FAA grounds 737 Max 9 Aircraft Indefinitely after Alaska Airlines incident

What makes you say that? Production of the 320NEO and the 350 aren't exactly related.
Several reasons as Airbus is regularly missing it's targeted production numbers. it predicted 10 A350s a month in 2022 and delivered 5. currently at 6 a month with a prediction it will go to 9 a month in 2025. They have missed their production targets in the last 4 years.

And the leasing companies are predicting delays in Airbus deliveries.
 
Several reasons as Airbus is regularly missing it's targeted production numbers. it predicted 10 A350s a month in 2022 and delivered 5. currently at 6 a month with a prediction it will go to 9 a month in 2025. They have missed their production targets in the last 4 years.

And the leasing companies are predicting delays in Airbus deliveries.
I suspect Airbus is being clever about how its arranging delivery schedules. Like QF getting 2 of the a220s now early then the rest will slowly come in over the next few years.

I suspect we'll see something similar with sunrise. 2-3 planes relatively on-time so that QF can have it's PR and launch event etc. Get all the fanfare launching the new planes then the rest of the fleet order slowly trickle in a while later.
 
I suspect we'll see something similar with sunrise. 2-3 planes relatively on-time so that QF can have it's PR and launch event etc. Get all the fanfare launching the new planes then the rest of the fleet order slowly trickle in a while later.
You don't want too slow a trickle, nor do you want only two at the start. You need enough to get the system running, training happening, and to allow for the inevitable down time. On the other hand, it will take time for the recipient to find the money....
 
Sigh - Non public hearings means lies and omissions are gotten away with. In the days past a Motorola QA would have pinpointed this immediately, and identified who made the QA change. Just read the border control people in the USA have made suggestions to fix things, but the head is an appointee knows 'on the ground' suggestions may create extra work and extra costs. Head in the sand works for many. As the same fault was found in many other planes - the fault is systemic - not a one off.
 
One of the faults of American style capitalism where you discount future risks for immediate returns this quarter, and deal with sh#t when it happens rather than prevent that sh#t from happening in the first place. Important that CEOs get their bonuses, more important than anything else.

Many companies live and breathe by their quarterly results and to hell with what happens tomorrow. I’ve worked for American companies for 20 years and time and time again you see that taking a small hit one quarter (through an investment or maintaining cost structure or forgoing a small amount of revenue) could save a whole stack of grief and 10/100 millions in McKinsey fees a few years later. But those choices seem to be rarely made.
 
Sigh - Non public hearings means lies and omissions are gotten away with. In the days past a Motorola QA would have pinpointed this immediately, and identified who made the QA change. Just read the border control people in the USA have made suggestions to fix things, but the head is an appointee knows 'on the ground' suggestions may create extra work and extra costs. Head in the sand works for many. As the same fault was found in many other planes - the fault is systemic - not a one off.
🧐. Umm…

Hey @ethernet, is there an English translation of this post somewhere?
I can understand the individual words and even groups of them, but the sentences don’t seem to make sense.
 
Oh dear…..


Door panel which flew off Boeing 737 MAX missing four key bolts, NTSB report finds​


Photo evidence released Tuesday shows bolts were missing from the door plug, which had been removed to fix rivets which were damaged in the production process, according to the independent US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) report.

 
Was just reading this on SMH, as well. Although shocking that a frame could go back into service without the bolts put back on the door/plug (which will of course never happen again to any such part), I am oddly comforted by the fact it still completed however many flights it did without incident until AS1282 finally occurred! I can only see 3 months of history from today from FlightAware, but even from the 2nd week of November to AS1282 on the 5th Jan it completed upwards of 140 flights.
 
It would appear that the problem is because someone marked the plug as "opened" and not "removed", even though the process for both in regards to the plug door is the same.
Then since it was "opened", the "closed" process doesn't require them to check the bolts are in place.

They need to change the processes so that a plug door can only be "removed" and never "opened".
 
A very detailed description of the door plug incident, especially the crew emergency response, from Mentour Pilot earlier today:
 
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Didn't Boeing just fail a significantly large amount of FAA QA audit checks as well?
 
it appears the the most humane thing to do would be to put the MAX down. There’s none and Buckley’s chance of that though.
 

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