In the United States, the air regulator opens an investigation into Boeing and its 787

In the United States, the air regulator opens an investigation into Boeing and its 787
In the United States, the air regulator opens an investigation into Boeing and its 787

This investigation aims in particular to find out whether the aircraft manufacturer correctly carried out the mandatory inspections regarding the junction of the wings to the fuselage “on certain 787 Dreamliner aircraft”, indicated the American Civil Aviation Agency (FAA).

The American Civil Aviation Agency (FAA) announced on Monday the opening of an investigation into Boeing, to determine whether the aircraft manufacturer had carried out the required inspections of its iconic 787s. “Dreamliner”, and whether documents had been falsified by employees. This investigation aims in particular to find out whether Boeing correctly carried out the mandatory inspections regarding the joining of the wings to the fuselage. “on certain 787 Dreamliner aircraft”the FAA said in an email.

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This investigation was opened after Boeing informed the agency “in April that it may not have carried out the required inspections”. The aircraft manufacturer “re-inspects all 787 aircraft still in production and must also develop a plan to care for the in-service fleet”adds the FAA.

Many production problems

The 787 Dreamliner and the 737 MAX have suffered many production problems since 2023, which have slowed down the aircraft manufacturer’s deliveries. This forced several airlines to change their flight schedules for 2024. Scott Stocker, manager of the 787 program, sent an email on April 29 to his employees at Boeing in South Carolina, where these aircraft are manufactured, informing them that A “teammate saw what appeared to be an irregularity in a required compliance test at the wing body junction”.

“He spoke to his manager, who brought it to the attention of senior management”he added. “We quickly looked into the matter and learned that several individuals had violated company policies by not performing a required test but recording the work as completed”, wrote Scott Stocker again. He assured that the“Boeing’s engineering team assessed that this fault did not create an immediate flight safety problem”.

Boeing, which had already struggled to recover after two crashes in 2018 and 2019, is in turmoil after a succession of quality and safety problems on its planes for more than a year. An Alaska Airlines plane notably lost a cap holder in flight on January 5. On April 17, four whistleblowers, including an engineer and former Boeing employees, testified before a US Senate inquiry to warn of “serious problems” production of the Boeing 737 MAX, 787 Dreamliner and 777 aircraft. This led Boeing Chief Executive Dave Calhoun to announce that he would step down at the end of the year.

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