Posted on 08/20/2019 6:28:14 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
SEATTLE: Boeing Co said on Tuesday it plans to add extra staff and hire "a few hundred" temporary employees at an airport in Washington state where it is storing many grounded 737 MAX jetliners, a key step in its best-case plan for resuming deliveries to airline customers in October.
The world's largest planemaker, burning cash as one of the worst crises in its history stretches into a sixth month, said the workers will assist with aircraft maintenance and customer delivery preparations at Grant County International Airport.
The hiring plans are the first publicly detailed steps Boeing will take as it works to deliver hundreds of grounded 737 MAX jets to airlines globally, an undertaking that would amount to one of the biggest logistical operations in modern civil aviation.
(Excerpt) Read more at channelnewsasia.com ...
I flew on one in mid April, several months after they were supposedly grounded. I would fly them any time. They're a great airplane, much roomier and comfortable than the alternatives. A that time, Southwest had over 31,000 successful flights with the Max 8. You were still safer in the air than on an automobile trip to the airport.
Besides that, a parachute wouldn't do you any good. The crashes were caused by ill trained pilots at take off. There was no time to put on your parachute, and no way to get out of the airplane. Even if you could, you would likely get hit by the wing or the tail after you jumped out.
Nothing wrong with the planes themselves, even the USAF admits that, it's that workers keep leaving garbage and their tools in the planes, often behind panels. An argument could be made that workers who are that careless may be also careless when assembling, but that doesn't translate into the plane itself being designed poorly.
Wouldn't do you much good. No way to egress the 737 while in flight and pressurized.
That's why DB Cooper chose the 727. The rear air stairs can be lowered in flight.
I'd fly on one today. As long as the flight crew are properly trained.
As is every Airbus aircraft, your only other choice for a passenger aircraft in that size.
It was tongue-in-cheek.
Hiring? So more $9/hr H1Bs from India? What else can go wrong? Are they trying to sink the company?
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