Boeing grounds all 737 Max - cites evidence found on ground an- BBC
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Boeing grounds all 737 Max - cites evidence found on ground an- BBC
Boeing has grounded its entire global fleet of 737 Max aircraft after investigators uncovered new evidence at the scene of the fatal Ethiopian Airlines crash.
The US plane-maker said it would suspend all 371 of the aircraft.
The Federal Aviation Administration said fresh evidence as well as newly refined satellite data prompted the decision to temporarily ban the jets.
The FAA had previously held out while many countries banned the aircraft.
All 157 passengers and crew died in Sunday's crash. Ethiopian Airlines said on Thursday that the black box flight recorders from the aircraft have been flown to Paris for analysis.
"An Ethiopian delegation led by Accident Investigation Bureau has flown the Flight Data Recorder and Cockpit Voice Recorder to Paris, France for investigation," the airline wrote on Twitter.
Dan Elwell, acting administrator at the FAA, said on Wednesday: "It became clear to all parties that the track of the Ethiopian Airlines [flight] was very close and behaved very similarly to the Lion Air flight."
He added that "the evidence we found on the ground made it even more likely the flight path was very close to Lion Air's".
The US plane-maker said it would suspend all 371 of the aircraft.
The Federal Aviation Administration said fresh evidence as well as newly refined satellite data prompted the decision to temporarily ban the jets.
The FAA had previously held out while many countries banned the aircraft.
All 157 passengers and crew died in Sunday's crash. Ethiopian Airlines said on Thursday that the black box flight recorders from the aircraft have been flown to Paris for analysis.
"An Ethiopian delegation led by Accident Investigation Bureau has flown the Flight Data Recorder and Cockpit Voice Recorder to Paris, France for investigation," the airline wrote on Twitter.
What has the FAA discovered?
The FAA has a team investigating the disaster at the Ethiopian Airlines crash site working with the National Transportation Safety Board.Dan Elwell, acting administrator at the FAA, said on Wednesday: "It became clear to all parties that the track of the Ethiopian Airlines [flight] was very close and behaved very similarly to the Lion Air flight."
He added that "the evidence we found on the ground made it even more likely the flight path was very close to Lion Air's".
What have the FAA discovered ?
Perhaps they have recognised the obvious, a hole in the ground. A very compact site, disintegrated structure, indicating a high energy impact.
The relatively low altitude of problem onset, sudden altitude loss, nose down, high speed, apparently without crew intervention - perhaps an unrecognised problem, misleading instrument readings, unable to take meaningful action, unable to communicate, high control forces, ineffective manual trim intervention.
Together with new satalite information.
Not to forget that humans will see patterns; any, and every-where.
Whatever; but an understanding of the FAA’s views and thoughts, could be as interesting as the accident itself
Perhaps they have recognised the obvious, a hole in the ground. A very compact site, disintegrated structure, indicating a high energy impact.
The relatively low altitude of problem onset, sudden altitude loss, nose down, high speed, apparently without crew intervention - perhaps an unrecognised problem, misleading instrument readings, unable to take meaningful action, unable to communicate, high control forces, ineffective manual trim intervention.
Together with new satalite information.
Not to forget that humans will see patterns; any, and every-where.
Whatever; but an understanding of the FAA’s views and thoughts, could be as interesting as the accident itself
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Aside from satellite data on flight path, they might have found the stab trim jackscrew, indicating last trim position. Photos from Atlas 767 thread show that it can survive this sort of impact.