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posted by martyb on Tuesday December 17 2019, @08:01PM   Printer-friendly
from the Stop-the-Bleeding dept.

https://www.npr.org/2019/12/17/788775642/boeing-will-temporarily-stop-making-its-737-max-jetliners

Production will stop in January. The jets were grounded after two crashes that killed nearly 350 people. Despite being grounded, Boeing continued cranking the planes out at its factory near Seattle.

(The interview had more good information, but at time of submission, the transcript wasn't available. There may be better articles out there.)

There are. Here's one:

Boeing will suspend 737 Max production in January at CNBC:

Boeing is planning to suspend production of its beleaguered 737 Max planes next month, the company said Monday, a drastic step after the Federal Aviation Administration said its review of the planes would continue into next year, dashing the manufacturer's forecast.

Boeing's decision to temporarily shut down production, made after months of a cash-draining global grounding of its best-selling aircraft, worsens one of the most severe crises in the history of the century-old manufacturer. It is ramping up pressure on CEO Dennis Muilenburg, whom the board stripped of his chairmanship in October as the crisis wore on.

The measure is set to ripple through the aerospace giant's supply chain and broader economy. It also presents further problems for airlines, which have lost hundreds of millions of dollars and canceled thousands of flights without the fuel-efficient planes in their fleets.

Boeing said it does not plan to lay off or furlough workers at the Renton, Washington, factory where the 737 Max is produced during the production pause. Some of the 12,000 workers there will be temporarily reassigned.

Previously:


Original Submission

 
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  • (Score: 1) by Ethanol-fueled on Tuesday December 17 2019, @10:05PM (1 child)

    by Ethanol-fueled (2792) on Tuesday December 17 2019, @10:05PM (#933448) Homepage

    On the other hand, I never understood certificates of conformance. It should be implied that your product has specifications and that your product meets or exceeds those specifications, no?

    Most expensive gadgets ship with their test and calibration data anyway. So what good does a CoC do? The tech signs it, maybe a quality manager (who knows less about the system than a tech does) gives it a brief look-over and pencil-whips his signature on the CoC? Or, even more funny, the pre-stamped signature of a C-level executive who has even less of an idea than the quality manager how the gadget works.

  • (Score: 2) by Bot on Thursday December 19 2019, @08:54AM

    by Bot (3902) on Thursday December 19 2019, @08:54AM (#934131) Journal

    I think those certifications are only meant to raise a class of bureaucrats and make it more difficult to startups to compete with the incumbent. An effective legal system and randomized checks render any certification redundant, as you know that if you sell crap you end up in jail, no matter what. The certification is a way for the politicians to have a seat for his cronies and proclaim 'we have done something for safety'.

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