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Interestingly, did you notice that when they announced it, they didn't mention MAX at all, they just said 737-8 and 737-10.IAG recently ordered 200 737 Max's so the industry doesn't seem too bothered at all, let alone in 10 years time.
Self certification is just fine.
Clearly not, if it was the 737 Max would never have been approved to fly.
This whole sorry saga will now play out through the courts and when the final conclusion is reached I daresay the exact sequence of events leading to the certification of the aircraft will be a complex one.
Nontheless, I'm confident the the system of self certification as it exists, combined with the cost cutting culture at Boeing will play a large part in leading to the loss of those two aircraft.
I'm not disputing that there's something wrong here, or in the process itself. I know that most regulators maintain a risk list of manufacturers, and depending on their previous audits/performance/experience/etc they will choose how often to check in detail or not. With Boeing that risk is probably low, so didn't check that often.I dont think the two accidents are key here. The fact that the certification process allowed a new system to be installed that significantly altered how a plane flew under certain circumstances, a single sensor failure was able to down an aircraft and it was done on the quiet so as to save money on pilot retraining.
That's what is a worry.
Clearly not? Where do you base this? On 2 accidents?
So it clearly works. Unless you have evidence to the contrary.
Alternatively, if you can recommend a system that works better that would be great.
Edit: To say that both systems can in theory work very well, however in practice self certification works better......
Mistakes always happen, no process is going to fully stop that, unless you check everything independently, which is going to hinder the industry completely to the point that nobody will be making anything.
Yes, I'm basing it on 2 catastrophic accidents although only one would be sufficient to call into question the certification process at Boeing.
The graph you've posted is largely meaningless in the specific context of what happened at Boeing. The fact that aviation is overall safer now than 30 years ago does not prove that how the Max was certified was safe.
The fact that 2 aircraft crashed is sufficient evidence. I would have thought that obvious. And how about sufficient independant oversight to ensure such an astonishingly bad idea as MCAS, as it was implemented, never made it past the drawing board.
You mean cheaper. The fox guarding the chicken coop. What could possibly go wrong.....
Mistakes happen?!! Good grief! Mistakes like this should never happen. This was not a subtle flaw which somehow made through a robust certification process, it was mindbendingly bad idea - the result of cost cutting and a far too cosy relationship with the regulator.
I'm afraid you are wrong, simply due to the fact that the numbers do not support your argument.
Welcome to the real world, where nothing is perfect.
Cost cutting does not come into it.
In fact the FAA is the only regulator in the world who still spends a substantial amount of money into research.
They are also the main source of regulations. Have a look at Code of Federal Regulations Part 25, versus Certification Specification 25 and spot any differences.
All EASA (and all other regulators around the world) did was largely copy paste what the FAA already had.
I await on a recommendation of a process you have evidence works better than what currently is out there.
...and is unfair to blame the FAA for this.
I'm curious then, what numbers would support my argument? 10 crashes? 20? Frankly, I'm not wrong - whereas one accident does not necessarily prove a systemic flaw, in this case it does. To put it in simple terms, Boeing and the FAA certified an aircraft as airworthy. It was not.
I live in the real world, thanks. I'm not entirely sure you do with the second line of the above quote. And cost cutting has everything to do with it. From rehashing a 60 year old airframe and slapping MCAS onto it, to keeping quiet about it in order to avoid additional training costs.
So what? They still allowed an unairworthy aircraft to be certified as airworthy. You seem to think this was a simple mistake, it was not - it is a fundamental flaw in the relationship between Boeing and the FAA.
Again, so what? The FAA may well have produced a robust set of certification standards. Standards are useless unless properly enforced.
How about sufficient external oversight to the certification process. MCAS wasnt a subtle flaw which slipped through a robust process - it was mindblowingly stupid. It should have been obvious to anybody who looked at the system.
I had to laugh at this. Again, the FAA allowed an unairworthy aircraft to be certified as airworthy, but we shouldnt blame them, right? I'm not entirely sure what you think the job of the FAA is?
I never said it was a simple mistake, in fact I pointed out how the system works, and that it needs a lot of mistakes in a row in order for something this important to be missed. Which is why the system itself is fine overall.
The whole point of oversight and regulatory standards is to provide people with a reasonable level of safety, reasonable being a very key word. There are ways to provide almost absolute safety in everything, however these are not pragmatic and would kill any industry that attempted it.
Oh no, actual data. This will blow the minds of a few here, including the thread starter. Surely 'fake news'?Clearly not? Where do you base this? On 2 accidents?
the number of accidents has been in decline since records began, and that is with increasing numbers of flights.
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So it clearly works. Unless you have evidence to the contrary.
In my previous post I think i came across as unnecessarily sarcastic - it wasn't my intention, I appreciate you do know what your talking about.
However, I think we're unlikely to agree on this.
I agree that aviation is safer today than ever before, however I think this is a case of 3 steps forward 2 steps back.
The simple fact of the matter is that safety costs money, at times a lot of money. I appreciate the problems you describe in EASAland, but solution is to invest more in staff (Easy to say, I know).
I suspect we're not going to agree here but if the system allows multiple mistakes to slip by then surely there is something wrong with said system. Again, I just want to reiterate just how bad an idea the MCAS implementation was. And that the FAA did, ultimately, certify an unairworthy aircraft.
The fundamental issue here is the culture of cost cutting that exists at Boeing, coupled with the light touch regulation from the FAA, seems to me to lead inevitably to the outcome we have seen. I rather suspect once all the facts are known the FAA will be spending considerably more time and resources overseeing the certification process of new aircraft in the US.
Again, I agree. If we want absolute safety aircraft would never fly. I'm not suggesting the a government inspector stands over the shoulder of every worker installing every nut and bolt on an aircraft. I appreciate you seems to have an indepth knowledge of the certification process and associated audits, nonetheless it seems to me there is a line where self certification works and where it does not. And that line was crossed here with catastrophic results. And that it was a fundamental flaw in the relationship between the FAA and Boeing (the system) that allowed it to happen.
Well that IS a relief.
I was under the impression that Boeing had failed to notice a major flaw on their latest aircraft . . . oh no, make that two unintentional cost-saving "oversights".
Where is Ralph Nader when you need him?