Boeing 737 Max Software Fixes Due to Lion Air Crash Delayed
All that being said, a big reasons ex-Boeing people stopped migrating to SACO was because we'd heard what a bureaucratic nightmare the place had become (and was getting worse). I knew two two people that had gone to the FAA from Boeing, only to return to Boeing because they couldn't stand the FAA bureaucracy...

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You have repeated this statement a number of times.
Certainly not saying you are right or wrong here (that would depend on how you define "FBW" and how you define a "FBW AIRCRAFT"). But we have to note that Boeing uses the term "FBW" in its own documentation for the MAX. And, in his Senate hearing testimony the acting Administrator of the US FAA uses the term "FBW" for the MAX.
There are at least 2 functions and solutions in the MAX that, depending on how you define it, could be ranked under FBW.
If you accept them as such, then we would have to make a distinction between aircraft with one or more 'FBW functions' and 'FBW aircraft'. For some this distinction might not be big, but for others this is big.
For the last group of people, definitions are extremely meaningful and therefore important. If you use another definition then you may be talking about very different 'things'.
For example - one way to look at it is - that the A320 came with a "FBW unless philosophy" (which implies a certain level of "automation", but also added a "glass cockpit" and "sidesticks", and embedded this in the philosophy of "how and where Airbus puts pilots in the loop" (which implies a certain level of "automation").
Between the 'iron' 737 and the 'fbw' 320 there is a large grey area. The 737MAX is somewhere in that grey area. The 2 accidents discussed here indicate to me that we all need clearer definitions. We need them first to understand eachother, and second to get to better solutions.
Certainly not saying you are right or wrong here (that would depend on how you define "FBW" and how you define a "FBW AIRCRAFT"). But we have to note that Boeing uses the term "FBW" in its own documentation for the MAX. And, in his Senate hearing testimony the acting Administrator of the US FAA uses the term "FBW" for the MAX.
There are at least 2 functions and solutions in the MAX that, depending on how you define it, could be ranked under FBW.
If you accept them as such, then we would have to make a distinction between aircraft with one or more 'FBW functions' and 'FBW aircraft'. For some this distinction might not be big, but for others this is big.
For the last group of people, definitions are extremely meaningful and therefore important. If you use another definition then you may be talking about very different 'things'.
For example - one way to look at it is - that the A320 came with a "FBW unless philosophy" (which implies a certain level of "automation", but also added a "glass cockpit" and "sidesticks", and embedded this in the philosophy of "how and where Airbus puts pilots in the loop" (which implies a certain level of "automation").
Between the 'iron' 737 and the 'fbw' 320 there is a large grey area. The 737MAX is somewhere in that grey area. The 2 accidents discussed here indicate to me that we all need clearer definitions. We need them first to understand eachother, and second to get to better solutions.
Good observation. The B737 is becoming a bastardised aircraft with fly by wire patches on a manual aircraft. Any other aircraft have a LAM? Landing Attitude Modifier? It’s fricken Frankenstein..
As a diehard Boeing fan, it’s too depressing

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Tdracer
Bureaucracy
Hmm, Is that not part of the problem here TD, The Big Overseer FAA not having the oversight!
" Boys, that looks to satisfy the details, but is it fit for purpose , and is one input smart considering You have two available!!??"
Note
Having English as a second language and being a tad dyslectic I tried to remember how Bureaucracy spells:
Burea U Cracy.
Regards
Cpt B
Hmm, Is that not part of the problem here TD, The Big Overseer FAA not having the oversight!
" Boys, that looks to satisfy the details, but is it fit for purpose , and is one input smart considering You have two available!!??"
Note
Having English as a second language and being a tad dyslectic I tried to remember how Bureaucracy spells:
Burea U Cracy.
Regards
Cpt B


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Two AoA sensors is not the answer, which one is right? Airbus has three and already has one fatal crash where two AoAs were were iced up, and the computer decided they were right and the remaining unfrozen sensor was wrong.
Any sensors in the airstream are exposed to damage, ice etc, no guarantee that a flock of birds should take out just one AoA sensor.
Surely the software should track pitch output from the attitude gyros against AoA, and report any sudden deviation.
Any sensors in the airstream are exposed to damage, ice etc, no guarantee that a flock of birds should take out just one AoA sensor.
Surely the software should track pitch output from the attitude gyros against AoA, and report any sudden deviation.

Salute!
Well, mister 42 and Fizz and others. Thanks for the reminder for those just checking in and those who do noit yet understand the intent and implementation of the MCAS - software and electrical wiring.
How many times must we here and Boeing and FAA and others have to point out [ the purpose of] the MCAS software kludge with its control over a very powerful aerodynamic feature, and then bypassing the older trim stab electrical switches, and then not telling the pilots and then..... GASP!!!
The damned feature was implemented to increase back stick control force at high AoA. PERIOD!! Sure, I don't want the stick getting lighter when I increase AoA close to the stall. But the cert requirement states that the pressure must increase as we get to the stall AoA. Apparently, Boeing couldn't do it aerodynamically without lottsa testing and mods and ...... So we got this half- ice kludge doofer and nobody knew about it.
Gums sends...
Well, mister 42 and Fizz and others. Thanks for the reminder for those just checking in and those who do noit yet understand the intent and implementation of the MCAS - software and electrical wiring.
How many times must we here and Boeing and FAA and others have to point out [ the purpose of] the MCAS software kludge with its control over a very powerful aerodynamic feature, and then bypassing the older trim stab electrical switches, and then not telling the pilots and then..... GASP!!!
The damned feature was implemented to increase back stick control force at high AoA. PERIOD!! Sure, I don't want the stick getting lighter when I increase AoA close to the stall. But the cert requirement states that the pressure must increase as we get to the stall AoA. Apparently, Boeing couldn't do it aerodynamically without lottsa testing and mods and ...... So we got this half- ice kludge doofer and nobody knew about it.
Gums sends...
Last edited by gums; 8th Apr 2019 at 13:20. Reason: clarify purpose in brackets [ ]

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Power/Pitch MAX vs -800
Can anyone that has HAND flown the MAX and the 737-800 please tell me if it has the same or less Pitch coupling.
Met a Cpt the other day that claimed it was much easier to fly???
Find this statement strange , now, but specifically DOES IT DROP THE NOSE AS MUCH AS THE -800 on power reduction.
Suspect NOT as the center of thrust is higher.
Anyone
Regards
Cpt B
Met a Cpt the other day that claimed it was much easier to fly???
Find this statement strange , now, but specifically DOES IT DROP THE NOSE AS MUCH AS THE -800 on power reduction.
Suspect NOT as the center of thrust is higher.
Anyone
Regards
Cpt B

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b1lanc
@b1lanc - I deleted that line from my post. There certainly were some blue boxes ;-)
@b1lanc - Thanks for the definition !
Actually, I've only said this once that I recall - but age can take its toll. Maybe it's the blue boxes that are confusing you?
But I'll give you my definition of FBW - no cables or pulleys.
But I'll give you my definition of FBW - no cables or pulleys.
@b1lanc - Thanks for the definition !

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One month on, there seems little or no progress. Operators with grounded aircraft don't know where they are or what they should do with their fleets. Little from Boeing and absolutely nothing from the FAA. Production is piling up, presumably of complete aircraft built to the old spec with no AoA disagree warning. Only the Ethiopian authorities seem to have made a major announcement.
"Industry standards" ? That's surely incorrect. Multiple source and handling of failures/disagree has been normal in this area since the Trident more than half a century ago incorporated a stick pusher based on similar inputs. Airbus likewise.
Boeing said Tuesday that the company’s internal analysis determined that relying on a single source of data was acceptable and in line with industry standards because pilots would have the ability to counteract an erroneous input.

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Only the second mention of LAM that I have seen in all these discussions (the first being mine)...there's another obvious kludge to fix a design error.
Interestingly there was a thread on tech-log about LAM around a year ago, started with the now very spooky line:
Consider the following to be some of the interesting stuff that Boeing just does not tell you about much....
Spoiler

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On the 787 there are also some Boeing designed software moving control surfaces ,( including spoilers I understand), in an autonomous way, and without any indication to the pilot : the famous anti turbulence feature. I wonder on how many sensors this system is relying upon .

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On the 787 there are also some Boeing designed software moving control surfaces ,( including spoilers I understand), in an autonomous way, and without any indication to the pilot : the famous anti turbulence feature. I wonder on how many sensors this system is relying upon .
It is not the technology per se, that is the problem but it's inappropriate use. Boeing know how to do redundancy properly, they made a rational business choice not to so, for profit.

Boeing Issues Reminder After Netherlands Crash
The Dutch Safety Board today said the altimeter was a factor in the crash that killed nine of the 135 passengers and crew onboard. The Boeing 737-800 plane crashed Feb. 25, within a mile of the runway, while trying to land at Amsterdam's Polderbaan of Schiphol Airport. Another 80 were injured in the accident.
Boeing's reminder applies to all the 737 planes it manufactured, not just the kind involved in the crash.
Events of the flight's final moments became clearer today, with the release of the preliminary accident report.
At 1,950 feet above the ground, the altimeter showed the plane to be at negative-8 feet instead, according to safety board chairman Pieter van Vollenhoven.
As a result, the plane's automatic pilot system responded as though the plane were landing, reducing power the way it would if it were nearing the ground. The crew apparently failed to notice that the airspeed was dropping dramatically, according to the report. The plane's ability to fly continued to deteriorate for more than a minute and a half without the pilots taking action.
Boeing's reminder applies to all the 737 planes it manufactured, not just the kind involved in the crash.
Events of the flight's final moments became clearer today, with the release of the preliminary accident report.
At 1,950 feet above the ground, the altimeter showed the plane to be at negative-8 feet instead, according to safety board chairman Pieter van Vollenhoven.
As a result, the plane's automatic pilot system responded as though the plane were landing, reducing power the way it would if it were nearing the ground. The crew apparently failed to notice that the airspeed was dropping dramatically, according to the report. The plane's ability to fly continued to deteriorate for more than a minute and a half without the pilots taking action.

"Unsafe..." was published in 1965. GM produced the Corvair between 1960 and 1969, though sales dropped off considerably after 1965. Unlike my younger colleagues at university, my contemporaries had owned cars of about this age when we started driving, so I'm not all that surprised to read that "A 1972 safety commission report conducted by Texas A&M University concluded that the 1960–1963 Corvair possessed no greater potential for loss of control than its contemporary competitors in extreme situations." I was driving British and Australian cars of the era, but they were all pretty horrid and would generally bite back at hamfisted drivers.
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A 1972 safety commission report conducted by Texas A&M University concluded that the 1960–1963 Corvair possessed no greater potential for loss of control than its contemporary competitors in extreme situations."

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Is it accurate to say that MCAS is AoA stall prevention at all? How would it prevent a stall at all, in normal, non-malfunctioning conditions? It adds nose down trim, yes, while the A/P is off, but it doesn't really prevent stall, at best it gives the pilot a better trim condition for high AoA, which might enable the pilot to prevent a stall. Just asking. MCAS does not make the 737 impossible to stall.
Of course not, but the functionality seems very “similar” but performance poor. As far as I understand, either Alpha Prot is not legally stall prevention system...
MCAS, again, is not a stall prevention device, it is a handling modifier. It makes the nose feel heavier to the pilot. Catastrophically so if activated improperly.
It is or claimed to be needed by Boeing flight engineers to prevent a lighter than desired stick force at higher AOA's.
It is or claimed to be needed by Boeing flight engineers to prevent a lighter than desired stick force at higher AOA's.
Boeing has right to call their system as they like. I have been involved in naming game couple of times where the aim has been to avoid potential legal, but highly unlikely responsibilities(, with with really bad worst case scenarios).
But, if you look “the publicly known”, and couple of time proofed functionality, you can decide your self...
The presumption is that the main feedback measurement in AoA (it at least had been said so and speed defines mostly the gain?) => MACS is control law of AoA => stall depends mostly on AoA => it is some kind of stall related control system.
It is true that trimming nose down increases stick force but it is just a side effect. What you measure that is what you control. As simple as that. Of course, you might have complicated soft sensoringing capabilities, but in this case seemingly not, because the stick forces went out of the hands.
