened a potential rift with some of its biggest customers. United Airlines chief executive Scott Kirby said last month that the carrier will consider alternativ­e aircraft in the future. Alaska Airlines chief executive Ben Minicucci said: “I am more than frustrated and disappoint­ed. I am angry.”

Alaska and United Airlines are the only two US carriers flying the Max 9. They reported finding loose hardware in door plugs of other planes they inspected after the accident. The

FAA grounded all Max 9s in the United States the day after the blowout. Two weeks later, the agency approved the inspection and maintenanc­e process to return the planes to flying.

By Monday, 94 percent of the Alaska and United Max 9 had been inspected and cleared to return to service, according to the FAA.

The FAA’s deputy associate administra­tor for aviation safety, Jodi Baker, said Monday that the FAA has stepped up oversight of Boeing’s 737 factory in Renton, Wash. She said the FAA is in the early stages of updating its procedures, including doing more “surveillan­ce” of factory workers instead of relying on “audits” of the manufactur­er’s work.

“We can actually talk to employees and figure out what is motivating them, what are they concerned about,” Baker told reporters, “and that allows us to get a better sense of the safety culture actually at the employee level.”

The accident on the Alaska Max 9 is already affecting Boeing in other ways.

The Arlington, Va.-based company said last week it was withdrawin­g a request for a safety exemption for a new, smaller model of the Max. Boeing had asked the FAA last year to let it begin deliveries of Max 7s before the company redesigned an antiice system.

 ?? NTSB/GETTY IMAGES ?? Plastic covered the fuselage plug area of the Boeing 737 Max 9 used on Alaska Airlines Flight 1282, two days after the Jan. 5 accident.
NTSB/GETTY IMAGES Plastic covered the fuselage plug area of the Boeing 737 Max 9 used on Alaska Airlines Flight 1282, two days after the Jan. 5 accident.
 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Boeing said Sunday that a supplier employee alerted managers about improperly drilled holes in some 737 Max fuselages.
BLOOMBERG Boeing said Sunday that a supplier employee alerted managers about improperly drilled holes in some 737 Max fuselages.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States