Latest 737 Max problem sets back Boeing new airplane deliveries
Boeing continues to grapple
with an electrical problem affecting some 737 Max airliners, and the setback is
hurting the aircraft maker's ability to deliver new planes.
The
company said Tuesday that it delivered 17 planes in April, including just four
Max jets. CEO David Calhoun had warned analysts that April deliveries would be
light because of the Max problem.
The slow
pace of deliveries hurts Boeing's cash generation because airlines and other
customers typically pay a large chunk of a plane's purchase price upon
delivery.
The Max,
Boeing's best-selling plane, was grounded for 20 months after two crashes that
killed 346 people. Deliveries of the jet resumed in November after Boeing
updated a flight-control system, but now about 100 Max jets are idled because
of an issue with electrical grounding of some parts. It has taken Boeing far
longer than expected to come up with a fix.
Ed
Pierson, a former Boeing production manager who has told Congress about
problems on Boeing's assembly line, said the electrical issue should have been
caught during the post-crash review of the Max. He criticized the Federal
Aviation Administration for focusing its review on the flight-control system
and not examining production problems. Read More
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