American Airlines, United and Southwest ground troubled 737 Max jets over new issue


American Airlines, United and Southwest ground troubled 737 Max jets after Boeing disclosed new ‘wiring problem’ affecting the planes

  • Airlines suspended the use of dozens of Boeing 737 Max jets on Friday
  • Boeing disclosed a possible electrical fault in the production of some planes
  • Issue is unrelated to the safety issues linked to two fatal crashes that killed 346
  • Comes just five months after worldwide grounding of the 737 Max was lifted 

Airlines suspended the use of dozens of 737 Max jets on Friday after Boeing warned them of a possible electrical fault in the production of some planes.

The glitch is the latest problem to beset Boeing’s most-sold model — but is not related to cockpit safety issues that led to an almost two-year worldwide grounding, lifted five months ago. 

That grounding followed two crashes that killed 346 people in October 2018 and March 2019.

Boeing told airlines that repairs for each plane could take a matter of hours or a few days, according to a notification seen by Reuters.

Airlines suspended the use of dozens of 737 Max jets on Friday after Boeing warned them of a possible electrical fault. Above, Southwest 737 Max planes are seen grounded in 2019

Airlines suspended the use of dozens of 737 Max jets on Friday after Boeing warned them of a possible electrical fault. Above, Southwest 737 Max planes are seen grounded in 2019

The top three U.S. 737 Max operators – Southwest Airlines , American Airlines and United Airlines – said they had removed more than 60 jets from service following the notice from Boeing.

The issue affects about 90 planes globally, sources briefed on the matter said.

The chief operating officer of American Airlines, which said the issue affected 17 of its most recently delivered 737 Max aircraft, told employees that Boeing has traced the issue to a production change made in the installation process.

‘(This) occurred after our last aircraft was delivered before the fleet grounding in March 2019,’ David Seymour said in the memo.

The status of Boeing deliveries was not immediately clear, with one source saying they too could be disrupted by the new checks.

‘Because the problem is understood and the fix looks relatively straightforward, it’s unlikely to be a show stopper, although it’s unclear if it might have any impact on the expected MAX delivery ramp,’ Cowen analyst Cai von Rumohr wrote in a note.

Boeing shares were down 1.8 percent in Friday trading.

A United Airlines Boeing 737 MAX airliner is pictured on the ramp at Renton Airport in November. The plane resumed service last hear

A United Airlines Boeing 737 MAX airliner is pictured on the ramp at Renton Airport in November. The plane resumed service last hear 

The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said Boeing had notified it late Thursday of its recommendation to temporarily remove some planes from service to address a manufacturing issue that could affect the operation of a backup power control unit.

The FAA said it was in contact with the airlines and the manufacturer, and would ensure the issue was addressed.

Boeing said in a statement that it wants 16 Max operators to check and verify that a ‘sufficient ground path’ exists for a component of the electrical power system.

Southwest, the largest 737 Max operator, said it was swapping out 30 of its 58 planes but did not expect a major disruption to its operations.

Boeing managed to get the 737 Max back in the skies late last year after it was grounded for 20 months following two fatal crashes, and recently announced an order for 100 of the aircraft as the airline sector begins to recover from the coronavirus pandemic.

The manufacturer discovered the latest issue on a plane in production ‘during normal build activity,’ a Boeing spokeswoman said.

It is ‘premature’ to discuss the time needed to address the issue, and ‘could take a matter of hours or a few days’ before planes are returned to service, she said.

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