Boeing and
the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) began a series of test flights on
Monday to determine whether the 737 Max should be allowed back in the air,
after it was involved in two deadly crashes that killed 346 people in 2018 and
2019.
The tests
are expected to last around three days. “While the certification flights are an
important milestone, a number of key tasks remain,” the FAA said in a
statement.
“The FAA is
following a deliberate process and will take the time it needs to thoroughly review
Boeing’s work. We will lift the grounding order only after we are satisfied
that the aircraft meets certification standards.
” Part of
Monday’s test flights, which happened in the Seattle area, reportedly involved
taking the plane into a very steep turn that would nearly cause a stall,
according to Bloomberg.
By doing
this, test pilots and engineers from the FAA and Boeing hope to recreate the
conditions that triggered the Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System,
or MCAS — the software that doomed both fatal flights.
The 737 Max was rushed into existence shortly
after Airbus surprise-announced the A320neo, a more fuel-efficient version of
its popular A320 aircraft, in 2010. Instead of designing a new plane from the
ground up to compete, Boeing tweaked the 46-year-old 737 by giving it new,
bigger engines that had to be placed further forward on the wings.
While this
helped the company get an A320neo competitor to market quicker, it also made
the new version of the plane more susceptible to stalling during certain types
of maneuvers. Boeing developed MCAS to counteract this. But the company hid the
software from the FAA and from pilots in order to reduce the amount of
retraining that would otherwise be required to get the plane into the air. The first
crash of the 737 Max happened in October 2018.
Lion Air Flight 610 took off at
6:20AM local time from Jakarta, Indonesia. It crashed into the Java Sea just a
few minutes later, killing 189 passengers and crew. The second crash happened
in March 2019 when Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 crashed six minutes after
taking off for Kenya, killing 157 people.
The 737 Max
was grounded worldwide shortly after. Boeing has since been subjected to
congressional inquiry and multiple federal investigations, and CEO Dennis
Muilenburg was pushed out last December. But while the company had halted 737
Max productions for months, it started building the planes again in May. The
FAA has discovered multiple new software glitches in the time since, which is
partly why Boeing is still in the process of recertifying the plane.
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