Use code "mentournow" and the link below to get an exclusive 60% off an annual Incogni plan: incogni.com/mentournow
@theregnarute10 ай бұрын
don't tell me what to do xD
@cristianvrincianu937610 ай бұрын
Video: 14 minutes ago, comment: 2 hours ago
@MentourNow10 ай бұрын
Yep, it’s uploaded hidden first so my Patreon can preview it. They have had it since Friday.
@keithmuir507710 ай бұрын
what have you been drinking?
@user-unknownorknown10 ай бұрын
China map has Kyrgistan in it too...@@MentourNow
@mikaluostarinen485810 ай бұрын
Boeing could make a profit at the last quarter of 2023 because of huge savings on bolts.
@MentourNow10 ай бұрын
🤔😂😂
@HugoAelbrecht10 ай бұрын
In fact Mentour made a small mistake: Boeing did NOT make a profit in Q4. Only the commercial Aviation division did. But your point is still valid: it’s in the commercial Aviation division that they saved on bolts!
@rayfreedell441110 ай бұрын
Not to mention the enormous training cost savings from MCAS!
@rayfreedell441110 ай бұрын
Top 'management' needs to forgo any and all bonuses, be replaced and move back to Seattle.
@forwardpaunganwa413510 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂
@peteorengo588810 ай бұрын
-Warning, I’m a Boeing fan. I have worked at Boeing and now fly the 787 for a living. Here’s my opinion: Boeing management insists in operating under a business model that has been disastrous for decades now. This started way before the MD merger. They now find themselves in the awful position of not having money to bring more of the manufacturing back under their control, not being able to certify new airplanes on time and much less being able to develop a new design to replace the troubled and tired 737. Their management has to go. From the board of directors to their top management, all should be replaced with competent leaders. That is the only way to fix Boeing. Unfortunately, I do not see it happening. The company is run by arrogant people that know the government will keep them afloat no matter what. I feel terrible for the Boeing employees. Working there used to be a source of pride. I hope for their sake that things do change. Thank you Pieter for another amazing video.
@elbuggo10 ай бұрын
Will probably get better when their DIE projects are completed!
@StratMatt77710 ай бұрын
@@elbuggo All you DEI people commenting all over every single KZbin video citing it as the cause of ALL problems in the world is getting really old. You should understand that all rational people reading your comments are annoyed and simply see you as a programmed politically tribal mindless parrot suffering from a persecutory paranoid delusion that FOX News and the politicians they serve brainwashed you with. In other words, all you are doing is advertising the inner workings of your psychology to the world. The people reading the comments under a video about airplanes really aren't interested in what you think or how you feel with regard to your political brainwashing and your "done to" psychology. But I do hope that you have a wonderful day!
@Evan.0110 ай бұрын
@@elbuggo This is an issue of cost-cutting, shareholder focused greed. ‘It’s the gays’ is a cop out argument. Take a closer look at the problem and come back with a smarter, well thought-out take.
@elbuggo10 ай бұрын
@@Evan.01 That's is what I am saying. The DIE projects will be a HUGE improvement, probably!
@NicolaW7210 ай бұрын
👍
@MrBanzoid10 ай бұрын
Boeing started to go downhill when they concentrated on building shareholder value rather than building aircraft.
@aycc-nbh728910 ай бұрын
Doesn’t Airbus also have this issue?
@musiqtee10 ай бұрын
@@aycc-nbh7289About 25% of shares are state owned, several countries. They also have an ongoing program for employees getting shares. Not saying this is “better”, but it may contribute to transparency, and ability / bravery to report issues without losing your job / influence, by not focusing solely on nominal growth. Most employees think a little differently if they also “own” a small representation - very “unamerican”, but more “european” as values go…?
@musiqtee10 ай бұрын
@OP: Doesn’t this go for *every* huge enterprise - private or state…? 😂
@ramadhanisme710 ай бұрын
@@aycc-nbh7289apparently no, airbus have a better reputation than boeing nowadays and their plane is better in almost every variable
@NoahSpurrier10 ай бұрын
Did Boeing achieve either?
@qfan885210 ай бұрын
Boeing: I need a boring year. Boeing door: this is too boring, let me go
@deepak7konka10 ай бұрын
😂😂
@uglybetty87479 ай бұрын
Bloopppp adiosssssss
@orangeball53127 ай бұрын
Boeing door: boring huh? Lemme show you something fun
@ShinzouWoSateSateSate7 ай бұрын
So boeing
@IainShepherd110 ай бұрын
6:54 oh man that’s hilarious “Boeing just needs a boring year in 2024” [spongebob French voice] ONE DAY LATER
@reinasherman80099 ай бұрын
And now a whistleblower just happened to end up dead. Yeah I think Boeing is in for far less than a boring year.
@alsen999 ай бұрын
@@reinasherman8009 just when Boeing is under a microscope, what a year for boeing
@NicePotato8 ай бұрын
And another Boeing incident with Southwest today. A boring year indeed.
@joergquasnowitz349510 ай бұрын
I worked as a contractor in Boeing engineering over 10 years ago. At the time i was tasked with evaluation of the production processes of the 787 tail section. After listing major issues with the design that would lead to near Impossible manufacturing challenges, I was asked to look into other areas as well in the next month. 2 months s later, an executive order came down, that would stop the whole project. That is all you need to know about manufacturing challenges at Boeing and their attitude towards quality.
@jpkatz143510 ай бұрын
Much thanks for the post. NOTHING LIKE HEARING FROM THE GUY THAT WAS ON FRONT LINE.
@jpkatz143510 ай бұрын
Much thanks for the post. NOTHING LIKE HEARING FROM THE GUY THAT WAS ON FRONT LINE.
@ejt370810 ай бұрын
Exactly. Wall Street doesn't care how many people die. If I were a young engineer I would be ashamed to work for Boeing. Now if Elon Musk saw the opportunity to bring in a better product, I would work for him.
@semilog64310 ай бұрын
@@ejt3708 Yeah, you'd choose to work for an inveterate, pathological liar. Good call. Just terrific.
@classydave7510 ай бұрын
@@ejt3708 What? Because you think Musk is better? He's a total charlatan and capricious billionaire hack. And that's being polite. Holy molly, for the love of God, stop dick riding that snake oil salesman. And billionaires in general.
@6StringPassion.10 ай бұрын
Using expert accountants to assure quality control was brilliant.
@huwzebediahthomas919310 ай бұрын
Ludicrous, isn't it? 😳😐😔
@altaccount469710 ай бұрын
They killed all their major competition (except Airbus) and spread out production all over the country. They axed quality control and cut corners to save money. They overworked and underpaid employees causing huge turnover so all the employees were new and had little experience, and so product quality went down the toilet. It's the same slow hypercapitalistic death every big company eventually dies, it's just scary when it happens to airplanes. Same reason Japanese made cars (Honda, Toyota, Nissan, etc) are so much better these days than American brands like Ford or Chevrolet.
@iPlayOnSpica10 ай бұрын
@@altaccount4697 Don't include the embarrassment that is Nissan in that list, plus it is no longer Japanese (it's more French than Japanese).
@classydave7510 ай бұрын
@@altaccount4697 Indeed. Just, capitalism. No need to even add the "hyper" adjective...
@msromike12310 ай бұрын
@@altaccount4697 Yeah, old news. The quality difference between Japanese cars and American cars is negligible. Of course, that wasn't always the case, but it's up to you to stay informed.
@smalltime010 ай бұрын
I think the fact that flight search engines let you filter out maxs now is going to be their biggest challenge.
@davidcole33310 ай бұрын
Really? The max is so unsafe that thousands of professional flight crews who make a living flying airplanes, get on board Max's everyday and do their job. The only thing that the unnamed search engine you speak of is doing is catering to mass hysteria fed by the media and KZbin channels like this one to score likes. I'm pretty sure if the Max was unsafe that the pilot and flight attendant unions would be screaming bloody murder to get their members off of these airplanes.
@georgedyson975410 ай бұрын
No doubt many of those who are anxious about flying at all, will be less comfortable if they see it is a Boeing plane scheduled for their flight. I don't know how much having cheaper fares, say, for Boeing flights would make a difference or whether an airline would even be willing to do something like that as it would mean that having Boeing aircraft would be less profitable..
@RandomGuy910 ай бұрын
Oof!
@RCAvhstape10 ай бұрын
Is this true? Ouch, that's gonna leave a mark.
@sarahparrish720610 ай бұрын
@@georgedyson9754Despite following so many pilot channels and reasonably understanding that crashes/accidents/dangerous situations are rare, I still decided to cancel my flight for spring break because neither my boyfriend nor I feel comfortable flying right now.
@VinceNet10 ай бұрын
It'd be good if you could cover what Airbus is doing differently to avoid the pitfalls of Boeing's management style (or any other detractors)
@Groovy-Train10 ай бұрын
Installing bolts for starters. 🤣
@DeadKraken10 ай бұрын
I think it's partially that the worker protection laws in EU and Europe are stronger and way way more protective towards workers than in the US, so Airbus can't actually make the same little greedy games Boeing does with their own engineers and staff. For example, the unions here have a very strong political and negotiating power, even if there's only one supplier and the workers have no alternative, they will still fight and are thus feared by businesses. This usually can push greedy businesses away to China or other less protected countries, but in the case of companies that *need* to be on european soil, it forces them to not cheapen out on things and makes their quality stronger and more reliable.
@nytracus968010 ай бұрын
I haven't checked but would assume there are more engineers and scientists in senior positions at Airbus. In France and Germany these professions are higher status and not dominated by clueless lawyers, accountants and MBAs.
@No-mq5lw10 ай бұрын
@@DeadKraken Remember that the governments of France, Spain, and Germany have a large stake in Airbus. According to 1 site, they collectively make up about 25% ownership in Airbus. I'm sure that any of those would be less than happy in Airbus if they were to have fundamental QA issues. Also, Airbus has assembly facilities in the US and China as well.
@DeadKraken10 ай бұрын
@@No-mq5lw If it's even partially government owned, then it makes even more sense that the workers in Europe have major benefits and are more protected. Working in companies either totally or partially owned by the government in Europe means your job is 100% safe, the company will have more problems trying to fire you than just paying better or respecting your rights. And usually european companies export parts of their worker protection rules as well, especially if they need both the european and the non-european parts to work in harmoniously.
@carey727210 ай бұрын
So in summing up, your tankers have clothes, parts and tools left in their internal spaces, you bid on VC-25s at 20% (so far) of their actual cost, your years delayed crew capsule is optimistically 2 years behind it's most recent years delay, people are randomly drilling holes in your aft pressure bulkheads, and after all that your door plugs are flying out of your brand new airplanes.
@doryds10 ай бұрын
From what I have seen, MBA managers tend to regard quality control as a negative item in their balance sheets. The problem is that those balance sheets usually don't take into account the kind of blowback that is possible from two crashed Max-8's and a blown door plug on the Max 9.
@20chocsaday10 ай бұрын
It is difficult to quantity their worth if not much happens. Similarly research will be represented as a Cost Centre.
@NicolaW7210 ай бұрын
Indeed, exactly.
@dirtykraut10 ай бұрын
The Quality of amazon electronic garbage is finally sucessfully scaled up to airplanes. 😂
@MrChadbag10 ай бұрын
If your claim to your job as a manager is an MBA you've already failed. An MBA, in my book, is a negative on a CV unless there are clear long term technical and other qualifications and education and clear experience being successful.
@mediocreman210 ай бұрын
Oh but they got their bonus that year! That's all that matters I guess. I don't know how they can sleep at night.
@robertmiller398710 ай бұрын
Boeing is an absolutely glaring example of Pournelle's iron law of bureaucracy. "In any bureaucracy, the people devoted to the benefit of the bureaucracy itself always get in control and those dedicated to the goals that the bureaucracy is supposed to accomplish have less and less influence, and sometimes are eliminated entirely." I believe one way to improve this situation would be to increase the salaries of the engineers and all workers who actually build the planes. Then fire half the managers and executives, and cut the salaries of the managers and executives remaining.
@RCAvhstape10 ай бұрын
Jerry Pournelle was a great writer. RIP
@RexKarrs10 ай бұрын
....and who would administer your plan?
@NAP79510 ай бұрын
Referring to Pournelle’s iron law of bureaucracy, there is no clearer example of this pronouncement than the Combo of the NATO/European Union Warmongering/Economic(Sanction) Barbarism, but multiplied Boeing’s scenario x 1000’s.
@jkk91610 ай бұрын
@@NAP795 Economic sanction barbarism? Damn, it must hit you hard.
@20chocsaday10 ай бұрын
During a tour of an old castle I was shown the bureau from which the estate was administered. The ruler was a bureaucrat.
@uwekonnigsstaddt52410 ай бұрын
Well, as Juan, a Boeing 777 pilot in his channel “Blancolirio” says, trying to save pennies, they lose billions 🤦
@nolan148110 ай бұрын
Tripping over a quarter to pick up a penny
@MQT-10 ай бұрын
That's the new math of the century....COMMON CORE... PPL stop being such a jellyfish, it's a joke about common core
@cageordie10 ай бұрын
Juan was also a 737 captain before he converted up to the 777. This all started with trying to screw the engineers on their pay and pensions, that was a small cost of a few hundred million over ten years compared to what Boeing lost on the 787 (development went from $10 billion to $34 billion). Every Boeing disaster is related to the damage they did to their engineering capability and each one comes with a multi billion dollar price tag.
@soeren7210 ай бұрын
Agreed, but he also once said US pilots are better than all others because of the 1500hr requirement, even if those 1500hr is in a cropduster 🤣
@briancorrell10 ай бұрын
@@MQT-oml shut up that's not the point
@strix747910 ай бұрын
I am relatively new to your channels, and find the content on both your channels really informative and interesting. Keep up the great work!🙂
@fredferd96510 ай бұрын
Captain Mentor, you are a serious, dedicated, unbiased, and completely honest aviation analyst. As such, we salute you. Your title, "Does Boeing Stand a chance anymore?" is in itself highly significant. The fact that such a subject could even be considered by an observer such as yourself (or any of the rest of us) indicates just how far down the slippery slope Boeing has fallen. Public opinion creates its own reality, and the gradient increases as time goes on. When the slope goes vertical, Boeing is going to be in deep trouble.
@gandalfgreyhame342510 ай бұрын
The problem is that Boeing seems dead set on continuing along the same path that got it into trouble in the first place. Instead of fixing their current product line, developing new aircraft, and getting back into focus as an engineering centered company, it still has a CEO who is primarily a private equity bean counter oriented towards profits. It moved its headquarters closer to Washington DC so its leaders could lobby Congress better and more easily, making it harder for them to keep a closer eye on its factories. Until it changes its ways, for instance, like Intel did by firing its CEO and hiring Gelsinger, who was a former Intel engineer, I don't see Boeing ever recovering. Instead, it's just going to go the way of Curtiss-Wright, North American Aviation, and other formerly great aviation companies as they stopped focusing on excellent engineering and instead went for the profits.
@raytrevor110 ай бұрын
Absolutely. Nothing will improve while the same people are in charge.
@fighter558310 ай бұрын
Changing the CEO isn't going to do much. You have to change the board too, and anyone in management positions that have been incompetent or felonious at their job.
@gandalfgreyhame342510 ай бұрын
@@fighter5583 Well, yes. They need to move their headquarters back to Seattle for that matter. Why is their entire management staff on the opposite side of the American continent?
@awdrifter339410 ай бұрын
Yep, if they are really big on safety, they would be stopping the development of 737 Max 7 and 10, instead start a brand new design.
@Flulix10 ай бұрын
Boeing has died out because of the 1997 merge but they have still have a chance to beat Airbus by basically reengineering the 737 MAX with the following: The new engines will be smaller but will be 10% more efficient and powerful compared to its competition (still the CFML). MCAS will be removed after they have tested all 737 MAX variants with the new engine with the MCAS disabled and should have no high attitude upon takeoff. With the door problems on the 737-9, Boeing will either replace the door with a window panel (with tight bolts ofc) or use a custom fuselage with no emergency door instead. Boeing will recommend airlines to use the new standards I just said and it should have no problem. This is their chance to beat Airbus and to fix the 737 MAX problems with better engineering and no profits made by the CEO.
@kenbrown280810 ай бұрын
maybe the union should consider writing a clause that requires 51% or more of boeing's senior management to be aircraft engineers. I mean, the biggest change made between their years of dominance in the airplane industry, and their current series of unfortunate events is that their management went from people who build airplanes to people who build profits.
@paulholmes67210 ай бұрын
And people that assumed they could increase those profits while divesting quality and logistics to new subcontractors and at the same time telling them to charge less for parts, or else. Boeing's accountant profiteering managers and planned "You have to give them to us cheaper as you need us.", are still scratching their heads over Spirit saying the heck with that and are now are building Airbus parts at increasing rates, forcing Boeing to compete for factory space. Irony at its finest.
@smalltime010 ай бұрын
@@zakirsiddiqui1 everyone jumps on 'it was the greedy business people' bandwagon
@kenbrown280810 ай бұрын
@@smalltime0 maybe it's because if all the times we've heard, "we can increase profits by reducing quality" from all directions, not just boeing.
@kenbrown280810 ай бұрын
@paulholmes672 every time i hear so.ebody say they can contract things out cheaper than they can do it in house, the math requires a reduction in quality to offset the cost of adding a middleman.
@ivansemanco697610 ай бұрын
Problem is, in todays world they more probably negotiate 51% or more woman, aliens, green etc. species than engineers. They are now push this in Europe… Instead capabilities and qualification we are hiring thru some strange and idiotic criteria.
@trthib10 ай бұрын
One of the major problem that has been ignored here is that this is the type of things that will make extremely difficult to get young people to want to work for the company in the long run. Even smaller plane manufacturers will probably seem like a better bet. If I was an engineer or a mechanic out of university I'd rather have daher, piper, texxtron or gulfstream on my CV than boeing. At least potential future employers wouldn't assume my work experience is synonymous with bad habits
@user-yt19810 ай бұрын
Come on, you are being unfair. Bad habits are mainly at management level and at that level they are not even seen as bad habits!
@Jehty_10 ай бұрын
@@danp576what has the GA accident rate to do with the CV of an engineer? (Unless those accidents are linked to manufacturing defects. Which I don't think they are)
@torstenmautz19510 ай бұрын
@@Jehty_those where mainly maintenance or Pilot Errors. Those huge costly birds have way more Error mitigation systems and current trained pilots than those GA Planes. And Higher cost and lower staff in maintenance has Just drawn more mechanics out of GA and risen Ticket prices.
@ejt370810 ай бұрын
I said the same elsewhere in these comments. How boring it would be to work for a company that subordinates mathematics to greed! I would be afraid to fly in my own plane!
@StratMatt77710 ай бұрын
@@danp576 Your assertion that airliner design quality and GA accidents caused by pilot error somehow relate to each other or somehow indicate anything regarding engineering quality in commercial vs. GA is illogical. Data is very important.
@happyguy481510 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@qtdcanada10 ай бұрын
All of the losses suffered from fixed-price defense contracts are clear indication of Boeing's engineering weaknesses and/or serious disconnects between Engineering/Manufacturing Departments and Sales/Marketing (and Upper Management)! Alarm bells went off years ago about losses incurred from the USAF KC-46 aerial tankers (based on the Boeing 767) and to lesser extent USN P-8 (based on the Boeing 737-800). It is interesting to note that Airbus took 8 years, from cleansheet design in 2006 to flight certification in 2014, for the world leading A-350. Boeing is taking likely 12 years to modernize and upgrade its flagship B-777X from a proven airframe.
@Hans-gb4mv10 ай бұрын
For a company that 5 years ago, after the MCAS disaster, stated that they were going to focus on safety, they keep dropping the ball and they keep asking for exemptions. Boeing is going to be second place for years to come. I can only hope that their next, clean sheet design, will really start with a clean slate and give them a new start so that by the middle of the next decade, they can claw back out of the pit they dug for themselves.
@StratMatt77710 ай бұрын
They didn't drop the ball. They dropped the bolts.
@jenda38610 ай бұрын
I don't see how that's possible when the CEO stated that they don't plan on even starting development of a new model within this decade. They may have a new type ready by mid 2040s if all goes reasonably well.
@northwesttravels723410 ай бұрын
A clean sheet design with an inexperienced workforce could be problematic.
@BabyMakR10 ай бұрын
Not only did they not focus on safety, they fired all the QA staff causing door plugs to start falling out of aircraft.
@cpnlsn8810 ай бұрын
I think their position is perilous. They need a clean sheet replacement of the 737 in the long term. When the new plane launches it will have a few crashes as most new systems do and then Boeing will really struggle in credibility. Especially if basic things like bolts etc. The malaise, sadly, is in the corporate culture. Safety first means a short term hit on shareholder return. There's the rub.
@johng547410 ай бұрын
Boeing needs to return to being an engineering company first. The world of aviation needs the competition.
@vikos7810 ай бұрын
They have burned too much cash. Now they deperately need to sale, fast and a lot. Proper engineering strategy and R&D are just wishful thinking, no time for this, Airbus is way ahead. Plus new various regulations on emission and so on will soon be a new burden.
@chrisschack971610 ай бұрын
@@vikos78 problem is, we're seeing what comes of doing it the other way. If Boeing keeps trying to do that, I doubt things will get better for them.
@TheLetsboogiedown10 ай бұрын
This is the problem in healthcare also. C-suite is focused on profits only. They have removed the doctors and the humanity from the leadership positions
@jxxxxx4410 ай бұрын
@RohankrishnaBcan we please, PLEASE not bring a CCP company into this conversation 😭😭😭
@paulkoza865210 ай бұрын
And there is none now.
@Muzakman3710 ай бұрын
Amazing really, once Boeing came up against competition it couldn't crush or buy-out it's really been struggling to keep up. Americans apparently love competition and believe in market forces dictating, but only when it means American firms are on top. Airbus is one of the most remarkable projects to emerge out of Europe since WW2, it shows what Europe is capable of when it pools its forces and talents together.
@Karibanu10 ай бұрын
Like the US is an open market anyway - try selling aircraft to the US military without using a US contractor as a front ( and probably having to re-engineer the thing to use local content ).
@trin16210 ай бұрын
What do you expect from the most corrupt nation on earth.
@jamesprice464710 ай бұрын
Many aerospace companies are effectively part of the Department of Defense. @@Karibanu
@Karibanu10 ай бұрын
@@jamesprice4647 Or the other way around, as it is in other places ( UK waves hi ). Armed forces-govt defence & procurement department-defence contractors are a merry-go-round of carreer posts circling the black hole of defence costs. That doesn't stop other govts being open to buying abroad ( even France, occasionally! ). I get there's notions of national security, but that also doesn't stop the US buying abroad dressed up as local product... and homegrown contractors are as liable to fail as foreign ones. Just got to have that cut, I guess. I wonder how many civil Airbus sales there'd be without local construction.
@valvodka9 ай бұрын
And is highly subsidized with free taxpayer capital infusions
@TheCalmPrince10 ай бұрын
Boeing will survive because Airbus simply cannot supply the entire market alone.
@jodyyy87529 ай бұрын
And this is effing sad
@tomasinasau33099 ай бұрын
lol 😂 airbus actually could that’s the funny part
@mateoqueen78349 ай бұрын
@@tomasinasau3309did you watch the video?
@pierrechardaire85258 ай бұрын
Boeing will survive because serious airlines do not want to see a monopolistic market.
@TheGodpharma10 ай бұрын
I spent my career in the pharmaceutical industry, in quality and regulatory affairs. Safety disasters in pharma may not normally be as dramatic and well publicised as in the aero industry, but if anything I'd guess more lives are potentially at risk. Even so, management, and especially those in sales and marketing, wanted us to bend the rules as far as possible, and the constant pressure can be difficult to resist, day in, day out. In one company I worked at, we were known by marketing as the "sales prevention department". I wonder if it's like that at Boeing.
@apveening10 ай бұрын
There have been some safety disasters in pharma that have been dramatic and well published (e.g. Thalidomide).
@TheGodpharma10 ай бұрын
@@apveening I said "not normally".
@VoicesInDark10 ай бұрын
@@apveening Sure, but that is 60 years ago. If the the example in your mind is that old, they are doing reasonably good job. Rofecoxib is a more recent example of a company withholding info about problems with the drug.
@paul756uk210 ай бұрын
@@apveeningno mention of the recent one that's causing 10% excess deaths in the populations that took it then? The fact is that the pharmaceutical industry kill more people than any other.
@burntnougat534110 ай бұрын
Uh yeah the scamdemic that just happened a few years ago?
@LucaAlbertalli10 ай бұрын
One of the Elephant in the room for this full story is Southwest (and to a certain degree, Ryanair in Europe). They are single type fleets and Boeing simply updated the 737 instead of going for a clean sheet design just to help them keep fleet commonality. I don't see how Boeing could squeeze out a new iteration from the basic 737 type certificate, so both will need to switch to a new type. If Boeing succeed in bringing them to a new design, they have a fighting chance, if not, they are relegated to a slow decline. Surely, we are talking of a change that will happen 10+ years from now, but they need to start planning for it now if they want to make it happen.
@NicolaW7210 ай бұрын
I don´t know if I heard it in another video of Petter or readed it somewhere else: Another problem of Boeing is indeed that they have a narrower range of customers for their most important product: The 737-MAX-Production depends mostly on a relatively small number of really big customers like Southwest, Ryanair, United and Alaska. If only these four customers would jump off from their orders it would be a huge blow for Boeing at a whole. The whole 737MAX8-200 program is specialized on the needs of Ryanair. The whole 737MAX7 program will be specialized on the needs of Southwest. There´re of course other customers, but they would never be able to compensate these few big ones. This is dangerous for Boeing. In opposite Airbus has a much wider range of customers for their A320neo-family program. Even if all the Indian Airlines, who ordered more than 1500 A320family-aircrafts only in the last year, would jump off as customers, this would of course be a loss for Airbus, but not a really threatening beat. So Airbus does not depend from special wishes of a few big customers.
@ValNishino10 ай бұрын
@@NicolaW72 Long line of airlines waiting to snap up those 1500 A320, too
@LucaAlbertalli10 ай бұрын
@@NicolaW72 United has already a few A321 in its fleet and is eager to take more as Petter said. Alaska had A320 in its fleet till a few years ago from the Virgin America merger (such a pity, Virgin America was awesome) so only SWA and Ryanair are really "safe" customers for now. But I doubt Boeing leadership has the leadership skills to play this game.
@trthib10 ай бұрын
Both airlines should buy enough Boeing stocks to get a seat at the table and steer the company in the right direction, that might be a matter of survival for them
@steveperreira585010 ай бұрын
I don’t on any of their stock and I never will. I don’t buy penny stocks.
@nicolamastascusa817310 ай бұрын
I'm really digging your map of China at 2:49 , where, somehow, it annexed both Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan.
@daniel1wantedtowin10 ай бұрын
and Taiwan
@adamsaint289010 ай бұрын
+10 social credit points for Mentour
@RocketboyX10 ай бұрын
CCP APPROVED!
@smalltime010 ай бұрын
Also recognises Kashmir, except the bit China controls
@Muzakman3710 ай бұрын
It's a map from 2040.
@DanielinLaTuna10 ай бұрын
The more Boeing is in the news, the more people will actively look at what aircraft are being flown to their destinations. I recently booked a trip from LAX to PDX on United Airlines, based on the two legs of the trip consisting of Airbus and Embraer aircraft, vs Alaska and Southwest flying 737 Max. I think more people are coming to the same conclusions
@burntnougat534110 ай бұрын
Noticed that too. Before you'd be a weirdo nerd if you talked about airplane types but now more and more normies are aware of what's flying them around
@PennPearson9 ай бұрын
Right. I'll fly to Asia in the fall and will try hard to avoid flying on any Boeing aircraft.
@n118nw8 ай бұрын
@@PennPearson You probably won't be flying to Asia in a 737.. there's nothing wrong with flying on a 747, 767, 777, or 787.
@PennPearson8 ай бұрын
@@n118nw I see. Thanks for the information.
@PARABOLA19668 ай бұрын
Your average individual doesn't know jack, about aircrafts, let alone about maintenence, design, etc.
@peterbonham554010 ай бұрын
Always felt they started going downhill after the Dreamliner battery fires in 2013. Probably started well before that, but that was my WTF moment
@Shadow__13310 ай бұрын
I feel like it started earlier, with the new composite rudder delaminations on 737s. The icing in the cake for me was calling that 2 out of 3 failed space capsule chute deployment a success 😂
@WowIndescribable10 ай бұрын
It's worth mentioning that profit is not just about sales prices for number of aircraft delivered, but also the very significant long-term maintenance profit that comes with each one as well.
@whysoserious866610 ай бұрын
Agree, but Boeings focus on short term quarterly numbers is killing them. The guy getting the aircraft delivered on time isn’t concerned about the long term maintenance profits. Removing quality control layers that can be a check on that bias is costing them. I don’t think for a minute that a Boeing employee would intentionally let a defective aircraft leave the plant, but we’re all humans and managers pushing schedule creates a lot of pressure. In this industry 90% quality isn’t good enough.
@leonardgrant687610 ай бұрын
Fixing the production of 737 Max for Boeing will be very difficult. Have been in some very large international companies and have seen very incompetent people working there because they had good social connections or they were receiving very small salaries. The problem for any CEO is that he doesn't know where are those incompetent people. Building planes is not a business where you can make many mistakes and still continue.
@raytrevor110 ай бұрын
Even worse when the CEO is incompetent.
@StratMatt77710 ай бұрын
That's what QA is supposed to be for.
@apveening10 ай бұрын
@@StratMatt777 But that is a real challenge when QA happens to be staffed with the incompetents shuffled there from other branches
@StratMatt77710 ай бұрын
@@apveening When I was hired at Boeing in 1997 as a 747 wingline assembly mechanic I went through 2 or 4 weeks (I can't remember) of training to read and interpret drawings, drill (ream) accurate holes etc. Your assertion that QA people are not given any training seems illogical to me. Also, the FAA wouldn't allow QA people to not be trained to do their job. Of course, I have no idea what has been going on at Boeing for 25 years, but your assertion seems quite illogical.
@randomplantsandstuff10 ай бұрын
I will not fly inside a 737 MAX anymore. Or for that matter any "newer" type Boeing planes.
@mikem.s.118310 ай бұрын
Excellent analysis. Most of the aircraft I travel in are Airbus aircraft, but I have a soft spot for the 737, 747 and 787. I hope Boeing solve their QC issues.. and also stop the bleading out of quality personnel in the design depts and assembly lines.
@MentourNow10 ай бұрын
I agree. Thanks for your nice comment
@apveening10 ай бұрын
I prefer Airbus as a passenger, much quieter than Boeing.
@carlo16973 ай бұрын
¡Gracias!
@lullimuppi10 ай бұрын
The problem may be much deeper. Yesterday I have the production of Steinway Pianos vs. Yamaha Pianos seen. Of course, this is about a completely different product. But the difference was, shortened, Middle Ages vs. Modern times.
Although I'm not a fan of boeing planes as a rule, its important that boeing remains one of the main players because for customers, a monopoly is not a good thing at all.
@SadisticSenpai6110 ай бұрын
I don't know that Boeing ending up going under would necessarily mean Airbus would have a monopoly. Boeing would likely be bought out by new owners (probably some venture capital firm), restructured, maybe renamed, and then continue making airplanes. It is a profitable industry and they do have all the logistics and systems in place to build airplanes, after all. Not that venture capitalists would be much better at managing the company than current Boeing execs are - they're even more "profit-first" in "managing." Or Boeing could be broken up and sold off piece-meal. At which point, it's possible that companies that currently make parts for Boeing (but aren't subsidiaries as Boeing has sold off a lot of the stuff they used to do in-house) could come together to form a conglomerate that makes airplanes. Isn't that how Airbus basically got started? A joint venture between a lot of companies and countries? I could be remembering wrong. After all, if Boeing goes under and those companies don't find new buyers for those parts? They go under too. And Airbus already has its own supply chains. Hell, I could see Lockheed Martin or another large military contractor that's flush with cash swooping in and buying up Boeing. It's similar to a lot of stuff they already do and comes with a supply chain already pre-built - a supply chain that is dependent on selling to Boeing. Although I will note that a monopoly doesn't _have_ to be bad. The airline industry is heavily regulated enough that they might be able to get away with a monopoly without any compromises in safety (compared to the current situation at least). And I don't really know how much Airbus would be able to raise their prices and still sell new airplanes at the current rate (or even increased rate without a competitor). Raise the prices too much and the used market will see a drastic uptick in appeal to airlines, even if it does mean increased maintenance costs. As for innovations in design and fuel usage? There's enough pressure in the industry to be more fuel efficient overall (as fuel is the single largest operating expense of an airline) that I think even with a monopoly, Airbus would feel pressure to continue innovating in that area. Not as much as they currently do ofc, but it would still be present. The fact that Airbus is based in the EU which has stricter regulations in general than the US is also to our advantage here. But overall, I don't think an Airbus monopoly would last too long. Simply because too many other companies would see an opportunity to make money by getting into the field - most likely companies that are currently best known as military contractors. And I suspect that the US government would happily sponsor/fund/etc such efforts as well simply so they don't have to rely on another country for all of their airplanes (but especially government owned/run airplanes such as Air Force One and all the planes operated by the military). Cuz the US loves capitalism until their pet industries and companies start failing. And then they absolutely love bailing out those corporations or using tax-payer funds to create new private and independent companies that don't share their profits with the very ppl that got them started in the first place. ...Sorry for the essay. 😅
@Taladar200310 ай бұрын
Not really. I agree on the monopoly but all we need is some second major manufacturer, doesn't have to be Boeing, and in fact it would be beneficial for competition if it was someone more competent than Boeing.
@jeremypearson685210 ай бұрын
Just imagine if Airbus didn’t exist. It would be impossible for Boeing to make anywhere near the number of aircraft required worldwide.
@apveening10 ай бұрын
@@SadisticSenpai61 No problem with the essay, I mostly agree with it. You are only overlooking the possibility of a competitor from somewhere else. And the PRC is already trying to get into the game (Comac 919) and is doing that slowly and carefully (very unlike most recent endeavors from there), so I have to give them better than even odds in succeeding.
@SadisticSenpai6110 ай бұрын
@@apveening Technically an outside company could start at any time and probably do somewhat well within the industry as a whole. That's why I didn't really go into that part. I'm not surprised that China is looking to start their own airline manufacturer. I'm only surprised they didn't get in earlier. It wouldn't surprise me if Russia started their own up again as well (and they're probably already working on it TBH). Esp with the difficulties they've been having with the trade embargos in airline parts. You can only cannibalize parts from grounded planes for so long before you start running out of spare parts. But the main reason I highlighted military contractors is cuz they not only have the capital to do so, but some of them used to make airplanes. Lockheed Martin used to be in the commercial airline business, after all - well, a couple mergers ago anyway.
@nellarl10 ай бұрын
What is the possibility Embraer taking some of the single-aisle market from Airbus and Boeing with its E-Jet family? Seems like Embraer is gaining reputation for quality and efficiency.
@tomstravels52010 ай бұрын
The E-Jet cannot compete with the 737/A320. It’s a regional jet
@shi0110 ай бұрын
Basically 0. Embreaer deliberately choose to not go toe to toe with Airbus and Boeing by designing the E-Jet family for a niche market segment which wasn't originally served by the two juggernauts. That only changed somewhat with the accuisitaion of the Bombardier C-Series by Airbus.
@trthib10 ай бұрын
Another reason for the Airbus & Boeing duopoly is that it's not just about building planes, you need to have the capacity to train thousands of crew on the aircraft type for their certification, the capacity to train the mechanics and the supply and network of parts all over the world Embraer can realistically only grow slowly developing all that
@beyondEV10 ай бұрын
@@shi01 C Series -> A220, because Boeing tried to abuse "buy america first" to keep bombardier out of the american market. By the time they lost, Airbus had already acquired it. The would try the same... unless they could shallow Embraer. But that is no longer a option.
@Gameflyer00110 ай бұрын
@@tomstravels520 it can compete with the A220/CSeries though, as intended.
@777Outrigger10 ай бұрын
I've always loved the Boeings I've flown. From KC-135s in the USAF to the B-727, the B-737-200, the 757, 767, and the 777. But Boeing's lost their way. Many have said that they started listening to the MBAs instead of their engineers. I'm sure that's too simple, but an aspect anyway.
@AAronFpv10 ай бұрын
This is really hitting home for me. I've been a fan for a long time and always enjoy your videos. It's always nice to have perspective on your life, I feel like I go through the same struggles and have been in a bad spot for a while. I've lost interest in a lot since my last relationship and I'm glad you posted this maybe it will be what I need to get myself back on track. I've been given a lot of great opportunities that I'm afraid I'll toss away if I don't get ahold of my mental health. I hope you get yourself back on track as well the first step is recognizing the problem and knowing where you stand.
@almac259810 ай бұрын
I worked with, not for, Boeing on one of the contracts the company I worked for before retirement. It was a only a few years after the McDonnell-Douglas take over. There was still a lot of resentment within the workforce and it showed in various ways, one side not informing the other what was going on, beancounters overruling engineers, etc. I think this has a lot to do with their problems.
@bearcubdaycare10 ай бұрын
Boeing is riding on their name from 25 years ago, 50 years ago.
@utuber3450010 ай бұрын
How was this commented two days ago?
@Ticklestein10 ай бұрын
@@utuber34500I think Bearcub is the editor (and thus has the direct link when it’s still unlisted and not public yet)
@wadehiggins111410 ай бұрын
@@utuber34500I saw that also 😂
@user-yt19810 ай бұрын
@@utuber34500 Patreon?
@kay954910 ай бұрын
bearcubdaycare Boeing has been around for many years. Having said that, looking back over the years, they always gave MD a run for there money. Hopefully whatever is happening, hope that all goes well. There will be always a competitive whether whom has the edge, MD, Boeing, Airbus. A question is did Boeing merge or buy out MD.
@sharoncassell527310 ай бұрын
We need more of these informative videos. Thank you Petter.
@ScotHarkins10 ай бұрын
Just having dinner one night with several Boeing gray beards in Renton was enough to really give me pause on flying newer Boeing jets, especially 737 lines. Not just money, but genuine corner cutting. They were more surprised by the recent 737 issues, deadly as they were. These folks were all just waiting out their retirements, struggling to protect the safety of their own work. It was at once so sad and so scary.
@bushav8er82010 ай бұрын
The Bread 'n' Butter graphic is genius and hilarious! I got a good laugh that I needed today! Thanks!! I love both of your channels. Keep up the great content. Fly safe!!
@BigWhoopZH10 ай бұрын
Airbus doesn't take any shortcuts and as a result their aircraft are more expensive and secure. For Boeing it's the opposite. It's quite obvious which strategy has proven to be more successful.
@chaffsalvo10 ай бұрын
HUH?!?. Airbus is typically considered cheaper than Boeing. As for safety Airbus has had its issues. Air France 447 (A340) crashed due to software issue reminiscent of 737 MCAS problem. AA587 (A300) vertical stab ripped off overstressed by pilot rudder inputs. Airbus doesnt have a monopoly on quality and safety.
@Ben2175610 ай бұрын
@@chaffsalvo I don't think it's fair to blame Airbus for the Air France 447 incident. A frozen pitot tube could have happened to any other plane, and it was the pilot's response to an otherwise manageable technical issue that led to the crash. This incident is not comparable to MCAS, and it's not the fault of Airbus software, either.
@tanmayta913110 ай бұрын
@@chaffsalvo Bruh... What are you even talking about? The Air France 447 accident involved the plane flying through some terrible weather which started to overwhelm the heating elements in the pitot tubes and caused a small build-up of ice in the pitot tubes which temporarily caused them to deliver erroneous airspeed data which resulted in the FMC (Flight Management Computer) reverting into Alternate Law where certain protections are not available. The accident was caused by the FO commanding maximum pitch-up from the aircraft for several minutes resulting in a stall that they never recovered from. The FMC would have limited the aircraft's pitch had it been operating in Normal Law which it unfortunately was not. The only "software issue" identified was that the stall warning and stick shaker event only lasted for the first few seconds after the aircraft entered the stall since after that the aircraft's indicated airspeed had dropped below 60 knots and the Flight Computer silenced the stall warning as it was deemed that such low airspeeds would only be possible on the ground where a stall warning would be irrelevant. The investigators concluded that while the stall warning being silenced was a contributing factor to the crash, a quick look at the artificial horizon would have shown that the plane was in a 46-degree nose-up attitude and that combined with their rapidly decreasing altitude would have clearly indicated that they were in a stall. The final investigation report states that the primary reason for the accident was a complete lack of situational awareness on behalf of the pilots. I wonder how you would justify calling this a "software issue reminiscent of MCAS". I do not see any similarities between this incident and those involving MCAS, especially since the only "software error" to have occurred here had nothing to do with the flight controls and the pilots were 100% in control of the aircraft when this accident happened. Stop making up random $#!T and spreading misinformation. Mentour himself has made a very good video explaining the crash of Air France 447. Maybe you should watch that. 👉kzbin.info/www/bejne/m2akeHt7it1_g6c
@benyomovod690410 ай бұрын
They waste too much time saving a Cent, instead making quality aircraft
@theregnarute10 ай бұрын
@@danp576 yeah you live in a former nation turned out country that is now run by israelis, extremely decrepit old folks and women. so yeah, not a great outlook.
@stevekranz202510 ай бұрын
During my last several years at Boeing, the saying "stepping over dollars to save dimes" was common around many areas...
@charlie7mason10 ай бұрын
@@danp576 What exactly are you even trying to say?
@ooooneeee9 ай бұрын
And it's costing them billions.
@christopherconkright131710 ай бұрын
When you let shareholders and profits cut corners can’t bitch when it bites you. They took the risk for profits it’s their own fault.
@RiaanStander-q2m10 ай бұрын
Thank you for broadening my knowledge on airliners,procedures and weather condition baswd flying
@josephconleith960610 ай бұрын
‘If you think safety is expensive, try an accident’ - Stelios Haji Ioannou, founder of Easyjet.
@nigelclinning244810 ай бұрын
Airbus said in their annual press conference just last week that the A320 replacement will come in the late 2030s. This will be a clean sheet design using 100% SAF. They also are working on a hydrogen powered aircraft most likely fuel cell) in service in 2035.
@classydave7510 ай бұрын
Their hydrogen projects are very interesting but 2035 is a very optimistic target...
@sw736610 ай бұрын
Politics forces aggressive estimates @classydave75 Politicians only care about being on the correct bandwagon $$$$$$$
@georgedyson975410 ай бұрын
I'm still curious as to how the whole hydrogen supply infrastructure is going to be created. Hydrogen is a very explosive gas and it is very good at leaking because of the size of the molecule, it also embrittles many metals. So likely it will need shipping as another gas such as ammonia, for example, which also has many safety issues because of toxicity. Then tehere is the issue of manufacturing hydrogen - electrolytical or chemical. Is either of these actually better for the environment. The thing about environmental issues is they have to be looked at from cradle to grave - the fact that the final product is greener is NOT the whole issue.
@matsv20110 ай бұрын
The fuel cell aircraft is unlikely to happen. The issue is speed. A fuel cell and electric motor have less power density so they have to fly slower to compensate. Range and fuel handling ks also a issue Doing the math of it, it just don't line up as a profitable aircraft compare to day using SAF.
@trthib10 ай бұрын
@@classydave75 Hydrogen has a few huge advantages, it is on the radar of almost everyone now, from shipbuilders to semi trucks to using it to stock solar and wind energy when not needed, the development can benefit a lot of the research that is done all over.... We know how to make it and it seems to be widely accessible (including in countries without petrol - France found a huge deposit in Alsace a couple of month ago)
@cruisinguy602410 ай бұрын
Here’s some insane food for though, Boeing introduced the 707, 727, 737, AND the freaking 747 in less time than it’s taking for them to release the 777-X. That’s seriously crazy they managed to design, build, test, and start production of all those ground breaking airframes in such a short time and now the modern Boeing is just truly incompetent. If it weren’t for all the military contracts I don’t see how the company would survive.
@StratMatt77710 ай бұрын
GE engine development troubles + Covid?
@RCAvhstape10 ай бұрын
Yep. And I'd feel safer on any one of those 60s era jets than a brand new Boeing.
@RCAvhstape10 ай бұрын
@@StratMatt777Excuses.
@apveening10 ай бұрын
@@StratMatt777 There were engine development troubles with the B747 as well.
@filanfyretracker10 ай бұрын
If they were not a major defense contractor I suspect they would have had much harder times at getting repeated bailouts. its not just that they are our only civil airliner company with a huge workforce that gets them easy access to bailouts but its considered a national security issue. They are also one half of ULA which is the only US satellite launch provider other than SpaceX.
@tabaks10 ай бұрын
If it's Max Boeing, I'm not going!
@wadehiggins111410 ай бұрын
If it's a boeing, I'm NEVER going!
@Pekiii9210 ай бұрын
If it's MAX, I ain't PAX.
@GeoStreber10 ай бұрын
I'd rather fly on a Tu-104 than on a 737Max at this point.
@Nikzmat10 ай бұрын
@@Pekiii92 should have said: If it's a MAX, I ain't gonna be a PAX
@aliancemd10 ай бұрын
Literally days ago they found that at least 50 737(non-MAX) frames have misplaced rivets that could lead to sudden decompression and hull loss in the air.
@kimberlyperrotis896210 ай бұрын
Thanks for mentioning this “sister channel” to Mentour Pilot as you did in your last MP video, you should mention it more often. I’ve been watching your excellent MP channel for several years, but didn’t know about this one. Yay for this discovery! More fascinating content for us to watch!
@Potemkin20009 ай бұрын
Just again... Blown away (no pun intended) by the quality of Mentour pilot videos. How big is the supporting team?
@Paul1958R10 ай бұрын
Petter/Mentour, Fantastic video/analysis - thank you! Perhaps in a future video you can do an indepth analysis of Airbus. As an American I dont hear much in the media about its strengths/weaknesses/issues. Paul (in MA USA)
@NicolaW7210 ай бұрын
👍 Maybe including the story of Frank Borrman, the man who saved Airbus.
@petercedilnik325410 ай бұрын
They need to cut out this 60+ year old model and start with a new plane in this segment
@robroilen444110 ай бұрын
That's crazy, I didn't know the laws of physics changed within the last 60 years
@GeoStreber10 ай бұрын
Laws of physics don't change, but engineering standards do. Back in the 60s, the engines were a lot smaller and less efficient. And the current airframe just cannot be fitted to modern ones properly anymore. The thinking that a design could be infinitely upgraded killed 338 people. So far. @@robroilen4441
@tonisimeunic771710 ай бұрын
@@robroilen4441well aerodynamics certainly changed lol. We saw how well that bodied with first maxes crashed because there has to be installed MCAS because plane was prone to stall of putting bigger engines on 50+ year old design ;)
@petercedilnik325410 ай бұрын
It has nothing to do with laws of physics @@robroilen4441
@robroilen444110 ай бұрын
@@tonisimeunic7717 I encourage you to read the actual crash investigations and original certification materials about the plane. It was found multiple times from 2012 to 2022 that the plane is completely stable with or without MCAS.
@StephaneCalabrese10 ай бұрын
"Too big to fail". Here, US government will never let Boeing fail.
@huwzebediahthomas919310 ай бұрын
US let their metals industries slip away. Companies like Boeing is the next step.
@beyondEV10 ай бұрын
True. And corruption will secure the US market for them. But if Comac gets serious, the could become the new duopoly (with Airbus) outside the US.
@jantjarks794610 ай бұрын
Question is if the public are aboard, after all they are paying the tickets. Or not. Flight booking pages allowing to sort out flights with the 737 is not necessarily the best foundation to operate with.
@danbenson758710 ай бұрын
Where’s McDonell Douglas? Etc. Yep, they don’t go broke so much as absorbed.
@jimgraham672210 ай бұрын
Probably.
@tlhIngan10 ай бұрын
McDonnell Douglas's problem (doing business as "Boeing") is that when they took over Boeing, they got rid of the engineers and promptly moved far away from them. It's the only reason why they're in Chicago. Back when Boeing actually existed, management was filled with engineers, and as engineers, they often wandered from the offices to the production line to see what was happening. If problems developed, everyone got involved in finding a solution, and that's where Boeing's history of engineering greatness comes from. Management from the CEO down were right down in there working to resolve the problems. Since McD-D took over, manglement was less concerned with the engineering and more concerned with the numbers - and walking the line was frowned upon as engineers have bad news and their fixes cost money. So they up and moved everyone to Chicago where they wouldn't hear of those problems. Of course, given how slowly the aircraft industry moves, it took that long for that decision to catch up with them, and that's what happened. And now, Boeing's engineers are gone, tired of being ignored (and likely have flocked elsewhere - Airbus among other companies) Remember when Boeing aircraft were good? That you wanted to ride in a Boeing over an Airbus? "If it ain't Boeing I ain't going"? Yeah, that doesn't seem to be happening, and I think it's becoming to the point people are avoiding Boeing and going with Airbus instead. Boeing is going to need to do a complete house cleaning and to stop concentrating on the CEO's new yacht and get back down to the basics of engineering before things can change for the better. Of course, I suppose they can start with negotiating a new contract with the union. The union's in control here and maybe if they actually manage to hammer out a new contract then it might be a beacon of hope. But if they decide to try to bully the union, then pretty much all hope is lost and the management just Do Not Get It(tm). And Boeing will become yet another extinct aviation company. There aren't many of those left - the likes of Cessna and Beechcraft being of the legacy companies (Piper collapsed and was resurrected as the New Piper company).
@apveening10 ай бұрын
"And Boeing will become yet another extinct aviation company." That won't happen as Boeing is too big to fail.
@tedstrikertwa80010 ай бұрын
Another First Class video. Airline aviation is a really intriguing topic.
@genevieveparismusic10 ай бұрын
That word “report / 😮reports” is one that’s used a lot, a very big lot, in Petter’s shows. I love the way he pronounces the end of it. Sounds a bit like “reportsh”. Appart from that, his accent is impeccable! Still his cute Swedish accent slips through from time to time. And I find it charming 😊
@montebont10 ай бұрын
I'm Dutch and I do the same...In Nordic languages the trailing "s" is a slightly "hissing" sounds. In English it is closer to a soft "z". It's ed versus ed ;-)
@Standswithafistremembers10 ай бұрын
My favourite one is the way he pronounces "jets" ❤
@fazerider928710 ай бұрын
I rather like his pronunciation of zero as "serro" too. :)
@dwaynelobo957110 ай бұрын
Great video Petter! Thanks for providing this information! Learned a lot! 🙂
@j0ckel61710 ай бұрын
Don't forget, that Boeing got the KC46 contract by screwing Airbus/Grumman out of it.
@apveening10 ай бұрын
And that contributed to Airbus's decision to not even offer the A380 for consideration for the next Airforce One, thus restricting the choice the Pentagon had (and leading to massive cost overruns).
@solandri6910 ай бұрын
Actually, the GAO (which nixed Airbus winning the original contract) made the right call on that one. The USAF laid out the criteria the planes had to meet, and specifically said no "extra credit" would be given for exceeding the criteria. But then in the report awarding the contract to Airbus, said the primary reason Airbus' entry won was because it exceeded the range criteria. Boeing's argument was that if they'd known additional consideration would've been given for exceeding the criteria, they could've submitted a design based on the 777 rather than the 767. I thought Airbus still had a good shot at winning the second time around, but they withdrew from the competition. If you're gonna blame someone, blame the Air Force brass who made those rules - zero consideration for exceeding requirements seems rather shortsighted.
@j0ckel61710 ай бұрын
@@solandri69 the main reason I say, that Boeing screwed/lobbied them out of it is, that the A330MRTT/KC45 was already flying and refueling planes left and right, doing everything it was supposed to, whereas Boeing‘s KC46 was a paper plane.
@burntnougat534110 ай бұрын
Don't forget Boeing tried to prevent the sale of the A220 in the US too
@rorykeegan189510 ай бұрын
@@apveening Get real, Airforce One being a European designed & built aircraft? Why would Airbus even waste their time bidding? Nobody I knew at Airbus were that stupid.
@LilRedDog9 ай бұрын
I was an OTR truck driver and I delivered to Boeing more times than I can remember. This is ~2010-2018. They were so cocky they wanted us to break HOS rules to go from one facility to another in Seattle. I told them I was not doing it anymore, not even 5 minutes. Last time, I clocked in the sleeper, went to sleep and when they woke me I told them they had interrupted my sleep and I would move the truck in 10 hours. They threatened calling the police, said they had national security something, something, and I rolled up my window and went back to sleep. No more Boeing dispatches sent to me. Safety was not their thing then and nothing has seemed to have changed.
@anngo414010 ай бұрын
Most international carriers fly the 350 as their flagship now, pretty telling
@bbelvito10 ай бұрын
787 isn't built in everett. It is rebuilt right in everett
@StratMatt77710 ай бұрын
LOL!
@creolespanish3410 ай бұрын
My perception is that Boeing is not shaking the tree hard enough in the QC side of the problem. To be a company centered in engineering, that is astonishing. When the disaster caused by the MCAS software happened, they had a golden opportunity to stop, rethink what was wrong with their processes, and focus on delivering quality. That never happened, they continued plugging emergency stopgap solutions all over the place and the results of that strategy are seen today. I wouldn't be surprised if they keep on hitting manufacturing issues in the near future
@haqvor10 ай бұрын
Boeing haven't been an engineering company for a long time. Their sole purpose is to maximize shareholder value and it is run by accountants. The problem is not QC, manufacturing or bad engineering those problems are only the symptoms of a bad company culture created by the incompetent leadership.
@bartsolari503510 ай бұрын
Boeing does not care...the PG&E mentality and cozy with govt
@hundredfireify10 ай бұрын
"Company centered in engineering" 😂
@maxenielsen10 ай бұрын
“plugging stopgap measures” is an interesting phrase in light of the Alaska Airlines blowout ;o)
@Your_Local_Nerd10 ай бұрын
Man I honestly hope Boeing recovers from all of this. You can’t even say anything positive about Boeing without people reminding you what kind of company they are
@s2snider10 ай бұрын
I hope so too, but with a board of directors that is focused on the long term, which may mean a wholesale change of members. What may be required are federal income tax rules that collect heavily on short term gains and are much easier on long term gains. Something like this would discourage the greediest from even wanting to serve on the board. Plus, this would make it so it's in every board member's interest to do the right thing for the company's future.
@marinablueGS10 ай бұрын
Many years ago, I remember a production meeting in which the plant manager said this about the maintenance techs....."Maintenance is a necessary evil", because maintenance tech didn't add value to the product (assembling parts, operating machinery, etc. to make a completed product). I was shocked (I was a maintenance engineer at the time) but tried to keep my face from showing it. It was a eye opener for me to realize that maintenance was NOT considered a valuable part of the team.
@patrickanquetil793710 ай бұрын
Great video! Just a tiny nitpick, when showing a map of China at 2:46 Kirghizistan was included into the lable "China"
@theresacaron423810 ай бұрын
Once passengers lose confidence in the aircraft product, especially when it involves perceived safety issues, the company took a defensive stand which in the end will be similar to MD's handling of the DC-10. MD eventually addressed the DC-10 safety issues, but by then the damage to the aircraft's reputation was done and the passenger confidence in the product failed. These same executives always delay appropriate decision making to until there is no choice. Since the previous MD executives now run Boeing, I expect a similar outcome, that is Boeing will fail due to shortsighted executives who only have their wallet contents as a priority and to the flying public's reluctance to board their aircraft.
@StratMatt77710 ай бұрын
People were flying DC-10s in the 1980s and 1990s with no awareness they were flying on a DC-10. But it took time... time enough for a new generation of people to be produced who hadn't experienced that hadn't experienced the 1970s news cycles (just kidding on that last part). ;)
@montebont10 ай бұрын
Well said. At he end of the day "informed" passengers decide the fate of an airline or a type of airplane. Whatever the extra cost I don't want to fly in a plane that has a reputation of losing a door in flight. You might argue it was an accident in a single plane. But the root cause is a lack of QA: if the defect was not detected in a single plane it might occur in multiple planes.
@0Clewi010 ай бұрын
Though it will be hard to measure how many passengers will look ahead of time and make decisions that monetarily affects airlines. As the passenger aren't Boeing's clients accountability from the mass public will be hard.
@marcmcreynolds282710 ай бұрын
DC-10s continued to be flown in large numbers long after the celebrated crashes. After the early '80s recession was over, plenty of DC-10s continued to be ordered and sold. It continued to beat the L-1011 in sales competitions, especially for long-haul routes. "previous MD executives" were gone a long long time ago.
@0521coxy10 ай бұрын
I mean I now look ahead and make sure I’m not on a max or a boeing if I have the option to fly on an airbus
@MrNikolidas10 ай бұрын
It would require a gargantuan turnaround in the culture throughout Boeing and its supply chain to keep up with Airbus and that's just in the present, nevermind the future. I don't believe that Boeing could withstand a ground-breaking Airbus design, not that I think one is coming soon, but with CFM engines on the horizon Boeing is certainly on the clock.
@TheBackyardChemist10 ай бұрын
Hmm, wouldn't it make more sense to install a few temperature sensors on the nacelle and have them turn the anti-ice off automatically if it gets too hot? Instead of trying to invent and manufacture new composite parts, they could stop frying them, through the extremely innovative technology of a ... thermostat?
@huwzebediahthomas919310 ай бұрын
Carbon fiber is not a good heat conductor, isn't it?
@TheBackyardChemist10 ай бұрын
@@huwzebediahthomas9193 It is probably better than glass fibers
@מיכאלרבינוביץ-י2צ10 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@johngibson383710 ай бұрын
Hey up mate I agree totally in this modern world a temp sensor or 50 is a pretty good view ov what's going on with the heat but why wasn't that done on the engine test bed
@StratMatt77710 ай бұрын
Then the airplane is grounded when the air temperature sensors fail. Better to design it properly now than to apply a patch to try to prevent the airplane from eating itself.
@linuxranch10 ай бұрын
I think Boeing has squandered the good will that once insulated them from all the competitors. At one time Boeing had a slogan "If it's not Boeing, I'm not going!". And now, passengers are beginning to question that premise. For a long time, I've been a Boeing fan. Since the days when the Boeing 707 entered the market. I just missed a flight on a Boeing Clipper Seaplane, when we moved over seas. The flight the week later as a Lockheed Constellation! And my next trip back to the US was on a DC-3. That airline (BWIA) bought a 707, then a 727, and stayed all Boeing for decades. I was a real Boeing fan for a long time. Boeing's design philosophy of not "hiding" anything from the crew made sense. The throttle position told you EXACTLY what thrust had been commanded. Autothrottle or not. But with MACS Boeing started playing games with what had been a core tennant. A good, reliable, "honest" aircraft. Then when build quality started suffering, so did my unwavering belief in the "rightness" of that loyalty. I'm not sure they will ever get it back. My career as a pilot is over, due to age and health.. so what I think about Boeing's reputation probably doesn't matter much any more.. But If it IS Boeing, it now rates a second look. Bill Boeing must be spinning in his crypt!
@blueightysix10 ай бұрын
Mr. Play It Safe was afraid to fly He packed his suitcase and kissed his kids goodbye He waited his whole damn life to take that flight And as the Boeing crashed down, he thought "Well, isn't this nice?"
@michaelhart756910 ай бұрын
A lot of companies would be really pleased to have a full order book stretching years into the future.
@tomsorrell491810 ай бұрын
I have stock options that expire in June and December of 2025. I'm betting big on the stock price being higher then...
@kw875710 ай бұрын
@@tomsorrell4918 For which company? Airbus or Boeing?
@Underestimated3710 ай бұрын
One thing I think is being overlooked is the reputation damage that could lead to fliers choosing not to fly on max variant planes, if resistance is high enough it could lead airlines to switch to other alternatives. The Max variants have gotten such a bad reputation that several people I know have sworn never to fly on one, and some booking sites even have set up an option to exclude booking flights on those planes.
@aycc-nbh728910 ай бұрын
It isn’t like they will have much of a choice if last-minute cancellations and equipment changes force them onto these planes.
@Underestimated3710 ай бұрын
@@aycc-nbh7289 that’s more an exception rather than a rule, I wouldn’t be surprised if some people just outright refuse to fly on one though regardless
@aycc-nbh728910 ай бұрын
@@Underestimated37What do you mean? These sorts of events happen all of the time, especially if people need to make alternate arrangements if significant delays cause them to miss their connections.
@Underestimated3710 ай бұрын
@@aycc-nbh7289 when airlines switch planes they usually stick to the same type, as the pilots don’t change, usually they’re type rated for one type of plane, they’re not going to go substituting a Boeing for an airbus, and people have and are outright refusing to fly on max variant planes. They refuse to go on flights that use the max types, even at short notice. In their mind it’s about convenience vs them risking their lives. Potential death is a pretty strong driving force that will make people do illogical things. And in those peoples minds, regardless of what the reality of the situation may be, they see these planes as death traps, and outright refuse to fly on them. Hence booking sites making an explicit no max variant option for booking flights. Missed connections be damned, there is a subset of people who refuse to fly on the max planes now, it’s a reality and one that is going to affect the industry regardless.
@Jehty_10 ай бұрын
I doubt that any significant number of people would do that. Just look at basically any other boycott. (of course it being a safety concern might motivate more people to boycott than let's say a moral concerns)
@The_little_Che10 ай бұрын
Right now Boeing suffering the same issues as every other large US companie, and it is a system crisis alredy for whall US industry. COs trying to cash out any single possible cent from the company, and it doesn't look like any chance to brake out from this situation.
@mudi2000a10 ай бұрын
I think unfortunately this problem is not only limited to the United States.
@michaelhiggins213510 ай бұрын
I’ve always been a Boeing fan and loved flying on the 737 but didn’t realize they’re pretty cramped. I’m a tall guy but have really enjoyed the space on the a320 family planes. Add in the the fact that Boeing doesn’t care about safety I choose airlines that offer airbus planes.
@rogerdavis745010 ай бұрын
So sad. Been a Boeing fan since a teenager. The 707 was the first jet that I flew on. Enjoyed flights on the powerful 727 (with tail winds, flew Miami to MoBay in 45 minutes). This is the result of a focus on the stock market vs. engineering and Quality, sacrificing Excellence for short term financial gains. (Similar happened to IBM.)
@airbus35080010 ай бұрын
One thing i've noticed is that Boeing has been very lucky & fortunate with many issues from production a quality issues with the 787 and the max series where they halted production during the pandemic where deliveries were delayed due to the lockdowns where no airlines wanted new aircraft. Where as Airbus has been less fortunate with engine issues with Pratt & Whitney for the A320 neo series and Rolls Royce with their financial conditions and issues with the xwb 97 , where Airrbus lost the A350 deal to boeing and with Thai Airways going their way to order the 787.
@user-yt19810 ай бұрын
While I mostly agree with you, a few years ago GE knocked Airbus' door and proposed to re-engine the A350s which Airbus refused. Airbus could also develop A350-800 and A350-2000. So not all of them are about bad fortune. Some of them are Airbus' own faults.
@fighter558310 ай бұрын
No airlines wanted the A358, so airbus trashed the idea.
@user-yt19810 ай бұрын
@@fighter5583 That is not true. There were 38 units of A350-800 ordered when it was cancelled. Airbus dropped it in favor of A330Neo, but A350 and A330 are not the same thing. And A350-800 is a better competitor for 787-8 and 787-9 than A330-900. A350-800 orders: Yemenia: 10 Hawaiian: 12 Aeroflot: 8 Asiana: 8 Also most of 22 A350-800/900 orders by US Airways which later merged with American Airlines and then later overall cancelled.
@fighter558310 ай бұрын
@hakanevin8545 If it was supposedly a better competitor for the 787 then Airbus would've went ahead and built it despite getting low interest. Fact is the 900 was the best sweet spot and the 800 was a niche; same with the 787-8 compared to the -9. Boeing had wanted to build a 787-3 for Japanese carriers but ultimately that got cancelled. The amount of customers that want the smaller jet just didn't justify the cost of making it.
@user-yt19810 ай бұрын
@@fighter5583 787-3 is irrelevant. It was not a low seat variant. It required a new wing and thus a lot of additional R&D costs. A350-800 didn't require that much cost to develop. Airbus assumed A300Neo can compete with 787 and airlines will replace their A330Ceos with A330Neos. They could easily win the latest Thai Airways order with A350-800s with GE engines (if available). Now TG will replace their A330-300s with 787-9, a complete failure of Airbus strategy.
@Lintary10 ай бұрын
It is going to be really hard for them to ensure proper QA/QC control because they split up their manufacturing of parts to so many sub suppliers so all of those would need to step up their game or Boeing would need to make a massive investment in doing very in depth QC on delivered parts which is just not realistic. People forget that QA/QC procedures is not just something you put on paper it is a cultural thing within your company, you need to get everyone onboard with it and on top it. If Jimmy the floor cleaner spots a missing bolt by accident they should feel encouraged to report it, which might sound silly, but a LOT of people are deadly afraid to point out mistakes because of how the company culture deals with such things. Say we get all of that sorted we still need to convince the FAA that we have managed it which means they will need to inspect all those sub suppliers, talk to the people there, check the procedures etc etc etc. Then finally they will get a green light to ramp up production, but might still be told that at random 1 plane a month is selected for additional QC just to ensure all is right for some years. The FAA is under heavy fire as is Boeing and they are not going to want to take risks and they do not have profits to worry about. It all comes down to that classic of quotes: "It takes years to build up your reputation and just a second to ruin it all.". Boeing is going to be suffering for a long time to come because of their own greed induced failures.
@texasabbott10 ай бұрын
Boeing should be really worried about the A220-500. Maybe they should work on a clean sheet of their own starting now!
@aycc-nbh728910 ай бұрын
Maybe they could either buy Embraer or build a “B717 MAX” plane.
@euloge99610 ай бұрын
No, there is no 220-500, it would kill the a320neo
@chakraborty198910 ай бұрын
P&W saving boeings ass then with the engine issues with A220
@user-yt19810 ай бұрын
As Mentour Pilot explained in another video, A220 program is not profitable yet. Until they reduce the costs, Airbus will not develop an A220-500. BTW, did you know that A220 fuselages are manufactured by Spirit?
@aycc-nbh728910 ай бұрын
@@euloge996How? It would likely not hold as many passengers or as much cargo.
@hotsauce24467 ай бұрын
Until these companies start getting jail time for involved persons or fines that actually hurt them, this will never stop.
@FutureSystem73810 ай бұрын
I have way over 20k hours flying Boeings up to and including the 747-400, and had absolutely HUGE respect for them. I’m now retired, and also now so damn sad to see what’s happened to this once proud and respected company. They absolutely MUST lift their game, and MUST earn respect again. It’s not negotiable. If not you end up with a massive monopoly … which is very bad for everyone.
@stradivarioushardhiantz517910 ай бұрын
New built Narrowbody from scratch is a necessity for Boeing, rather than fixing Max
@robroilen444110 ай бұрын
Lol there's nothing inherently wrong with the 737 MAX
@apveening10 ай бұрын
@@robroilen4441 Nothing besides it being based on a 60 year old design that is just seriously, completely outdated and an engine size and placement that is just plain dangerous.
@robroilen444110 ай бұрын
@@apveening I encourage you to read through the findings of the crash investigations and results of recertification testing after the crashes. It was found that the plane has absolutely no stability issues. The information repeated by the mainstream media about the engines is factually incorrect.
@PAC-fp9hy10 ай бұрын
The ramp up to 75 single aisle aircraft per month was a target for Airbus back in 2017. Covid put a stop to that and the ongoing issues with supply chains is still a drag on achieving that. Last year space was released at the Toulouse site for a new A320 assembly line, previously being the A380 FAL. This will take time to ramp up even if the supply chain recovers because people have to be trained, tooling needs to mature etc. Airbus has already signaled that it intends to start designing the next gen single aisle and so it can be expected that they will want to sell as many current aircraft to finance these aircraft of the future. It will be interesting to see whether a stretched A220-500 becomes an interim design between current aircraft and next gen. The stretch design is already possible and a new second engine option may secure additional customers. It is clear that signalling new and more modern aircraft is a clear contrast with Boeing who want every cent out of the 737's sixty year old design. The accountants are still in charge at Boeing.
@ultimachamada110 ай бұрын
When B bought McD, they payed with a "stock swap". This operation made McD formers controllers the "New B" shareholders controllers. Well it's seems that we are seeing the history repeated itself with the same captains in command.
@lukavujeva658410 ай бұрын
A purchased a significant position in September, and despite these issues, it’s holding supremely good.
@simian_essence10 ай бұрын
Post again in 10 years. I'd be very curious to see how you're doing then.
@barleysixseventwo66659 ай бұрын
To figure out if Boeing can recover, imagine yourself in the following position: You are an airline company looking to supplement your existing fleet of aircraft with some new planes of any type or size. 3 days ago you got a call from you insurance agency announcing that in light of recent events, they’ll be upping your premiums by 5 milllion/year for every Boeing aircraft in your inventory and 15 million/year for every 737 Max in your inventory starting next fiscal quarter. And that’s very inconvenient because 4 days ago the FAA called and grounded all the 737s for an indeterminate amount of time due to mechanical issues. In top of that, your PR department just reported several people called and requested cancellations when they confirmed the aircraft they were going to be flying on was a Boeing aircraft. Do you plan to buy more Boeing planes, or perhaps planes from literally any other manufacture with a competitive product?
@BLUESBOYBENFIELD10 ай бұрын
Somebody somewhere has recently realized they forgot to fit the bolts in the plug door……I would like to find out who didn’t do their job properly…..
@BLUESBOYBENFIELD10 ай бұрын
Yes, let’s have the guys name……
@BrianHoff0410 ай бұрын
Because knowing the person's name will fix the process? Do you work in mfg?
@oystercatcher94310 ай бұрын
It’s surely not one persons fault. It likely training, management, procedures. Remember the Swiss cheese model?
@thewhitefalcon853910 ай бұрын
@@oystercatcher943 Everything is the fault of one person, who must be punished as much as possible. Don't you remember conservative ideology?
@tomstravels52010 ай бұрын
@@danp576Alabama???? That’s where Airbus makes its aircraft so doubt it
@LTVoyager10 ай бұрын
Another channel did a very good analysis on where Boeing went wrong. The main reason is their decision to push R, D & E onto their subcontractors and then squeeze them so hard on price that they couldn’t do so profitably. The typical MBA approach to running a business. This can be corrected, but it will take years. The good news is that the world needs more than two airliner makers and these fat order backlogs provide a real opportunity for small companies like Embraer to grow and prosper and challenge Boeing and Airbus in the future and that benefits us all.
@freeculture10 ай бұрын
I see Embraer and Comac, Tupolev if the war ends. Wish Bombardier didn't merge but that is history. Those A220 are superior to the A320s...
@MrJimheeren10 ай бұрын
Close the headquarter in Chicago and move it back to Seattle. Fire the whole board (yes everyone) and start designing a new fresh single isle aircraft. And then maybe maybe they can come close to Airbus. A company that sells more aircraft and has vastly more money at hand right now
@ppeterson935910 ай бұрын
Boeing HQ actually moved to Arlington, VA in ‘22. I agree HQ should have been moved back to Seattle.
@MrJimheeren10 ай бұрын
@@ppeterson9359 seriously they moved from Chicago to Virginia. What the hell are they doing there?
@DominicMazoch10 ай бұрын
@@MrJimheerenDOD contracts.
@apveening10 ай бұрын
@@MrJimheeren Check the distance to DC.
@vishnuchaithra92239 ай бұрын
Am a huge fan of your analysis!! But I curious to understand, How this online booking sites play role in this. Because of following reasons 1. People are more aware of this this news and online booking sites will allow you to choose the flight models you going to travel. 2. People will be paying more for safer flights from Airbus. 3. This means online sites will get more data on this and they pull the customer whichever side they want. Due to all this AI based algos. I would like to see your opinion on this. Thank you
@Hionut-gb3et10 ай бұрын
Yet again very interesting video. Thanks, great channel !!!
@robertfindley92110 ай бұрын
Based on the little I know, much from watching this channel, it seems Boeing does a great job of predicting air travel needs, and then blows it with poor quality, corner cutting and bonehead mistakes. But an industry needs at least two players to stay competitive, healthy and progressive.
@coolblue181210 ай бұрын
Pride is their biggest downfall period.
@apveening10 ай бұрын
Make that at least three so one can fail without creating a monopoly.
@Jimjef10 ай бұрын
Why can't they just automate the anti-ice/de-ice system operating range with sensors and switches rather than relying on the aircrew to turn it off? When it senses icing conditions it turns on, when it gets too hot it turns off. Why redesign the engine to tolerate an overtemp situation when all it needs is a thermostat and switch? Of course, any time the system is passively deactivated there could be a CAS warning so the pilots could reactivate the system if necessary. There could be an emergency mode where it always stays on if there's a sensor failure, then an inspection would be made once its fixed and if necessary the upgraded nacelle be installed at that time. It's probably too late for existing aircraft, but a modification could be made at the next major inspection. But the new design just ignores automation and opts for a more rugged design. Silly.
@s2snider10 ай бұрын
I wondered the same thing. Maybe the alleged redesign is simply fitting the nacelle with temp sensors and adding some automation.
@tomstravels52010 ай бұрын
Type certification most likely. Also you’re forgetting the 737 doesn’t have EICAS. They got that exemption in 2022
@Jimjef10 ай бұрын
@s2snider No, he said the carbon in the engine cowling was being reinforced or something like that.
@Jimjef10 ай бұрын
@tomstravels520 Even without EICAS, the older CAS can implement a deicer warning failure. I find it disgusting that it doesn't have EICAS and that an exemtipn was even granted. Pilots want it, and Boeing once again bought out the FAA for an exemption because it would cost billions to implement. Of course, it wouldn't if they had put it in there in the first place. I think once again Boeing will be OK with sacrificing the lives of passengers to save a buck. I used to love Boeing, now I think it's the worst company on the planet. The former CEO should be in prison, not on a beach in Tahiti.
@luzbooth98959 ай бұрын
Really whe yuo in the sky these is😢
@huwzebediahthomas919310 ай бұрын
Aircraft flight control systems company boardroom meeting when I was there - the MD, head of sales, five senior engineers, and me, R&D department engineering all rounder.
@20chocsaday10 ай бұрын
Pilots? A lot of pilots from around the world might have useful views on flight controls.
@rorykeegan189510 ай бұрын
@@20chocsaday Really? I worked at several airlines, ran several maintenance bases and we even got into light aircraft manufacturing. Pilots are the last group of people I would call on for wise words, seriously. I remember once having to explain to a senior training Capitan that the reason his car wouldn't move was he was pressing the brake rather than the accelerator.
@DontUputThatEvilOnMe10 ай бұрын
@@rorykeegan1895in the pilots defense both pedals in an airplane sort of do the same thing. Lol
@20chocsaday10 ай бұрын
@@rorykeegan1895 Thanks for that. I had thought it would be easy to get the person involved in the activity thinking of what he needed and what was a distraction.
@Azeria10 ай бұрын
If Boeing didn’t start work on a composite based, genuinely modern 737 replacement as soon as the 797 fell through and the issues with the 737 MAX line started showing up, I truly don’t know what they’re doing over there.
@charleswhitaker817510 ай бұрын
This has probably been said before but when I learned that Boeing was no longer run by engineers but by accountants it has been no surprise that they find themselves in their current parlous state. Reputation can take a lifetime to build and can be destroyed in a flash. Until they can recover their fine engineering culture then they will continue to underperform. Apologies to accountants who read this. You do a vital job which I would never diminish.