US FAA to brief international regulators on status of Boeing 737 MAX
FAA chief Steve Dickson has invited about 50 aviation safety regulators from around the world to an informal briefing in Montreal next week on the status of the grounded Boeing 737 MAX. The FAA has been reviewing proposed software and training changes from Boeing for the plane that has been grounded since March. Dickson said the FAA is working to provide regulators with "useful information as you make your individual decisions on safely returning your fleets to service." The meeting, to be held Monday, is taking place in connection with the ICAO World Aviation Forum. Boeing plans to revise the 737 MAX software to take input from both angle-of-attack sensors in the MCAS anti-stall system linked to the two deadly crashes. It is not clear when Boeing will conduct a key certification test flight. <br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2019-09-18/general/us-faa-to-brief-international-regulators-on-status-of-boeing-737-max
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US FAA to brief international regulators on status of Boeing 737 MAX
FAA chief Steve Dickson has invited about 50 aviation safety regulators from around the world to an informal briefing in Montreal next week on the status of the grounded Boeing 737 MAX. The FAA has been reviewing proposed software and training changes from Boeing for the plane that has been grounded since March. Dickson said the FAA is working to provide regulators with "useful information as you make your individual decisions on safely returning your fleets to service." The meeting, to be held Monday, is taking place in connection with the ICAO World Aviation Forum. Boeing plans to revise the 737 MAX software to take input from both angle-of-attack sensors in the MCAS anti-stall system linked to the two deadly crashes. It is not clear when Boeing will conduct a key certification test flight. <br/>