Boeing 737 Max: The Questions Behind Automated Systems

An airplane with blue and white livery marked "Boeing 737 MAX" ascends in a clear blue sky with a few clouds below. The aircraft, featuring automated systems and two engines mounted under its wings, boasts a sleek, modern design.
Boeing 737 Max

Admittedly, this isn’t the most positive topic, but Boeing’s recent troubles have introduced us to a technologically focused conundrum that we may keep running into for the next few years. Two horrific commercial plane crashes in the space of just six months, causing the tragic deaths of some 326 passengers and flight crew, have led to the grounding of the Boeing 737 MAX worldwide.

In October last year, Lion Air Flight 610 crashed in Indonesia, killing everybody on board the aircraft. Shortly after takeoff at 06:20, the pilots experienced a problem establishing their correct speed and altitude; an error also experienced the last time the plane flew.

Boeing 737 Max

Outside the plane, an ‘angle of attack’ sensor had falsely indicated that the plane’s nose was too high, which could mean the aircraft stalling. This triggered an automated system, called MCAS […]

 

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