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originally posted by: Lidstrom5
Nevermind I read down more ....sounds like it struck something on take off ...can't be throwing the book at boeing just yet
a reply to: Boomer1947
originally posted by: Zaphod58
a reply to: quintessentone
No, it makes no sense to blame manufacturing for something that happens 8 years after the aircraft was delivered. As for the GEnx, the issues were found and fixed. You keep pointing out issues found over ten years ago, like they just went, “oh well” and did nothing.
originally posted by: Zaphod58
a reply to: quintessentone
The bottom line is the entire point of having a business, so of course they care about that first. But at some point they get hammered so much they have to change practices. Boeing has been hammered in the last ten years and is reaching that point. They have already made significant changes ahead of the investigation, and the investigation will make recommendations as well.
Which brings us to the Boeing Problem.
The capital letters are appropriate because the largely self-inflicted troubles — some with lethal or potentially lethal consequences — are no longer one-offs, easily explained or brushed aside by the company born and once headquartered in Seattle.
These troubles are heavily the result of the company’s Jack Welch acolytes and General Electric-style management, weak board of directors, union busting, and exchanging Boeing’s history of engineering excellence for McDonnell Douglas’ “bean counters.” Regular readers know I have written about this often.
In 2001, a top Boeing aerospace engineer John Hart-Smith presented an internal paper before top executives warning of excessive reliance on outsourcing — a paper that was lauded by his peers within the company but ignored by management.
Behind all this was one driving force: to keep the stock price up and reap high executive compensation.
originally posted by: Zaphod58
a reply to: quintessentone
And in the last ten years, they have lost more than in the previous 23. The initial batch of KC-46s alone lost more than the contract value, and they are still paying to fix issues on it. The T-7A isn’t far behind, and the MQ-25 is running into its own issues. That’s just the military side
originally posted by: Zaphod58
a reply to: quintessentone
And they’d go out of business in no time. There needs to be a balance between the two.
originally posted by: Zaphod58
a reply to: quintessentone
Even with what they’ve lost, and paid out they still make a ton of money from sales and support contracts.
originally posted by: Zaphod58
a reply to: quintessentone
And there’s your fundamental flaw in understanding how this works. Boeing designs the aircraft, the airlines decide on the interior configuration. They determine cabin layout, seat pitch and size, and all the things around its operation. They tell Boeing, who then installs the cabin based on that configuration.
Depending on route, and aircraft used, airlines make profit based on the fact that they have so many planes flying. I’ve seen routes where a flight that was full barely broke even, because they were using a 30 year old plane.
originally posted by: Zaphod58
a reply to: quintessentone
And your comfort doesn't play into making money, required for the airline that you are flying on to remain in operation.