Report: Delta considering trading 717s to Boeing for 737MAX jets
#106
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remember also that at the time of the AA191 accident (May 1979), public access to information -- both accurate and, shall we say, less so -- was orders of magnitude less immediate and widespread than it is today; short of paying for ad space in a newspaper or magazine, writing a letter to the editor or an article for publication, or participating in a technical or academic conference, there was essentially no way for an individual to get their opinion in front of more than a few people at a time
#107
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granted DL never purchased the DC-10, but they actually operated the type for awhile ~1970 while awaiting delivery of their first few TriStars ... I believe Lockheed actually arranged for the short-term leases
#108
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It's also worth noting that NW operated the DC-10 for many years on various routes, including SEA-AMS.
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#110
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#111
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FedEx bought more freighters in 1985, but I can't find any records of a new order for a passenger variant of the DC-10 after the type certificate was pulled in July 1979...
#112
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And for those who say there wasn't much publicity on the accidents. I don't agree. A photo of AA191 rolled over on its side seconds before crashing was on the front page of nearly every newspaper. You will also notice that after the DC-10 crashes McDonnell-Douglas switched to the 'MD' prefix; MD-11, MD-80, MD-90, MD-95.
#113
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#114
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It's an important distinction because it means the purchase decisions for much of the 1980s production of the DC-10 were made before the type certificate was pulled in 1979, and there may not have been any additional passenger planes ordered/sold after that incident. I can't find definitive records one way or the other, although I did find an article confirming FedEx ordered DC-10Fs in 1985. (Boxes don't freak out at bad PR for an airframe, though!)
#115
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This is a great example of why the 737MAX will be the safest airplane flying when it returns to the skies - the Eye of Sauron is reviewing every little scrap of the design in great detail, a level of scrutiny that very few commercial airliner models have recently faced, and even potential issues that have not come up in decades of commercial service are being found and corrected.
#116
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The concern here is that ripping out wiring and replacing it in an already-built airplane may cause more risk than leaving it the way it is. Basically nobody has an appetite for changing the 737NG based on the new rules, and Boeing's argument is that they shouldn't have to go change already built 737MAX aircraft, either, for the same reason.
They'll almost certainly make changes for future production going forward regardless, but the question is what to do about the frames that already exist. Not a cut and dry "correct" or "incorrect" situation, just a classic engineering risk tradeoff that the FAA has to work through and make a decision on.
This article has a nice rough summary of all the areas being focused on, but I'm sure there are other small things happening internally at Boeing that don't make the newspapers... https://www.barrons.com/articles/the...ng-51580752481
#117
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Well this doesn’t bode well for the future of the 717 at Delta.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/willhor.../#73a209b252d2
https://www.forbes.com/sites/willhor.../#73a209b252d2
#118
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The wiring issue is the most impactful. Basically, from things we've learned from accidents over the last few decades, there are new rules about how wires can be routed through an aircraft that the 737 design doesn't meet. https://www.seattletimes.com/busines...boeing-missed/
The concern here is that ripping out wiring and replacing it in an already-built airplane may cause more risk than leaving it the way it is. Basically nobody has an appetite for changing the 737NG based on the new rules, and Boeing's argument is that they shouldn't have to go change already built 737MAX aircraft, either, for the same reason.
They'll almost certainly make changes for future production going forward regardless, but the question is what to do about the frames that already exist. Not a cut and dry "correct" or "incorrect" situation, just a classic engineering risk tradeoff that the FAA has to work through and make a decision on.
This article has a nice rough summary of all the areas being focused on, but I'm sure there are other small things happening internally at Boeing that don't make the newspapers... https://www.barrons.com/articles/the...ng-51580752481
The concern here is that ripping out wiring and replacing it in an already-built airplane may cause more risk than leaving it the way it is. Basically nobody has an appetite for changing the 737NG based on the new rules, and Boeing's argument is that they shouldn't have to go change already built 737MAX aircraft, either, for the same reason.
They'll almost certainly make changes for future production going forward regardless, but the question is what to do about the frames that already exist. Not a cut and dry "correct" or "incorrect" situation, just a classic engineering risk tradeoff that the FAA has to work through and make a decision on.
This article has a nice rough summary of all the areas being focused on, but I'm sure there are other small things happening internally at Boeing that don't make the newspapers... https://www.barrons.com/articles/the...ng-51580752481
Previous Douglas commercial airframes had a very good reputation in the industry for robustness and longevity and the -10 also followed in these ways. Some other airliners would not be converted to freighters with the same zeal because of airframe fatigue limits and nontransparent strength concerns.
The MAX has other problems including a lack of basic aerodynamic stability within important segments of normal flight envelope and it would not be certificated without dubious automatic systems including the nightmare MCAS. The DC-10 did not have such basic problems, at least not before the MD-11 "enhancement."
I do not want to think of commander struggling against uncommanded pitchdown MCAS Kubrick was right so many years ago... claro! This system should be called HAL "I'm sorry Dave I can't let you do that..." It is time to unplug HAL!
If somehow I could have direct choice today, with only MAX or DC-10, then I pick DC-10 every time...