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Boeing

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Web site www.boeing.com
Ceo Dave Calhoun
HeadquartersArlington County
Virginia
United States
Revenue101. 1 billion USD (2018)
Founders William E. Boeing
Subsidiaries Jeppesen
Boeing Commercial Airplanes
Boeing Defense, Space & Security
Boeing Store
Stock quote BA
Disclaimer
FoundedSeattle
Washington
United States
CioSusan Doniz
Cfo Brian West
CtoTodd K. Citron
Presidents Dave Calhoun
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID551153
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About Boeing


The Boeing Company is an American multinational corporation that designs, manufactures, and sells airplanes, rotorcraft, rockets, satellites, and missiles worldwide. The company also provides leasing and product support services.

Boeing: Plane-maker reveals losses from Trump Air Force One deal

Boeing: Plane-maker reveals losses from Trump Air Force One deal
Apr 29,2022 12:55 pm

...Former US President Donald Trump s new deal for Air Force One was a bad one for Boeing, the plane-maker s chief executive has said...

Headlines: Queen gives '72-fix-hour period rift'

Headlines: Queen gives '72-fix-hour period rift'
Feb 16,2020 10:00 am

... feel the crisis the airplane manufacturer Boeing, according to the publication of a series of internal messages, in which employees acknowledged errors in its 737 Max airliner...

Tech trends in 2020: a New spaceship and flexible screens

Tech trends in 2020: a New spaceship and flexible screens
Feb 16,2020 9:22 am

... Boeing uses its CST-100 Starliner crew module final tests That could change everything in the year 2020, when, if all goes according to plan, two in the U...

Ed Sheeran, Drake and Justin Bieber: What were they doing 10 years ago?

Ed Sheeran, Drake and Justin Bieber: What were they doing 10 years ago?
Feb 16,2020 9:07 am

... By the end of 2019 though, the rapper s got his very own £140m Boeing 767...

Boeing whistleblower raises doubts about 787 oxygen system

Boeing whistleblower raises doubts about 787 oxygen system
Feb 16,2020 7:52 am

...A Boeing whistleblower has claimed that the passengers could be left on the 787 Dreamliner, to suffer without oxygen, if the cabin were a sudden decompression...

Boeing 737 Max Lion Air crash 'caused by series of failures'

Boeing 737 Max Lion Air crash 'caused by series of failures'
Feb 16,2020 7:29 am

...A series of failures led to the crash of a Lion Air flight, which killed 189 people and led to the grounding of the Boeing 737 Max, a report has found...

Work on production line of Boeing 737 Max ‘not adequately funded'

Work on production line of Boeing 737 Max ‘not adequately funded'
Feb 16,2020 3:43 am

...A former Boeing engineer has told the BBC s Panorama programme that work on the production line of the 737 Max plane was not adequately funded...

Boeing admits it 'fell short' on safety alert for 737

Boeing admits it 'fell short' on safety alert for 737
Feb 16,2020 3:32 am

...Boeing has admitted it fell short when it failed to implement a safety alert system on the 737 Max...

Work on production line of Boeing 737 Max ‘not adequately funded'

Feb 16,2020 3:32 am

A former Boeing engineer has told the BBC's Panorama programme that work on the Production Line of the 737 Max plane was not adequately funded.

The aircraft is currently grounded after two crashes which killed 346 people.

The 737 Max is The Company 's fastest selling plane and has earned The Company billions of dollars in sales.

Boeing denies the claims and says it's committed to making the 737 Max One of the safest aircraft ever to fly.

Adam Dickson worked at Boeing for 30 years and led a team of engineers who worked on the 737 Max. He said they were under constant pressure to keep costs down.

"Certainly what I saw was a lack of sufficient resources to do The Job in its entirety," he says.

"The culture was very cost centred, incredibly pressurised. Engineers were given targets to get certain amount of cost out of the aeroplane. "

Adam Dickson worked for three decades at Boeing

Mr Dickson said engineers were Under Pressure to downplay new features on the 737 Max.

He said by classifying them as minor rather than major changes, Boeing would face less scrutiny from the US regulator, the Federal Aviation Administration.

"The Goal was to show that those differences were so similar to the previous design that it would not require a major design classification in the certification process. There was a lot of interest and pressure on the certification and analysis engineers in particular, to look at any changes to the Max as minor changes. "

He said that downplaying the changes reduced scrutiny in a way that could impact safety. Now even his own family have fears about the plane's safety.

"My Family won't fly on a 737 Max. It's frightening to see such a major incident because of a system that didn't function properly or accurately. "

Boeing said its former engineer's comments were incorrect.

"We did not cut corners or push the 737 Max out before it was ready," it said.

"We have always held true to our values of safety, quality and integrity and those values are complementary and mutually reinforcing with productivity and company Performance . "

Boeing says that safety is One of its values

Passengers first flew on the 737 Max in 2017, but airlines have been making advance purchases since the plane was first marketed in 2011

Five thousand have been ordered - Making It the fastest-selling plane in Boeing 's history.

Some of The Money from those sales has been used to fund big pay-outs for company executives and shareholders.

'Supercharge'

Since 2013, Boeing has paid $17bn (£13. 74bn) in dividends to shareholders and has spent a further $43bn buying its own shares - a spending spree that has helped Boeing treble its share price in just five years.

Chief executive Dennis Muilenburg has also been paid More Than $70m.

Economist William Lazonick says senior management were too focused on Making Money .

Critics have accused Boeing of paying more attention to the stock market than the safety of its passengers.

Economist William Lazonick said senior management were too focused on Making Money .

"If you supercharge the incentives of top executives and tell them that their job is to get the stock price up, they're not going to pay the kind of attention they need to pay to ensuring they produce a safe plane," he said.

Boeing said it "follows a balanced cash deployment strategy that ensures investment in our core businesses and workforce, returns value to shareholders and maintains our strong balance sheet and credit rating".

The 737 Max has been grounded since March and there is currently no sign of regulators allowing the plane back in The Skies .

Boeing has been trying to fix the software that forced the aircraft in Indonesia and Ethiopia down.

MCAS was designed to operate when the plane was flying at a steep, nose-up Angle - and would automatically attempt to move The Nose downwards.

It was meant to make the controls feel more predictable and familiar to pilots who were used to older versions of the 737.

But pilots didn't know about MCAS because it wasn't included in training materials or the 1,600-page manual for the Max.

Boeing 's system also had a fatal Flaw - it used a single sensor to Work Out the Angle the plane was flying at.

On both the Indonesian and Ethiopian flights, that sensor stopped working properly. This resulted in MCAS forcing the aircraft downwards even though they were already on the correct course.

The pilots struggled to regain control, because MCAS was designed to kick back in every few seconds. The Indonesian plane was forced down More Than 20 times before it crashed.

'Complicated'

Boeing said it wasn't relying on the single sensor, because the pilots were there as back up. It said there was a way to override MCAS - a standard procedure that pilots should have known about from flying the old 737.

The Company has said the pilots didn't completely follow the correct operating procedures when things went wrong.

But 737 pilots like Chris Brady say it is wrong to blame the pilots.

"If you're going to design and certify an airliner with such a complicated, obscure failure mode as happened to that crew, it's no wonder that your average crew aren't able to deal with it," he said.

Boeing said it is focusing on implementing the software update, finalising pilot training and rebuilding trust with customers.

"Boeing truly regrets the loss of life and will continue to work with communities, customers and the aviation industry to help with The Healing process," it said.

"In any accident we must learn from what happened. It's also important to avoid speculating ahead of The Final investigative reports. "

Watch BBC Panorama: Boeing 's Killer Planes, on 29 July at 8. 30pm on Bbc One .



aviation safety, air travel, aerospace, companies, boeing 737 max 8,boeing

Source of news: bbc.com

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