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NTSB Finds Alaska Air Boeing 737 Max Jet Had Missing Door Bolts

Tyler Durden's Photo
by Tyler Durden
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A preliminary report released by the National Transportation Safety Board finds the mid-air incident with an Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 Max 9 jet last month was caused by a door plug that had not been properly attached before Boeing Co. delivered the plane. 

NTSB said the Max 9 jet was missing four bolts, which were supposed to serve as a fail-safe mechanism for securing the panel to the fuselage. 

X user Jason Rabinowitz, who reviewed the report, cited a line from NTSB's report: "Four bolts that prevent upward movement of the MED plug were missing before the MED plug moved upward off the stop pads." 

Rabinowitz said the report confirms that Boeing's fuselage-maker Spirit AeroSystems delivered the fuselages to the planemaker with defects around the door plug that required its opening. 

"Photos from Boeing actually show the door plug opened for work, then closed again ***without the bolts to hold it in place***," he said. 

And this. 

"We caused the problem," Boeing’s CEO Dave Calhoun said on a Jan. 31 earnings call.

Calhoun continued: "Over these last few weeks, I've had tough conversations with our customers, with our regulators, congressional leaders and more. We understand why they are angry, and we will work to earn their confidence."

Meanwhile, the NTSB's website that has the report crashed... 

Are the same folks who made Boeing Max jets now making websites? 

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