Investigators say they confirmed pilots' account of a rudder-control failure on a Boeing Max jet ( apnews.com )

United Airlines pilots said pedals that control rudder movement on the plane were stuck as they tried to keep the plane in the center of the runway during the Feb. 6 landing.

The pilots were able to use a small nose-gear steering wheel to veer from the runway to a high-speed turnoff. The rudder pedals began working again as the pilots taxied to the gate with 155 passengers and six crew members on the flight from Nassau, Bahamas, according to a preliminary report by the National Transportation Safety Board.

Boeing said this is the only rudder-response issue reported on a Max, although two similar incidents happened in 2019 with an earlier model of the 737 called NG or next generation, which has the same rudder-pedal system.

The manufacturer said the issue was fixed by replacing three parts. The plane has made dozens of passenger-carrying flights since then, according to data from FlightAware.

toiletobserver ,

Holy dick bags Batman. Cold environment testing is normal stuff. Coupled with cycle testing, and this shit ain't supposed to happen.

FiskFisk33 ,

Cold environment testing? Isn't it like -40°C to -80°C at cruising altitude anyways?

peopleproblems ,

Yes, and we have machines to do these things. Ours could easily fit 4 flight computers for a 4, 8, 12 or 24 hour test at -70C to something crazy like 50C

Evil_Shrubbery ,

... so your machine could probably cool my GPU nicely is what you are saying ...

Shizu ,
@Shizu@lemmy.world avatar

I think Boeing should rethink their strategy. How are their Stockprices not at the bottom of the ocean yet? Cutting so many corners and risking so many lifes should not be legal. This should definitely be prosecuted.
Either ban all the current executives or ban the planes.

cozy_agent ,

That's what I don't get, their stock goes down for a while but then people think it's a good time to buy and it goes back up. Like it doesn't affect them at all. Casually kill 400 people and barely anything happens.

CountVon ,
@CountVon@sh.itjust.works avatar

Every time there's a bad-news dip in Boeing's stock price, traders are treating that as a discount to buy the stock because they don't think the US government would ever allow Boeing to fail. Sadly, they're probably not wrong. If Boeing's financials get into deep trouble the US government would likely bail them out because they're a large employer and a strategic component of US economic hegemony.

FuglyDuck ,
@FuglyDuck@lemmy.world avatar

and a strategic component of US economic hegemony.

Not to mention, they build a lot of the toys the military plays with.

thefartographer ,

I think there's a few execs over at Boeing who haven't seen All My Sons yet

Gork ,

Because they're busy buying back their stock, causing the stock price to go up.

I don't think public companies should be able to do this, but they seem to do it all the time.

sin_free_for_00_days ,

I'm pretty sure it was made illegal after the stock crash, or at least way more tightly regulated. Then Reagan made it cool again.

jonne ,

Because the stock market knows the US government would never let Boeing fail. Ever since the 2008 crisis investors have been acting on the assumption that every company that is too important for the US economy will be bailed out (as in, given low interest loans, not nationalised like a sane government would do).

PrincessLeiasCat ,

I was wondering the same thing about one of these planes and the ocean, tbh.

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