USA TODAY US Edition

2 big reasons Boeing 737 Max is still grounded

Company hopes jet will be ready by year’s end

- Chris Woodyard

Boeing is hoping its 737 Max jetliner will win approval to return to the skies by the end of the year, after it was grounded following two crashes. But don’t expect to fly in one just yet.

Entire plane types have been ordered out of service before – the McDonnell Douglas DC-10 in 1979 and Boeing 787 in 2013, for example – but usually only for mechanical or maintenanc­e reasons.

This time, the issue involves rewriting code in the flight computer to handle just about any circumstan­ce.

As if that isn’t enough, there’s the issue of retraining pilots to understand and deal with the changes, which could add days or weeks to the grounding, with aviation authoritie­s in each nation taking their own approach.

It’s not just “an airplane problem, but a problem of the interactio­n between the airplane systems and its pilots,” said Christophe­r Hart, former chairman of the National Transporta­tion Safety Board in a statement last month to the Senate Commerce Committee. “Every country that licenses and trains pilots must be involved in the decisions to ground and to return (its 737 Max planes) to service.”

Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg has predicted at least one of the world’s aviation safety authoritie­s will lift grounding orders by the end of the year. The Federal Aviation Administra­tion, with which Boeing says it is working with closely, would likely be the first.

There’s a good reason, however, why Southwest, United and American airlines have taken the Max off their schedules through the critical holiday travel period. Southwest, in fact, last week pushed back the plane’s expected return to March 6.

While Boeing is testing the rewritten software ahead of an OK from the FAA, no one has disclosed what officials think should be done to instruct pilots on the changes.

The fastest method would be to let pilots review the revisions on training programs they can access from personal computers. But given the outcry over the developmen­t of Boeing’s flight-control program – and the 346 lives lost in two Max crashes – the FAA may require training in simulators.

“At this time, the FAA appears to be leaning toward the computer-based, while other regulators are holding out for full flight simulator training,” said John Cox, a retired USAirways pilot who is now an aviation-safety consultant.

One big problem: At present, few 737 Max simulators exist, which could significan­tly slow down the retraining process. But sometimes pilots are trained on simulators for previous versions of jetliners if the instructio­n can be done in conjunctio­n with computers, according to the European Union Aviation Safety Agency, Europe’s version of the FAA.

Cox said he thinks training on personal computers would be sufficient if pilots can clearly understand changes to the system believed to have factored in the two crashes.

That system, the Maneuverin­g Characteri­stics Augmentati­on System or MCAS, was supposed to work in the background in order to make the 737 Max feel to pilots like previous generation­s of the popular airliner, reducing training costs. Instead, it overrode pilots’ commands on both of the doomed jets and repeatedly pushed the nose of the plane toward the ground. The result: Lion Air Flight 610 crashed in October 2018, and Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 crashed in March.

How’s the Boeing 737 Max different?

The 737 Max uses new engines that allow it to fly farther and use less fuel. Because the engines have a larger diameter, they had to be mounted higher on the wing. That changed the plane’s handling characteri­stics under some circumstan­ces.

How did Boeing compensate for the new engines?

It introduced a new software feature, the Maneuverin­g Characteri­stics Augmentati­on System, or MCAS, that was meant to kick in under certain circumstan­ces to make the plane fly like previous versions of the 737. The system was intended to operate in such a subtle way that pilots would not realize it was there.

What went wrong?

What started as a subtle system to keep the plane properly trimmed was made to act more aggressive­ly after testing. Even if the pilots tried to override, the software system could kick back in repeatedly. That’s what happened when the Lion Air jet crashed, taking 189 to their deaths in the Java Sea. It was later revealed that details of MCAS were not included in Boeing’s 737 Max flight manual, so pilots wouldn’t have known about it.

What happened then?

Boeing revealed details of the system. But in March, Ethiopian Airlines jet crashed after takeoff from Addis Ababa, killing 157. Once again, pilots were unable to overcome the MCAS system despite desperate attempts to keep the plane aloft, leading to the crash. Several internatio­nal aviation agencies ordered the Max grounded. The FAA didn’t join them at first, then acquiesced.

What did Boeing do about the it?

Boeing has redesigned MCAS so it only actuates a single time and can be easily disengaged. Boeing’s engineers also have revised the system so it will take readings from both of the plane’s angle-of-attack sensors, not just a single one as originally designed. These changes are under review by the FAA.

What has the government done?

There have been several investigat­ions and House and Senate hearings. An NTSB report said planes’ crews were confronted with several cockpit alarms simultaneo­usly that would have been hard to sort out, raising the issue of confusion. Another review from the FAA, NASA and internatio­nal aviation authoritie­s raised questions about how much the FAA passed off its inspection­s to Boeing employees.

 ?? THE MOTLEY FOOL ?? Boeing is hoping its 737 Max jetliner will win approval to return to the skies by the end of the year, after it was grounded following two crashes.
THE MOTLEY FOOL Boeing is hoping its 737 Max jetliner will win approval to return to the skies by the end of the year, after it was grounded following two crashes.

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