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A380's now getting scrapped


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Shame really I do like flying on them, will be flying emirates A380 on Tuesday. But suppose the new A350 and B787 are more fuel efficient then the A380. Still waiting to fly the A350.

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The A350s are nice planes.  I think I've flown on a few.  Smooth and fairly quiet ride.  I'm beginning to wonder about Boeing.  Just the other day I read an article about the 787 and Boeing's decision to not equip the planes with a lightning protection device.  Cost cutting.  Personally, I'd rather pay a bit more for a ticket and have a safer plane.  

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21 hours ago, Butch said:

That article was June 2018, they were early builds and were replaced by new-build A380's

Another ex-Singapore A380 has found a new home with ACMI specialist HI-Fly and was recently used on Thomas cook repatriation flights...

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Isn't that still fairly young for a long haul airframe, in the sense of number of cycles it would have done?.

I did some more reading up on business insider, it seems there is a lot of value in parts and they suggest that the Aircraft was only half way through its life.

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I will be sad to see them go. The A380 is probably the most comfortable plane I've flown on. I only travel economy and the ones I've flown seem to be quieter and have more seat space than the smaller Airbuses and any Boeing.

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6 hours ago, Butch said:

Isn't that still fairly young for a long haul airframe, in the sense of number of cycles it would have done?.

I did some more reading up on business insider, it seems there is a lot of value in parts and they suggest that the Aircraft was only half way through its life.

That statement ignores economic life.

The bird is not able to compete with other birds.

Pretty simple to understand whey they only built 300+ and are scrapping them.

 

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10 hours ago, martini9946 said:

yes its all about profit per passenger and they were just uneconomical against the small planes  

Its much more than just "small" planes.

It is new materials, new engines etc.

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Hi,

The A350 is replacing the Boeing on planned Qantas non stop flight between London and Sydney. More trouble for the American company.

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/boeing-considers-suspending-or-reducing-737-max-production

Boeing Considers Suspending 737 MAX Production

 
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22 hours ago, wacmedia said:

Hi,

The A350 is replacing the Boeing on planned Qantas non stop flight between London and Sydney. More trouble for the American company.

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/boeing-considers-suspending-or-reducing-737-max-production

Boeing Considers Suspending 737 MAX Production

 

Many are quoting that "test" flight as a publicity stunt. It had massive media coverage here in the UK and even a couple of "specials" on national news. I read somewhere that Singapore Airlines fly a service that is only slightly shorter to NY and have been doing so for years (in a 2 class config).

Not sure if I'd want to spend any more than 12 hours in economy. That's why we never fly PAL from UK to the RP, it is longer than they actually advertise, I prefer to break up a journey of that distance with a stop.

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On 12/14/2019 at 8:08 AM, js007 said:

The A350s are nice planes.  I think I've flown on a few.  Smooth and fairly quiet ride.  I'm beginning to wonder about Boeing.  Just the other day I read an article about the 787 and Boeing's decision to not equip the planes with a lightning protection device.  Cost cutting.  Personally, I'd rather pay a bit more for a ticket and have a safer plane.  

There is a wire mesh built-in to the composite skin of the aircraft which provides lightning protection. There were many discussions about this on the aviation web sites when the 787 first entered into production.

Edited by Samsonite
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1 hour ago, Gottsy said:

Slightly off topic but Boeing really is going downhill fast.

Their 'Starliner' due to meet up with the space station wont make it there now after a fault in the last stage.

OOOOOOOPS

https://www.space.com/boeing-starliner-oft-fails-to-reach-correct-orbit.html?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=dlvr.it

Come on, a malfunction of a test rocket is taking Boeing downhill?

What a load of BS.

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44 minutes ago, MrMango said:

Come on, a malfunction of a test rocket is taking Boeing downhill?

What a load of BS.

Not getting the 737 max certified safe isnt helping and iBelieve Turkish airline is now going to sue Boeing for loss of income  also the engine problems with the dream-liner will take till 2022 to sort out  

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42 minutes ago, martini9946 said:

Not getting the 737 max certified safe isnt helping and iBelieve Turkish airline is now going to sue Boeing for loss of income  also the engine problems with the dream-liner will take till 2022 to sort out  

I agree that none of that helps Boeing, but to say that the test rocket malfunction is taking Boeing down is a streach.

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5 hours ago, martini9946 said:

........also the engine problems with the dream-liner will take till 2022 to sort out  

Only the airlines who bought Rolls Royce engines are having problems and Rolls is either repairing or replacing every engine sold before a certain date. The GE engines are not having problems and the majority of 787s sold are powered by GE.

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6 hours ago, Samsonite said:

Only the airlines who bought Rolls Royce engines are having problems and Rolls is either repairing or replacing every engine sold before a certain date. The GE engines are not having problems and the majority of 787s sold are powered by GE.

Not quite true..... The GEnx has had problems and Airworthiness Directives issued against it!!!

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On 12/20/2019 at 3:54 PM, Gottsy said:

Slightly off topic but Boeing really is going downhill fast.

Their 'Starliner' due to meet up with the space station wont make it there now after a fault in the last stage.

OOOOOOOPS

https://www.space.com/boeing-starliner-oft-fails-to-reach-correct-orbit.html?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=dlvr.it

Hi,

Unfortunate timing for Boeing. Other companies may jump ahead in the space sector after the latest fuckup.

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/22/business/boeing-dennis-muilenburg-737-max.html

Boeing’s Crisis Deepens as the C.E.O. Struggles to Confront It

As the grounding of the 737 Max has persisted, Dennis Muilenburg’s handling of the situation has angered lawmakers, airlines, regulators and victims’ families.

https://www.theguardian.com/science/2019/dec/20/boeing-starliner-space-capsule-goes-off-course-on-first-test-flight

Boeing Starliner space capsule goes off course on first test flight

This was Boeing’s chance to catch up with SpaceX, Nasa’s other commercial crew provider, which successfully completed a similar demonstration last March. SpaceX has one last hurdle – a launch abort test – before carrying two Nasa astronauts in its Dragon capsule, possibly by spring.

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49 minutes ago, TheFiend said:

Looks like the Starliner cock-up was the final nail in the coffin for Dennis Muilenburg as he has been disposed off at Boeing...

https://www.wsj.com/articles/boeing-names-david-l-calhoun-to-replace-dennis-muilenburg-as-ceo-11577110365?mod=hp_lead_pos1

 

Boeing CEO Pushed Out as Company Reels From 737 MAX Debacle

Dennis Muilenburg succeeded by David Calhoun, who was brought in as chairman to handle crisis

 
 
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Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg on Capitol Hill in October. PHOTO: ANDREW HARNIK/ASSOCIATED PRESS
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Boeing Co. ousted Chief Executive Dennis Muilenburg as the company struggles with an extended crisis caused by two fatal crashes of its 737 MAX jetliner and friction with regulators over returning the grounded planes to service.

The aerospace giant said David Calhoun, a longtime Boeing director with deep ties to the aviation and private-equity industries, will become CEO next month. He was named Boeing’s chairman in October in a boardroom shake-up.

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Boeing named David L. Calhoun, pictured in 2017, to be the new CEO. PHOTO: CHRISTOPHER GOODNEY/BLOOMBERG NEWS

Mr. Calhoun, 62 years old, is stepping down as a senior executive at private-equity giant Blackstone Group Inc. An experienced corporate fixer, he is also a former top executive at jet-engine maker General Electric Co.

The leadership decision culminated a series of setbacks for Boeing that led to its recent decision to halt production of the 737 MAX starting next year, according to a person close to the board.

Mr. Calhoun and Boeing finance chief Greg Smith, who will serve as interim CEO, face the same challenges as Mr. Muilenburg: winning back the confidence of government officials, suppliers, airlines and the traveling public. Mr. Calhoun spent much of Monday phoning some of those constituents, including lawmakers, a Boeing spokesman said.

In a call with one U.S. airline CEO, Mr. Calhoun signaled Boeing would be taking a different tack, a person familiar with the call said. Airlines have lost hundreds of millions of dollars as they have been forced to adjust schedules that were dependent on a MAX fleet that should have numbered about 800 jets by now, only for all to be grounded.

Regulators had criticized Mr. Muilenburg’s efforts to reassure customers and the financial community that government approval of a fix for the MAX was coming soon—optimism that repeatedly proved misplaced. The new leadership team made it clear in public statements Monday that they won’t get ahead of regulators in predicting the return to service of the 737 MAX after its grounding in March following twin crashes that claimed 346 lives.

Boeing’s board decided to oust Mr. Muilenburg on Sunday during a 5 p.m. Eastern Time conference call following weekend conversations, people familiar with the matter said. Mr. Muilenburg didn’t participate in the discussion of his fate, though before turning to that matter the board discussed other issues with him.

Mr. Muilenburg learned of his dismissal from Mr. Calhoun and another board member that evening, said a person close to the board. Mr. Muilenburg wasn’t happy with the decision but understands, said a friend who spoke to him on Monday, describing him as a professional who cares about the company. “He’s very at peace,” this friend said.

Efforts to reach Mr. Muilenburg weren’t successful Monday.

The 55-year-old executive’s ouster came a week after the board gathered in Chicago for a regularly scheduled board meeting that focused largely on complicated plans for shutting down its 737 factory in Renton, Wash., the person close to the board said.

Frustration on the board had been increasing in recent weeks after the Federal Aviation Administration signaled that the MAX wouldn’t return to service until 2020, this person said. As the need to halt production became clear, there was concern that changing leadership while planning the factory shutdown could destabilize the company, this person said

Directors, who had affirmed their support for Mr. Muilenburg in October, were also dissatisfied at times with delays by management in providing them updates, this person said. “There were some surprises along the way,” this person said, one being Mr. Muilenburg’s rosy estimates for FAA approval that repeatedly proved inaccurate.

The malfunction of Boeing’s Starliner space capsule during its maiden flight on Friday, which left it unable to dock with the international space station, added to setbacks at the Chicago-based company. Mr. Muilenburg tweeted his congratulations to the Starliner team before the problem was disclosed on Friday.

The person close to the board noted that the mission was partly successful and said the mishap wasn’t a significant factor in directors’ decision.

The company has lost about $50 billion in market value since the MAX crisis began, with the stock off 24% from its level before the second crash in March. The MAX, which went into service in 2017, is Boeing’s best-selling plane.

Boeing shares rose about 3% on Monday to $337.55.

The MAX’s return to service won’t happen until regulators approve fixes to a flight-control system implicated in the two crashes. And board members have been particularly concerned about increasing friction with the FAA, which ultimately holds the key, the person familiar with the board said, calling the tension a “very significant and negative development.”

With the leadership change, Boeing’s board wanted to signal it would improve communication, particularly with regulators and customers, the person said.

An engineer by training, Mr. Muilenburg appeared to often rely heavily on data and legal advice rather than diplomacy in formulating his response to the escalating crisis, and his approach sometimes exacerbated friction with customers and regulators. His relationship with FAA leaders deteriorated to the point that about two weeks ago agency chief Steve Dickson publicly called out the company’s failures to provide complete and timely data supporting proposed MAX software fixes.

After Boeing’s announcement Monday, the FAA reiterated that it has set no timetable for when the MAX would be allowed to resume carrying passengers. It also said that it expects Boeing to focus on “the quality and timeliness of data submittals for FAA review, as well as being transparent with its relationship with the FAA.”

Turbulent Tenure

Boeing shares surged during CEO Dennis Muilenburg's tenure, with its market value peaking above $250 billion just days before the second crash of a 737 MAX.

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Boeing share price

$500

4

6

400

300

3

5

200

1

100

2

0

2015

’16

’17

’18

’19

July 1, 2015

Dennis Muilenburg becomes CEO

1

May 16, 2017

First 737 MAX delivered to Malaysia's Malindo Air

2

Oct. 29, 2018

Lion Air Flight JT910 crashes

3

March 10, 2019

Ethiopian Airlines Flight ET302 crashes

4

Dec. 16, 2019

Boeing announces plans to suspend 737 MAX production

5

Dec. 23, 2019

David Calhoun appointed CEO

6

Source: FactSet

Mr. Calhoun, who is set to become CEO on Jan. 13, has been a Boeing director since 2009. He spent 26 years at GE, including running its aircraft engine business.

At Blackstone, he has confronted other major corporate crises. He is credited with turning around the fortunes of Nielsen Holdings PLC after being put in charge of the market research and measurement company.

He later became chairman of Caterpillar Inc. ’s board weeks after federal agents raided the heavy machinery maker’s Illinois headquarters. Both he and Mr. Muilenburg are on Caterpillar’s board.

Directors and executives who have worked with Mr. Calhoun have said his experience should help Boeing overcome its problems. Inside boardrooms, his personality looms large, and he became increasingly assertive inside Boeing’s boardroom as problems mounted this year, colleagues have said.

Mr. Smith, who has spent most of his career at Boeing except for a stint running investor relations at Raytheon Co. , is well respected by the investment community. As Boeing’s finance chief, he expanded his role in recent years to reduce risk on the company’s balance sheet and focus on a raft of efficiency measures. He also has led efforts to realign production and negotiate customer compensation following the MAX grounding.

On Monday, Mr. Smith pledged to help “chart a new direction for Boeing,” in a note to staff viewed by The Wall Street Journal. Boeing isn’t expected to detail any additional strategic plans or financial fallout from the MAX until it reports full-year results on Jan. 29.

He isn’t joining the company’s board, more than half of whose members were directors when the decision was made in 2011 to proceed with the 737 MAX rather than counter rival Airbus SE with an all-new airplane. The board’s makeup has prompted criticism from some that Boeing needs to reset its internal culture.

U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D., Conn.) expressed skepticism Mr. Calhoun’s appointment would bring sufficient change and called for the longtime Boeing board member to testify before Congress

“It’s more than just one person,” the senator said. “It’s the management and the culture.”

Larry Kellner, a veteran airline executive who has been on the Boeing board since 2011, will take over from Mr. Calhoun as chairman.

Mr. Muilenburg’s defense of Boeing’s development of the MAX after the second crash in March made him a target of criticism, though he subsequently apologized to victims’ families on multiple occasions and acknowledged Boeing made mistakes.

Michael Stumo, who lost a daughter in the Ethiopian crash, called Mr. Muilenburg’s departure “a good first step,” but also said several board members should resign.

Mr. Muilenburg became CEO in July 2015. Before the MAX grounding, Boeing shares had more than tripled on his watch as the company boosted jetliner production and returned a bigger portion of profits to shareholders through stock buybacks and higher dividends. He is eligible for a $39 million payout, including $6.6 million in cash as well as bonuses and stock awards, based on share price of $322.50, according to regulatory filings. Boeing declined to comment on potential severance details.

Boeing’s new leadership will have its hands full. The company is suspending production of the MAX in 2020 amid uncertainty over the aircraft’s future, which will pressure Boeing’s finances, suppliers and the U.S. economy.

The crisis has disadvantaged Boeing in its competition with Airbus to supply carriers in a fast-growing air travel market. The two plane makers have a backlog of more than 13,000 jet orders, representing seven years of production. Boeing had planned to build more than 900 aircraft this year, including almost 600 MAX jets. It will end the year delivering fewer than 400.

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During a late October House hearing, former Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg explained three key mistakes the company made. Photo: Reuters/Sarah Silbiger (Originally published Oct. 30, 2019)

The company, which has about 5,000 MAX orders in hand, estimates the MAX crisis will cost it $10 billion in added costs and customer compensation, a figure analysts expect to at least double.

The FAA isn’t expected to approve the MAX software fixes, as well as related changes to pilot training, before February, according to people familiar with the matter.

Dennis Tajer, a spokesman for the union that represents pilots at American Airlines Group Inc., said pilots are seeking “actions that are desperately needed in rebuilding trust in Boeing.”

The FAA’s own pilots may pose hurdles to the return of the MAX. Some of them contend that tests so far suggest airline crews need simulator drills to prepare for certain emergencies involving the flight-control system, according to people familiar with the details. A final decision will likely take weeks, and involve various other pilots inside and outside the agency.

—Andy Pasztor and Alison Sider contributed to this article.

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On 12/20/2019 at 10:24 AM, wacmedia said:

Hi,

I have a feeling that Boeing may not be around for too much longer.

Hi,

You said it wac. The 737 was a great plane whose reputation is being destroyed. Boeing should have created a new plane from scratch for the more fuel efficient engines.

 

https://www.independent.co.uk/travel/news-and-advice/boeing-737-max-8-crash-lion-air-deaths-accident-ethiopian-airlines-a9174181.html

The Max has much larger engines, improving the fuel efficiency of the aircraft. But the undercarriage of the Boeing 737 is short, and it sits much lower on the ground than its more modern counterpart, the Airbus A320.

Had the latest large engines been hung from the wings, as on previous versions, there would have been insufficient ground clearance.

Instead, the engines were moved further forward and blended into each wing. While intuitively this sounds as though it should have made the aircraft “nose-heavy”, in fact the aerodynamic consequence was that the engine housing themselves generated lift and could tilt the aircraft upwards. 

 

The designers concluded this characteristic increased the risk of a stall, in which the wings do not generate sufficient lift to keep the plane flying safely.

So they installed software called the Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System (MCAS).

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