Engineer Sam Salehpour calls on planemaker ahead of testimony before Senate homeland security committee

Archived version: https://archive.ph/vgS2s

  • manucode
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    1 month ago

    If I were him, I would keep away from parking garages

  • Dreizehn
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    301 month ago

    After watching the documentary about Boeing’s South Carolina production site, no thanks. I do not want to fall from the sky like a bucket of juice. Airbus is more appealing to me.

    • @[email protected]
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      231 month ago

      Before all of the stuff I used to not pay any attention what planes were part of my route. Now it’s definitely a factor I consider.

        • BrikoXOPM
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          41 month ago

          No it’s not. There was a deal in 2020 about a joint venture, but it failed. Brazilian government also has golden shares that give them veto power in certain circumstances.

      • BrikoXOPM
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        11 month ago

        It’s considered the 3rd biggest player in commercial plane market, but they are tiny in comparison. They have a lot of backend infrastructure built to keep operating, but they don’t have the capital to swing for new, risky designs. One miss and they are at bankruptcy level.

        They also missed the mark with their latest Embraer 175-E2 design by not being able to keep the weight under the US scope clause, so they lost a huge market segment.

        • T (they/she)
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          21 month ago

          Even before all this I always used to prefer traveling through Embraer planes. I have an irrational fear of flying after an awful turbulence I’ve experienced.

          There’s this air company in Brazil called Azul and their fleet is pretty much a mix of Embraer and Airbus.

  • @[email protected]
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    41 month ago

    Honest question: Do Boeings have stricter inspection in the EU, or is it the same everywhere in the world?

    • BrikoXOPM
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      151 month ago

      The European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) has the authority to act independently of FAA, but they used to mostly follow FAA since they have direct access and oversight of Boeing, them being a US company. But that started to change in 2019 with 373 MAX groundings. It exposed how FAA were incompetent and believed Boeing lies about MCAS. EASA didn’t follow FAA directive to unground them and required some additional procedural changes, combined with relevant training modifications, before ungrounding.