contrail67
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 13, 2003
- Posts
- 954
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It was both. If my company did this, then I wouldn't be defending them. That's the difference.
Dont you work for valujet oh my bad airtran. By the way your company did to it they just changed their name.
I understand the "older airplane inspections" were mandated after the infamous Alaska Airlines accident when part of the cabin blew off and sucked out a flight attendant...
The whistle-blowers say FAA managers knew about the lapse in safety at Southwest, but decided to allow the airline to conduct the safety checks on a slower schedule because taking "aircraft out of service would have disrupted Southwest Airlines' flight schedule."
Isn't the point of oversight to find errors and improve future performace? The feds ALLOWED us to comply with the inspections on an amended timeline. Now we're being targeted for following the FAA guidelines?
Let the hearings take place. If we were caught with our hand in the cookie jar then they ought to spank us. We would deserve it. We missed the deadlines plain and simple and will surely pay a fine for it but if we inadvertantly missed this inspection and enhanced safety by improving future performance then I say the system worked.
Gup
The real problem is the FAA mandate to police AND promote aviation. If the NTSB had enforcement powers stuff like this wouldn't happen. I wonder if the FAA personnel who apparently knew about this were former SWA employees.
yada yada...someone trying to dig up dirt on them.
Why all the haters?
The recap how I see it.
We were told to do checks. Some accidentally got overlooked. 46 planes were re-checked. 6 were found to have extremely small cracks deemed too small to compromise safety. Boeing said it was okay to continue for 10 days. We disclosed to FAA. FAA did not ground the 6 planes for the 10 days. All was ok. FAA has reconsidered. I believe that we did this purposely is simply not true. These planes have greater than 98% MX dispatch reliability, rarely even have MELs, and corners don't need to be cut. My coolaid colored glasses might be foggy, but a sucessful airline in today's economy puts a bigger target on us than a heart shaped tatoo on the small of a chick's back.
Q: What is Boeing’s opinion of whether Southwest should have grounded their 737s until the inspections had been completed?
A: That would be a decision for Southwest to make. Boeing concluded their compliance plan was technically valid and maintained fleet safety.
Q: Were any of the skin cracks found by Southwest Airlines unsafe for the flying public?
A: All the analysis and abundance of test data developed by Boeing on the issue of skin cracking indicated that an immediate safety concern was not imminent. Southwest’s plan to complete the inspections and any necessary repairs ensured an acceptable level of safety.