Boing, boing.

done around 2800 miles on one yesterday kept my belt on just to be on safe side ;)
 
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The efficacy of just culture and the blameless postmortem is hardly in doubt. The United States has achieved the safest airline industry in the world through rigorous root cause analysis made possible only by a commitment to transparency, justice, and truth...Globally, airline accidents of all causes have been almost eliminated, even as global air traffic increases year-on-year. In 1972, by most measurements the nadir of global aviation safety, approximately one in 200,000 airline passengers worldwide did not reach their destination alive. Half a century later in 2022, this number was one in 17 million. In the U.S., where airline safety has always led the global average, no scheduled passenger airline has had a fatal crash in 15 years.

asteriskmag.com

Good odds...but keep up your insurance premiums if you're flying Boeing, all the same.
 
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Boeing went under the magnifying glass at not one, but two Senate hearings today (April 17th) examining allegations of deep-seated safety issues plaguing the once-revered plane manufacturer. Witnesses, including two whistleblowers, painted a disturbing picture of a company that cut corners, ignored problems, and threatened employees who spoke up.

The FAA report conducted hundreds of interviews with Boeing employees across the country, and the authors found staff often didn’t know how to report concerns or who to report them to. “In one of the surveys that we saw, 95 percent of the people who responded to the survey did not know who the chief of safety was,” said Tracy Dillinger, manager for safety culture and human factors at NASA.

The second hearing put the spotlight on two whistleblowers. Boeing quality engineer Sam Salehpour and former Boeing engineer Ed Pierson alongside aviation safety advocate and former FAA engineer Joe Jacobsen and Ohio State University aviation professor Shawn Pruchnicki. The whistleblowers slammed Boeing for allegedly knowing about defective parts and other serious assembly problems, and choosing to ignore or even conceal them. Such problems could slow down production and be expensive to fix — and internal and external critics say that Boeing’s priority was maximizing its profits.

During Wednesday’s hearings, witnesses reiterated that Boeing management had been overly focused on ramping up production while also cutting costs.

VOX.com
 
The hearings are on YouTube was quite an interesting watch
 
“In one of the surveys that we saw, 95 percent of the people who responded to the survey did not know who the chief of safety was,”

He keeps a low profile.............


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About twenty years ago, I saw one of those crash investigation programmes. I'm sure it was about a 737, and that the conclusion was a problem with one of the door frames, It was something along the lines that the original tooling had worn out so they were making them up by hand and bodging them into place. It sounds a bit crazy, but does anyone remember anything like this?
 
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