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FAA identifies new potential risk on 737 MAX
The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration has identified a new potential risk that Boeing Co must address on its 737 MAX before the grounded jet can return to service, the agency told Reuters on Wednesday. The risk was discovered during a simulator test last week, sources with knowledge of the matter told Reuters. As a result, Boeing is not expected to run a certification test flight until at least July 8, they said. "On the most recent issue, the FAA’s process is designed to discover and… (www.msn.com) Más...Sort type: [Top] [Newest]
How is it that the U.S. & Canadian pilots were flying it without any incidents, then these two foreign crashed and now everyone is concerned. The U.S. and Canadian pilots were flying the Max and now they say it is dangerous? Something is amiss!!
You apparently missed the SWA incident at KMCO where they declared emergency from it and subsequently landed.
As far as I'm concerned, this whole business is no different from the story of the DC-10; even with its rocky start and grounding, it still ultimately proved to be comparable in terms of safety to similar aircraft.
Yup.. until AAL191 and botched maintenance, and UAL232, then everyone started avoiding them again unless they had no choice.
AA 191 was what caused the grounding of the DC-10.
AAL191 caused the grounding of the DC10. crappy maintenance after a rather stellar pomp caused AAL191. AAL191 wasn't just a freak accident that happened from nothing at all.