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Monday, June 29, 2020

The 737-7 IS Airbourne With FAA

The (Max Today) flown and built by Boeing flew its 737-7 having FAA examiners on board and representing the Boeing 737 Max family, while using the smallest Boeing 737-7 model in this line as the test example. The strategic choice for testing the 737-7 is a good option as its larger models, the 737-8-10 is sold and containing the most abundant model type (Max-8) to its customers.  

Thus, the Max-8 causes a massive look at the majority of aircraft Boeing has parked.  Even though Boeing will have to certify all of the grounded Max anyways. 

       Andrew Boydston: Chief Blogger

If the 737-7 is a "go" by the FAA after the next two flight tests then a quicker delivery can be made with the fewer 737-7 models ordered and is an easier lot to manage than the the 737-8 type at this time. The European flight testing team has yet to be engaged which is needed for all of Boeing's testing hurdles of the Max world wide. 

The European approvals for the Max can be made simpler if the FAA/Boeing can independently demonstrate it has met all items both testing agencies meet requirements with a strong case made for each inspection type and the reliability for safe flight.

It will become an expensive process this point forward for new models submitted for certification. As one agency won't approve another agency's findings without validating its own standards for aircraft awaiting certification for safe flight. The agency with the toughest standards will also drive the certification process, since it is simpler to meet some high bar standards while using a double inspection system. The step forward is how the inspection and validation systems work best. 

May the agency with the most complete evaluation win the standards battle with an oversight of some other agency having a final role concurring on the first agency's findings for newly minted airplane types. The 737 Max should of had a double check source for testing, as a submission goes to a second agency approving the first agencies findings for an advanced or new airplane submitted even though training and build replicate the prior version or as a clean sheet. Advanced improvements negates a thinner inspection process as is considered in today's process.

It will increase time and money with this approach, but saving a life is worth the "due diligence" applied to any advanced airplane for certification. Lessons learned, is having duplicate testing from an independent  governance processes or whatever governance is required. The 737-8 crashes exposed a fault of having a builder and independent inspection listen to the builder without a third party, which does not have overriding authority, or not under pressure from the "others" and not having influence over approval or disapproval for airplane certification flight or commercial service. 

In essence 2-1 validation will have "secondary validations answered as well as the primary validations." The by-laws from major airplane builders and inspection agencies cannot assume or demonstrate a bias from builder or agency completing the validation over industry standards.

An unbiased inspection review would of saved hundreds of lives if the 737 Max would have used a more compliant certification process from multiple agencies in the marketplace. In other words from certifying commercial airplanes from single engine to multi engine this would apply. A peer inspection process may cost builders a greater value placed on certified frames but it should save lives.

Friday, June 26, 2020

737 Max Tracks For Certification In August?

The FAA has come to terms with Boeing and early next week is the test target with Boeing's wild ride on its fixed 737 Max after the two crashes of Boeing early built 737 Max, during 2018-2019.


       Andrew Boydston: Chief Blogger
 
Depending on complexity of the fix, it should take-off on a FAA test flight either next Monday or Tuesday early. Boeing will have to agree when it's ready to show the revisions made on the Max since the last crash of the 737 Max during March 2019.

Tuesday, June 23, 2020

Covid-19 Disrupter near you

Six Gen FA- is about to fly near a aerospace plant near some USAF base in Texas.
                      
       Andrew Boydston: Chief Blogger
 
So I'm partial to aviation things, and the American military juggernaut. Covid-19 is no match to pushing a button of mass destruction and a Sixth Gen will deliver a JSF that sinks ships or land surrounded by water that is coming to a theatre of war near bad actors, similar to China. Let's stop hitting the spacebar and go for the name Gen6 and call it good and better than what's on the military at this time.


By 2024 the F-22 will have changed roles in the scheme of things since the Gen6 will be in production and flying out the door. The prototype or Gen6 parts are rolling down the conveyor belt loaded with ball bearings under each part at this time and should fly by 2021.

Since the F22 emerged on the design board during the 1990's is should be safe to assume a new evolution of jet destroyer is going somewhere with a complement of wingman drones at its side, mopping up airspace, destroying sea lanes and flattening land bases which supports the flaming hoard in the far east. In the end there is the end and Gen6 will fly by then.

Friday, June 19, 2020

Chief Executive Organiser, Winging IT, Speaks!

               
       Alfred E Newman Chief Executive Organizer: 
                                Winging It

Boeing built the economy off of Washington state and now since Covid-19 outbreak it is asking if Alfred knows how to reorganize its airplane business. Winging It (Alfred), 

"says no to that inference! Boeing must put its big boy shorts on and build airplanes according to the hand dealt them. In other words, go buy toilet paper like the rest of the retirement community. It didn't stop covid-19 to do-do that little thing but it was impressive to Costco's bottom line and while jungle paper became the US' number one import during winter of 2020.

WI, Chief Executive Organizer, pleads with Costco every day in the state of Washington and to send more paper instead of pink slips. It's not helping the economy. Now Boeing wants to pink slip its workers across Washington's landscape with 146 here and 10,000 there while there is nothing left to DO!"

Thursday, June 18, 2020

A340-600 Quickly Retired With Iberia Removing Its Aircraft Because Of Corona-virus

                          

                              Andrew Boydston: 
                                                 Chief Blogger



The A340-600 is quickly exiting from major airline service, a victim of the coronavirus downturn. Its last two large airline operators, Iberia and Lufthansa, are parking the four-engined jet known for its long fuselage but a short history.

Iberia will retire its A340-600s as part of a restructuring to make the airline smaller for the next five years, CEO Luis Gallego said. Iberia will also reportedly delay new A350s and A320s, and retire older A320 family aircraft.

A340-600s at its three largest operators, as of year-end

Coronavirus is accelerating changes afoot before the downturn. Iberia previously planned to end the year with 10 A340-600s, down from 17 last year. A further five would exit by 2022, and the remaining five by the end of 2025.

Airlines including China Eastern, Etihad, and Thai Airways retired their smaller A340-600 fleets last decade. Remaining -600s in commercial service is spread across smaller airlines, such as the four at South African Airways and seven at Iran’s Mahan Air, according to Airbus data. Other commercial operators include charter carriers.

              
 Andrew Boydston: Chief Blogger