关于波音坠机:新的消息来了

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狮航坠机的前一天,另一架狮航737MAX差点坠机。当执飞机长不知所错时,被搭机度假的另一位狮航飞行员判断出问题所在,告诉机长如何应对,从而避免了坠机。而这一过程,居然没有在印尼11月的事故报告中提及。

俗话说:难者不会,会者不难。同样一个知识,为什么同一个航空公司的飞行员会有的知道有的不知道呢?如果狮航坠机也是同一原因,那么

(1)狮航至少有两个飞行员没有这个知识,一个飞行员有这个知识。
(2)接连两天发生,说明这或者和狮航有关,或者不是极小几率事件。如果不是小几率事件,那么大机队(如中国有近百架,美国西北航空一家就有三十多架737MAX)的飞行员是如何应对的?

报道链接:
Pilot Who Hitched a Ride Saved Lion Air 737 Day Before Deadly Crash
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...in-cockpit-saved-a-737-max-that-later-crashed
 
最后编辑:
所以要优先安排航空公司员工搭乘。:)
 
波音公司737 Max 8型客機5個月內先後歷經印尼獅航JT610與衣索比亞航空ET302等2起空難,但《彭博》20日報導,在JT610空難發生前,獅航另一架波音737 Max 8型客機其實也遇上類似狀況,所幸當時有一位未執飛機師在場,成功找出正確應對方式,避免災難發生。

有兩位消息人士表示,這班飛機從峇里島飛往雅加達時遇上飛航控制系統故障,恰巧在場的第三名機師告訴執飛機師,切斷迫使機鼻向下的馬達電力,從而保住整架飛機。就在隔天,由另外一組機師執飛的JT610遇上相同事故,最後墜毀於爪哇海,機上189人全數喪命。

根據報導,這一位機師是坐在駕駛艙後座(jumpseat)的「免費乘客」(dead-head),即獲派搭乘公司航班前往指定目的地待命的非執飛機組員。消息此前並未曝光,印尼國家運輸安全委員會去年11月底公開的報告也沒有提到此事。

《彭博》指出,這個事前未曾公開的案例細節可望提供新線索,解答部分波音737 Max 8型機師如何避免空難發生,遇上空難的機師卻又不知道如何處理。

《紐約時報》在獅航空難後報導,波音公司對類似情況發出機組員操作手冊公告,指示機師可將一對STAB Trim電門切到Cut Out,解除驅動水平安定面(Stabilizers)上下的馬達電力控制,避免防失速系統控制客機飛行姿勢,最後再由其中一位機師搖動水平安定面配平輪(Stabilizer TRIM Wheel),用手動方式讓飛機回穩。

《Inside Edition》採訪的退休民航機師艾默(Ross Aimer)在模擬飛行中示範了這個動作,成功挽救了下墜的飛機。他表示,衣航ET302班機進入了「死亡下墜」,機師不管怎麼做都無力回天。

美國聯邦運輸部部長趙小蘭已要求該部督察長(Inspector General)審計聯邦航空管理局(FAA)對波音737 Max 8型客機發出適航認證的程序,波音公司已聲明全面配合。

https://udn.com/news/story/12886/3708138?from=udn_ch2cate7225sub12886_pulldownmenu
 
美国联邦航空管理局在调查,黑盒子的信息也导出来了,会有结果的。
 
US Justice Department prosecutors have issued multiple subpoenas as part of an investigation into Boeing's Federal Aviation Administration certification and marketing of 737 Max planes, sources briefed on the matter told CNN.

波音和FAA都跑不了。
 
US Justice Department prosecutors have issued multiple subpoenas as part of an investigation into Boeing's Federal Aviation Administration certification and marketing of 737 Max , sources briefed on the matter told CNN.

波音和FAA都跑不了。
还是钱伯伯手段厉害,你不得不服。
波音的软件外包给三哥,FAA 的验证外包给波音,波音的高管步入白宫。
 
最后编辑:
Flawed analysis, failed oversight: How Boeing, FAA certified the suspect 737 MAX flight control system
March 17, 2019 at 6:00 am Updated March 19, 2019 at 2:25 pm



By
Dominic Gates
Seattle Times aerospace reporter


As Boeing hustled in 2015 to catch up to Airbus and certify its new 737 MAX, Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) managers pushed the agency’s safety engineers to delegate safety assessments to Boeing itself, and to speedily approve the resulting analysis.

But the original safety analysis that Boeing delivered to the FAA for a new flight control system on the MAX — a report used to certify the plane as safe to fly — had several crucial flaws.

That flight control system, called MCAS (Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System), is now under scrutiny after two crashes of the jet in less than five months resulted in Wednesday’s FAA order to ground the plane.

Current and former engineers directly involved with the evaluations or familiar with the document shared details of Boeing’s “System Safety Analysis” of MCAS, which The Seattle Times confirmed.

The safety analysis:

  • Understated the power of the new flight control system, which was designed to swivel the horizontal tail to push the nose of the plane down to avert a stall. When the planes later entered service, MCAS was capable of moving the tail more than four times farther than was stated in the initial safety analysis document.
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  • Failed to account for how the system could reset itself each time a pilot responded, thereby missing the potential impact of the system repeatedly pushing the airplane’s nose downward.
  • Assessed a failure of the system as one level below “catastrophic.” But even that “hazardous” danger level should have precluded activation of the system based on input from a single sensor — and yet that’s how it was designed.
The people who spoke to The Seattle Times and shared details of the safety analysis all spoke on condition of anonymity to protect their jobs at the FAA and other aviation organizations.

Both Boeing and the FAA were informed of the specifics of this story and were asked for responses 11 days ago, before the second crash of a 737 MAX last Sunday.

Late Friday, the FAA said it followed its standard certification process on the MAX. Citing a busy week, a spokesman said the agency was “unable to delve into any detailed inquiries.”

Boeing responded Saturday with a statement that “the FAA considered the final configuration and operating parameters of MCAS during MAX certification, and concluded that it met all certification and regulatory requirements.”

Adding that it is “unable to comment … because of the ongoing investigation” into the crashes, Boeing did not respond directly to the detailed description of the flaws in MCAS certification, beyond saying that “there are some significant mischaracterizations.”

Several technical experts inside the FAA said October’s Lion Air crash, where the MCAS has been clearly implicated by investigators in Indonesia, is only the latest indicator that the agency’s delegation of airplane certification has gone too far, and that it’s inappropriate for Boeing employees to have so much authority over safety analyses of Boeing jets.

“We need to make sure the FAA is much more engaged in failure assessments and the assumptions that go into them,” said one FAA safety engineer.

Certifying a new flight control system
Going against a long Boeing tradition of giving the pilot complete control of the aircraft, the MAX’s new MCAS automatic flight control system was designed to act in the background, without pilot input.

It was needed because the MAX’s much larger engines had to be placed farther forward on the wing, changing the airframe’s aerodynamic lift.

Designed to activate automatically only in the extreme flight situation of a high-speed stall, this extra kick downward of the nose would make the plane feel the same to a pilot as the older-model 737s.

MCAS-MAX-737-sensor-W-780x520.jpg

Boeing engineers authorized to work on behalf of the FAA developed the System Safety Analysis for MCAS, a document which in turn was shared with foreign air-safety regulators in Europe, Canada and elsewhere in the world.

The document, “developed to ensure the safe operation of the 737 MAX,” concluded that the system complied with all applicable FAA regulations.

Yet black box data retrieved after the Lion Air crash indicates that a single faulty sensor — a vane on the outside of the fuselage that measures the plane’s “angle of attack,” the angle between the airflow and the wing — triggered MCAS multiple times during the deadly flight, initiating a tug of war as the system repeatedly pushed the nose of the plane down and the pilots wrestled with the controls to pull it back up, before the final crash.

On Wednesday, when announcing the grounding of the 737 MAX, the FAA cited similarities in the flight trajectory of the Lion Air flight and the crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 last Sunday.

Investigators also found the Ethiopian plane’s jackscrew, a part that moves the horizontal tail of the aircraft, and it indicated that the jet’s horizontal tail was in an unusual position — with MCAS as one possible reason for that.

Investigators are working to determine if MCAS could be the cause of both crashes.

03152019_NEW_737Photos_185537-1020x429.jpg

Boeing 737 MAX planes sit in a row last week behind the Renton plant on the south shore of Lake Washington. (Mike Siegel / The Seattle Times)
Delegated to Boeing
The FAA, citing lack of funding and resources, has over the years delegated increasing authority to Boeing to take on more of the work of certifying the safety of its own airplanes.

Early on in certification of the 737 MAX, the FAA safety engineering team divided up the technical assessments that would be delegated to Boeing versus those they considered more critical and would be retained within the FAA.

“There wasn’t a complete and proper review of the documents,” the former engineer added. “Review was rushed to reach certain certification dates.”

But several FAA technical experts said in interviews that as certification proceeded, managers prodded them to speed the process. Development of the MAX was lagging nine months behind the rival Airbus A320neo. Time was of the essence for Boeing.

A former FAA safety engineer who was directly involved in certifying the MAX said that halfway through the certification process, “we were asked by management to re-evaluate what would be delegated. Management thought we had retained too much at the FAA.”

“There was constant pressure to re-evaluate our initial decisions,” the former engineer said. “And even after we had reassessed it … there was continued discussion by management about delegating even more items down to the Boeing Company.”

Even the work that was retained, such as reviewing technical documents provided by Boeing, was sometimes curtailed.

“There wasn’t a complete and proper review of the documents,” the former engineer added. “Review was rushed to reach certain certification dates.”

When time was too short for FAA technical staff to complete a review, sometimes managers either signed off on the documents themselves or delegated their review back to Boeing.

“The FAA managers, not the agency technical experts, have final authority on delegation,” the engineer said.

Inaccurate limit
In this atmosphere, the System Safety Analysis on MCAS, just one piece of the mountain of documents needed for certification, was delegated to Boeing.

The original Boeing document provided to the FAA included a description specifying a limit to how much the system could move the horizontal tail — a limit of 0.6 degrees, out of a physical maximum of just less than 5 degrees of nose-down movement.

That limit was later increased after flight tests showed that a more powerful movement of the tail was required to avert a high-speed stall, when the plane is in danger of losing lift and spiraling down.

The behavior of a plane in a high angle-of-attack stall is difficult to model in advance purely by analysis and so, as test pilots work through stall-recovery routines during flight tests on a new airplane, it’s not uncommon to tweak the control software to refine the jet’s performance.

After the Lion Air Flight 610 crash, Boeing for the first time provided to airlines details about MCAS. Boeing’s bulletin to the airlines stated that the limit of MCAS’s command was 2.5 degrees.

That number was new to FAA engineers who had seen 0.6 degrees in the safety assessment.

“The FAA believed the airplane was designed to the 0.6 limit, and that’s what the foreign regulatory authorities thought, too,” said an FAA engineer. “It makes a difference in your assessment of the hazard involved.”

The higher limit meant that each time MCAS was triggered, it caused a much greater movement of the tail than was specified in that original safety analysis document.

The former FAA safety engineer who worked on the MAX certification, and a former Boeing flight controls engineer who worked on the MAX as an authorized representative of the FAA, both said that such safety analyses are required to be updated to reflect the most accurate aircraft information following flight tests.

“The numbers should match whatever design was tested and fielded,” said the former FAA engineer.

But both said that sometimes agreements were made to update documents only at some later date.

“It’s possible the latest numbers wouldn’t be in there, as long as it was reviewed and they concluded the differences wouldn’t change the conclusions or the severity of the hazard assessment,” said the former Boeing flight controls engineer.

If the final safety analysis document was updated in parts, it certainly still contained the 0.6 limit in some places and the update was not widely communicated within the FAA technical evaluation team.

“None of the engineers were aware of a higher limit,” said a second current FAA engineer.

The discrepancy over this number is magnified by another element in the System Safety Analysis: The limit of the system’s authority to move the tail applies each time MCAS is triggered. And it can be triggered multiple times, as it was on the Lion Air flight.

One current FAA safety engineer said that every time the pilots on the Lion Air flight reset the switches on their control columns to pull the nose back up, MCAS would have kicked in again and “allowed new increments of 2.5 degrees.”

“So once they pushed a couple of times, they were at full stop,” meaning at the full extent of the tail swivel, he said.

Peter Lemme, a former Boeing flight controls engineer who is now an avionics and satellite-communications consultant, said that because MCAS reset each time it was used, “it effectively has unlimited authority.”

Swiveling the horizontal tail, which is technically called the stabilizer, to the end stop gives the airplane’s nose the maximum possible push downward.

“It had full authority to move the stabilizer the full amount,” Lemme said. “There was no need for that. Nobody should have agreed to giving it unlimited authority.”

On the Lion Air flight, when the MCAS pushed the jet’s nose down, the captain pulled it back up, using thumb switches on the control column. Still operating under the false angle-of-attack reading, MCAS kicked in each time to swivel the horizontal tail and push the nose down again.

The black box data released in the preliminary investigation report shows that after this cycle repeated 21 times, the plane’s captain ceded control to the first officer. As MCAS pushed the nose down two or three times more, the first officer responded with only two short flicks of the thumb switches.

At a limit of 2.5 degrees, two cycles of MCAS without correction would have been enough to reach the maximum nose-down effect.

In the final seconds, the black box data shows the captain resumed control and pulled back up with high force. But it was too late. The plane dived into the sea at more than 500 miles per hour.

03152019_NEW_737Photos_185538-1020x699.jpg

Recovery work continues around the crater where the Ethiopian Airlines plane crashed shortly after takeoff last week near Bishoftu, southeast of Addis Ababa. Flight data analysis is yielding clues about the cause of the crash. (Yidnek Kirubel / The Associated Press)
System failed on a single sensor
The bottom line of Boeing’s System Safety Analysis with regard to MCAS was that, in normal flight, an activation of MCAS to the maximum assumed authority of 0.6 degrees was classified as only a “major failure,” meaning that it could cause physical distress to people on the plane, but not death.

In the case of an extreme maneuver, specifically when the plane is in a banked descending spiral, an activation of MCAS was classified as a “hazardous failure,” meaning that it could cause serious or fatal injuries to a small number of passengers. That’s still one level below a “catastrophic failure,” which represents the loss of the plane with multiple fatalities.

The former Boeing flight controls engineer who worked on the MAX’s certification on behalf of the FAA said that whether a system on a jet can rely on one sensor input, or must have two, is driven by the failure classification in the system safety analysis.

He said virtually all equipment on any commercial airplane, including the various sensors, is reliable enough to meet the “major failure” requirement, which is that the probability of a failure must be less than one in 100,000. Such systems are therefore typically allowed to rely on a single input sensor.

But when the consequences are assessed to be more severe, with a “hazardous failure” requirement demanding a more stringent probability of one in 10 million, then a system typically must have at least two separate input channels in case one goes wrong.

Boeing’s System Safety Analysis assessment that the MCAS failure would be “hazardous” troubles former flight controls engineer Lemme because the system is triggered by the reading from a single angle-of-attack sensor.

“A hazardous failure mode depending on a single sensor, I don’t think passes muster,” said Lemme.

Like all 737s, the MAX actually has two of the sensors, one on each side of the fuselage near the cockpit. But the MCAS was designed to take a reading from only one of them.

Lemme said Boeing could have designed the system to compare the readings from the two vanes, which would have indicated if one of them was way off.

Alternatively, the system could have been designed to check that the angle-of-attack reading was accurate while the plane was taxiing on the ground before takeoff, when the angle of attack should read zero.

“They could have designed a two-channel system. Or they could have tested the value of angle of attack on the ground,” said Lemme. “I don’t know why they didn’t.”

The black box data provided in the preliminary investigation report shows that readings from the two sensors differed by some 20 degrees not only throughout the flight but also while the airplane taxied on the ground before takeoff.

No training, no information
After the Lion Air crash, 737 MAX pilots around the world were notified about the existence of MCAS and what to do if the system is triggered inappropriately.

Boeing insists that the pilots on the Lion Air flight should have recognized that the horizontal stabilizer was moving uncommanded, and should have responded with a standard pilot checklist procedure to handle what’s called “stabilizer runaway.”

If they’d done so, the pilots would have hit cutoff switches and deactivated the automatic stabilizer movement.

Boeing has pointed out that the pilots flying the same plane on the day before the crash experienced similar behavior to Flight 610 and did exactly that: They threw the stabilizer cutoff switches, regained control and continued with the rest of the flight.

However, pilots and aviation experts say that what happened on the Lion Air flight doesn’t look like a standard stabilizer runaway, because that is defined as continuous uncommanded movement of the tail.

On the accident flight, the tail movement wasn’t continuous; the pilots were able to counter the nose-down movement multiple times.

In addition, the MCAS altered the control column response to the stabilizer movement. Pulling back on the column normally interrupts any stabilizer nose-down movement, but with MCAS operating that control column function was disabled.

These differences certainly could have confused the Lion Air pilots as to what was going on.

Since MCAS was supposed to activate only in extreme circumstances far outside the normal flight envelope, Boeing decided that 737 pilots needed no extra training on the system — and indeed that they didn’t even need to know about it. It was not mentioned in their flight manuals.

That stance allowed the new jet to earn a common “type rating” with existing 737 models, allowing airlines to minimize training of pilots moving to the MAX.

Dennis Tajer, a spokesman for the Allied Pilots Association at American Airlines, said his training on moving from the old 737 NG model cockpit to the new 737 MAX consisted of little more than a one-hour session on an iPad, with no simulator training.

Minimizing MAX pilot transition training was an important cost saving for Boeing’s airline customers, a key selling point for the jet, which has racked up more than 5,000 orders.

The company’s website pitched the jet to airlines with a promise that “as you build your 737 MAX fleet, millions of dollars will be saved because of its commonality with the Next-Generation 737.”

In the aftermath of the crash, officials at the unions for both American and Southwest Airlines pilots criticized Boeing for providing no information about MCAS, or its possible malfunction, in the 737 MAX pilot manuals.

An FAA safety engineer said the lack of prior information could have been crucial in the Lion Air crash.

Since MCAS was supposed to activate only in extreme circumstances far outside the normal flight envelope, Boeing decided that 737 pilots needed no extra training on the system.
Boeing’s safety analysis of the system assumed that “the pilots would recognize what was happening as a runaway and cut off the switches,” said the engineer. “The assumptions in here are incorrect. The human factors were not properly evaluated.”

03152019_NEW_737Photos_1855402-1020x680.jpg

The cockpit of a grounded Lion Air 737 MAX 8 jet is seen at Soekarno-Hatta International Airport in Cengkareng, Indonesia, last week. The crash of an Ethiopian Airlines plane bore similarities to the Oct. 29... (Dimas Ardian / Bloomberg) More
On Monday, before the grounding of the 737 MAX, Boeing outlined “a flight control software enhancement for the 737 MAX,” that it’s been developing since soon after the Lion Air crash.

According to a detailed FAA briefing to legislators, Boeing will change the MCAS software to give the system input from both angle-of-attack sensors.

It will also limit how much MCAS can move the horizontal tail in response to an erroneous signal. And when activated, the system will kick in only for one cycle, rather than multiple times.

Boeing also plans to update pilot training requirements and flight crew manuals to include MCAS.

These proposed changes mirror the critique made by the safety engineers in this story. They had spoken to The Seattle Times before the Ethiopian crash.

The FAA said it will mandate Boeing’s software fix in an airworthiness directive no later than April.

Facing legal actions brought by the families of those killed, Boeing will have to explain why those fixes were not part of the original system design. And the FAA will have to defend its certification of the system as safe.

03152019_NEW_737Photos_185540-1020x479.jpg

Seven weeks after it rolled out of the paint hangar, Boeing’s first 737 MAX‚ the Spirit of Renton‚ flies for the first time Jan. 29, 2016, from Renton Municipal Airport. (Mike Siegel / The Seattle Times)

https://www.seattletimes.com/busine...-max-system-implicated-in-the-lion-air-crash/
 
美国防部代理部长因“偏袒波音”面临内部调查
2019-03-21 12:15:41 来源: 新华网

  新华社华盛顿3月20日电(记者孙丁 刘阳)美国国防部督察长办公室20日宣布,已启动对国防部代理部长帕特里克·沙纳汉的调查,理由是他被指曾偏袒老东家波音公司、有违职业道德。

  美国国防部督察长办公室发言人德雷娜·艾伦当天说,近期收到投诉称,沙纳汉曾发表宣扬其前雇主波音公司、同时贬低波音竞争对手的言论,涉嫌违反职业道德和行为准则。国防部已告知沙纳汉,相关调查已启动。

  本月早些时候,一家位于华盛顿哥伦比亚特区的独立监督机构向国防部投诉,理由是有报道称沙纳汉担任国防部副部长时曾在内部会议上贬低洛克希德-马丁公司,同时标榜波音公司。

  据美国政客新闻网今年1月报道,沙纳汉曾抨击洛克希德-马丁公司的F-35联合攻击战斗机项目,并指责该公司不会管理项目。

  沙纳汉现年56岁,他在2017年3月被美国总统特朗普提名为国防部副部长并于当年7月上任。去年底,他被特朗普任命为国防部代理部长。沙纳汉曾供职波音超过30年。

  洛克希德-马丁和波音是美国最大的两家防务承包商。波音公司近日因波音737 MAX系列飞机安全性问题受到各方密切关注。
 
美国要查波音737 MAX 8认证过程 欧加不放心
2019-03-21 06:51:33 来源: 新华网

  美国交通部19日确认,交通部督察长办公室将审核美国联邦航空局对波音公司737 MAX系列客机的认证过程。

  美国司法部已经先行介入波音客机安全监管调查。737 MAX 8型客机5个月内连续发生两起空难,致大约350人殒命。

  波音同一天宣布两项人事调整,以应对监管调查。

  不过,欧洲联盟和加拿大坚持对波音客机作独立调查。


  【多方介入】

  美联社报道,美国交通部长赵小兰19日致信交通部督察长卡尔文·斯科韦尔,正式要求审核波音737 MAX 8客机获得认证的过程,以澄清“客观和详尽事实”。

  作为政府监管机构,美国联邦航空局接受交通部管辖。信件说,审核有助于联邦航空局“确保有效执行安全流程”。

  波音同一天回应说,将全力配合审核。

  另据路透社报道,国会众议院运输和基础设施委员会主席彼得·德法齐奥和成员里克·拉森19日对斯科韦尔提出类似要求。这两名民主党人要求审核联邦航空局为什么决定“不修改飞行员培训项目和手册,以反映起关键作用的飞行自动化系统所作调整”。

  美国司法部已经先行着手调查波音接受联邦航空局监管的情况。一名知情人士18日披露,美国首都华盛顿一个大陪审团已向参与波音737 MAX系列客机开发的某人发出传票,要求后者提供电子邮件、信息和通信文件。

  美国国会打算最早下周就两起空难举行听证会,联邦航空局代理局长丹尼尔·埃尔韦尔等政府官员出席。

  美国媒体先前曝光,联邦航空局为减少开支,2009年起把自身承担的部分检验业务“授权”由飞机制造商或第三方专业机构承担。波音737 MAX客机的部分安全检验程序由波音工程师操作。

  另外,联邦航空局局长一职过去14个月一直空缺。美国总统唐纳德·特朗普19日提名斯蒂芬·迪克森出任这一职务。迪克森在达美航空公司供职27年,任航班运营业务高级副总裁,去年10月退休。

  【波音自纠】

  波音同一天宣布,对商用飞机部门作人事调整。先前兼任部门副总裁和首席工程师的约翰·汉密尔顿将只担任首席工程师,以“全力投入正在进行中的事故调查”。

  先前在波音工程、测试和技术组出任测试和评估负责人的琳恩·霍珀将接替汉密尔顿出任主管工程的副总裁。

  路透社分析,上述人事调整显现波音作为世界最大飞机制造商尽力在应对调查的同时维持737系列客机生产。

  全球航空运营商目前共运营大约370架737 MAX系列飞机。波音对737 MAX系列客机寄予厚望,原本打算今年让737 MAX系列客机交付量占737客机总交付量的九成。

  然而,去年10月印度尼西亚狮子航空公司和本月埃塞俄比亚航空公司接连两起空难发生后,全球130多个国家和地区下令停飞或禁飞737 MAX系列,等待对安全性的确认。波音已暂停交付737 MAX系列。企业市值因股票价格大跌蒸发大约280亿美元。

  专家怀疑,两起空难可能归咎于737 MAX系列特有的防失速系统“机动特性增强系统”(MCAS)。MCAS系统会在探测到上方气流与机翼形成的迎角过大时自动触发,“旋转水平尾翼、下压机头”,而飞行员难以越过MCAS系统重新掌控飞机。暂无结论性证据认定两起空难相关。

  消息人士16日披露,波音打算一周至10天内发布MAX737 系列客机的升级软件。为争取737 MAX系列早日复飞,波音承诺修改飞行员训练项目。

  但是,按照路透社的说法,美国国会打算在所有客机完成软件升级后才让737 MAX系列复飞。这可能耗时数周。

  【欧加单查】

  尽管美国政府介入、波音宣布整改,但欧盟和加拿大坚持自行调查737 MAX客机的安全性。这可能导致737 MAX复飞进一步延迟。

  欧盟航空安全局执行理事帕特里克·基19日在欧洲议会一场听证会上说,没有为全部问题找到可接受的答案前,不会允许737 MAX系列客机复飞。

  加拿大同一天宣布,今后将独立验证737 MAX系列的安全性,而非依赖美国联邦航空局的“背书”。加拿大将对MCAS系统作“全面评估”,派专家组协助美方审核已提出的系统修改建议,同时评估是否需要对系统作其他修改。

  美国联邦航空局发表声明,声称“美国和全世界现有和过往航空安全纪录经由联邦航空局稳健发展以及航空业界全面合作而取得”。

  波音2011年开始研发737 MAX系列客机,2017年开始交付使用。
 
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New York (CNN) US Justice Department prosecutors have issued multiple subpoenas as part of an investigation into Boeing's Federal Aviation Administration certification and marketing of 737 Max planes, sources briefed on the matter told CNN.

The criminal investigation, which is in its early stages, began after the October 2018 crash of a 737 Max aircraft operated by Lion Air in Indonesia, the sources said. Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao on Tuesday asked the agency's inspector general to investigate the Max certification.

Criminal investigators have sought information from Boeing on safety and certification procedures, including training manuals for pilots, along with how the company marketed the new aircraft, the sources said.

It's not yet clear what possible criminal laws could be at issue in the probe. Among the things the investigators are looking into is the process by which Boeing itself certified the plane as safe, and the data it presented the FAA about that self-certification, the sources said.

The FBI Seattle office and Justice Department's criminal division in Washington are leading the investigation.

A Boeing (BA) spokesperson referred to a statement the company released earlier in the week, which indicated it "does not respond to or comment on questions concerning legal matters, whether internal, litigation, or governmental inquiries."

The safety of the 737 Max has been called into question after it was involved in two fatal crashes in less than five months. Both the crash last October involving the Lion Air jet and the crash last week involving an Ethiopian Airlines jet resulted in the deaths of everyone aboard.

The planes were grounded for an indefinite period worldwide after the Ethiopian Airlines crash. Boeing is still building the planes, but it said last week that it would temporarily stop delivering them to airlines while it determines what caused the two crashes.

The FAA and others have said data shows similarities between the Lion Air and Ethiopian crashes.

The FAA also said Wednesday that Boeing has developed a software patch and pilot training program to address issues with the Max that were identified in the Lion Air crash.

The 737 Max jets are by far the most important product for the company. It has orders for nearly 5,000 of the jets, enough to keep production lines operating for years to come. But none of the 371 planes delivered so far can fly until aviation authorities around the world determine they are safe.

Boeing spent three days after the crash insisting the plane was safe before conceding that the jets should be grounded out of "an abundance of caution and in order to reassure the flying public of the aircraft's safety."

Boeing and the FAA had been insisting that with proper training the pilots could overcome any problems with the safety systems, and that the planes could keep flying while a software upgrade was completed. That upgrade is expected to be available next month.

— CNN's David Shortell and Jackie Wattles contributed to this report.
 
印尼鹰航宣布取消49架波音737 MAX 8型客机订单
2019-03-23 06:51:26 来源: 新华网

  印度尼西亚鹰记航空公司22日声明,这家国营企业已致函美国波音公司,要求取消49架波音737 MAX 8型客机订单。

  鹰航发言人伊赫桑·罗桑说,取消订单原因是印尼乘客对737 MAX 8客机“不再信任、失去信心”。他说,鹰航正在等待波音回复;后者准备下周派代表赴印尼,协商鹰航“退订”事宜。

  鹰航2014年与波音签订合同,购买50架737 MAX 8客机,按照目录价格计算合同金额为49亿美元,迄今接收1架,剩余49架没有交付。

  罗桑说,鹰航准备与波音协商,已交付的唯一一架客机能否“退货”。

  鹰航迄今支付波音大约2600万美元货款,鹰航总裁古斯蒂·伍拉·达纳迪普特拉告诉印尼在线新闻服务网站(Detik),鹰航“原则上不想换掉波音”、转向其他飞机制造商,而是考虑改用737 MAX系列的“更新版”产品。

  波音方面说,不会就“客户讨论”作回应。

  印尼狮子航空公司一架波音737 MAX 8客机去年10月29日在爪哇海坠毁,189人遇难;初步调查显示,失事原因可能关联迎角传感器故障和737 MAX系列特有的防失速系统。今年3月10日,埃塞俄比亚航空一架同型号客机坠入田野,157人丧生。“黑匣子”信息显示,两架客机坠毁前飞行轨迹多处“明显相似”。

  两起空难促使130多个国家和地区停飞或禁飞737 MAX系列客机。

  马来西亚航空业咨询机构兴楼分析公司主管舒库尔·优素福说,截至目前,鹰航是首家正式宣布退订737 MAX 8客机计划的航空运营商,“可能不是最后一家”,鹰航竞争对手狮航“可能作出相同决定”。

  狮航2011年订购222架波音737 MAX系列客机,包括MAX 8、9、10型号,迄今接收11架。狮航总经理丹尼尔·普图本月说,狮航“考虑取消订单”。
 
每个客机设计一个巨型降落伞?
 
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