Boeing reported another problem with fuselages on its 737 jets that might delay deliveries of about 50 aircraft in the latest quality gaff to plague the manufacturer.

Boeing Commercial Airplanes CEO Stan Deal said in a letter to Boeing staff seen Monday that a worker at its supplier discovered misdrilled holes in fuselages. Spirit AeroSystems, based in Wichita, Kansas, makes a large part of the fuselages on Boeing Max jets.

"While this potential condition is not an immediate safety issue and all 737s can continue operating safely”

‘bUT iT’s sAFE’

  • @winterayars
    link
    English
    725 months ago

    I know Boeing is kind of fucking everything up right now, but safety delays are an indicator of safety, not the opposite.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      165 months ago

      They can also be a sign of poor quality control and/or poor quality in general, which makes them newsworthy to people (potentially) entrusting their lives to the workmanship involved.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        55 months ago

        Not to mention… didn’t Boeing also help with the Ospreys? Those things are known for eating Marines throughout its development cycle. Gotta wonder if this complete lack of engineering may be a reason.

      • @winterayars
        link
        English
        -25 months ago

        This is kind of a survivorship bias kind of thing (with the WW2 bombers): NOT getting the news is the actual indicator of lack of quality control. Getting reports of them finding things is an indicator they’re actually looking. We know they had problems due to the whole, you know, planes falling out of the sky.

        Of course it’s not black and white, what’s in the news isn’t really the important thing either way. It’s just what we can see.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          75 months ago

          Yes, but actually no. They are looking NOW, because they are being forced to look. They apparently weren’t before, which is a sign of bad QA, and the scary part for the potential passengers.