'If it takes a year to find everything we need to give us the confidence, so be it,' Dan Elwell, acting administrator of the FAA, said.
Many airline executives have indicated they expect the plane to be back in service by July or August.
The Federal Aviation Administration, still stinging from criticism of its certification and eventual grounding of737 Max, is optimistic it can get regulators around the world to agree on the process for getting the planes back in the air. "We will follow a process that is robust, rigorous and we will leave no stone unturned," he said. "If it takes a year to find everything we need to give us the confidence, so be it."
France Dernières Nouvelles, France Actualités
Similar News:Vous pouvez également lire des articles d'actualité similaires à celui-ci que nous avons collectés auprès d'autres sources d'information.
FAA chief says pilot decisions contributed to Boeing 737 MAX crashes“There are so many pieces to any accident,” Daniel K. Elwell said. “I’ve never looked at an accident where there weren’t three or four of five links in the chain, any one of which, if it hadn’t gone wrong, the plane would have survived.”
Lire la suite »
FAA chief has no timetable for ungrounding Boeing 737 MAXThe acting head of the Federal Aviation Administration said on Wednesday he does...
Lire la suite »
Boeing says 737 Max update is being held up by FAA questionsThe U.S. regulator has asked Boeing to provide more details about “how pilots interact with the airplane controls and displays in different flight scenarios,' the company said in a statement Thursday.
Lire la suite »
FAA Head Downplays Importance Of Broken Warning Light On 737 MAX, Faults Pilots In Deadly CrashesAn inoperative cockpit indicator on Boeing 737 MAX planes that has become a focus of attention in recent weeks was a maintenance light, not a safety feature, and wouldn’t have had a bearing on the crashes of two models of the plane that killed 346 people, FAA chief Daniel Elwell tells lawmakers.
Lire la suite »
Boeing Faces More FAA Requests as It Completes 737 MAX FixBoeing completed a software fix for its 737 MAX jets but faces additional information requests from U.S. aviation regulators, another hurdle in returning the troubled aircraft to passenger service, the company said.
Lire la suite »
Boeing says 737 Max software is fixed, now it's up to the FAAThe software fix was needed to allay concerns that figured in the crashes of two of the jetliners.
Lire la suite »
Boeing shares rise after report that a bird strike may have caused 737 Max crashThese are the stocks posting the largest moves before the bell.
Lire la suite »
Chinese airlines seek compensation from Boeing over 737 MAX groundingChina's three biggest airlines requested compensation from the US planemaker for losses the companies suffered over grounding 737 MAX jets and delayed deliveries.
Lire la suite »
Boeing Says It Has Fixed Software In Grounded 737 MAX AirplaneThe model has been implicated in two deadly crashes.
Lire la suite »
Ryanair: Boeing 737 MAX Grounding Will Hurt ProfitRyanair, Europe’s largest budget airline and the region’s largest customer for Boeing’s 737 MAX jets, warned that its profit for this year would be dented by the plane’s global grounding.
Lire la suite »
Boeing made mistakes on 737 MAX says Southwest CEO, hopeful planes return in U.S. summerBoeing Co made mistakes with its 737 MAX planes that need to be addressed, South...
Lire la suite »