With the 737 Max 8's reputation in question and the experts and world seemingly split on whether there's a common flaw, what would you do if you were to go on a 737 Max 8 tomorrow?
A little background for those that haven't been following:
The Indonesian Lion Air crash last fall involved a new automatic system added to the Max 8 line (only rolled out 2 years ago, only 350 in operation) that automatically triggers and noses the plane down when it thinks it's stalling. This was implemented quietly to counter the Max 8's tendency to nose up slowly because the engines were repositioned and resized to improve fuel efficiency. The Lion Air crew were not familiar with this system nor how to override it. Boeing subsequently issued a bulletin to inform pilots what to do.
Now this new Ethiopian crash (an airline with an impeccable safety record) has some disturbingly similar characteristics to the Lion Air crash. (Same model airplane, similar amount of time in service, occurring at a similar time during takeoff, an erratic flight pattern prior to a powered nosedive, and a crew that requested an emergency return to their departing airport prior to the crash.) However some call this notion premature, superficial, reactionary, and/or emotional as none of the data on this crash has been analysed yet. Ethiopia, Indonesia, and China have grounded all 737 Max 8s pending investigation. Canada and the US have not.
There are over 40 in service in Canada alone. They are all under two years old and not to be confused with the traditional, long-standing and reliable 737 workhorses.
A little background for those that haven't been following:
The Indonesian Lion Air crash last fall involved a new automatic system added to the Max 8 line (only rolled out 2 years ago, only 350 in operation) that automatically triggers and noses the plane down when it thinks it's stalling. This was implemented quietly to counter the Max 8's tendency to nose up slowly because the engines were repositioned and resized to improve fuel efficiency. The Lion Air crew were not familiar with this system nor how to override it. Boeing subsequently issued a bulletin to inform pilots what to do.
Now this new Ethiopian crash (an airline with an impeccable safety record) has some disturbingly similar characteristics to the Lion Air crash. (Same model airplane, similar amount of time in service, occurring at a similar time during takeoff, an erratic flight pattern prior to a powered nosedive, and a crew that requested an emergency return to their departing airport prior to the crash.) However some call this notion premature, superficial, reactionary, and/or emotional as none of the data on this crash has been analysed yet. Ethiopia, Indonesia, and China have grounded all 737 Max 8s pending investigation. Canada and the US have not.
There are over 40 in service in Canada alone. They are all under two years old and not to be confused with the traditional, long-standing and reliable 737 workhorses.





