More of the on going Boeing saga from Moon of Alabama.
The more that is uncovered, the worse it gets, not only for Boeing, but, in particular, the FAA.
It now comes to light that there is an inherent design flaw, that could potentially be catastrophic, on the 737 NG series as well.
Boeing 737 Max crash reveals a severe problem with older Boeing 737 NGs
Putting it into context:
The crashes of the two 737 MAX revealed a number of problems with the design of the MCAS system. Several additional issues with the plane were since revealed. There may be other problems with its 737 MAX that no one yet knows of. The rather casual FAA certification of the type was clearly not justified.
But the problems described above are 737 NG problems. The 380 or so existing 737 MAX are currently grounded. But some 7,000 737 NG fly about every day. The record provides that it is a relatively safe airplane. But a runaway stabilizer is a well known electrical malfunction that could by chance happen on any of those flights.
and...
Simulator sessions demonstrate (video) that a runaway stabilizer incident on a 737 NG can no longer be overcome by the procedures that current Boeing manuals describe.
It is pure luck that no NG crash has yet been caused by a runaway stabilizer incident. It is quite astonishing that these issues only now become evident. The 737 NG was certified by the FAA in 1997. Why is the FAA only now looking into this?
A common mistake that people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools - Douglas Adams.