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by robocat
605 days ago
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> Bean counters bathing in blood, all the way down. No resource is infinite and money is an important constraint in any engineering project. Engineering is all about making compromises. Good engineering is making the right compromises: especially when life and death decisions are being made. Casually blaming "bean counters" is a distracting fantasy available to anyone that doesn't have to make real-world decisions. Understanding the causes of how Boeing systematically screwed up requires a bit more maturity than you appear to show. "Bean-counters" particularly comes across as childish name-calling to me, and clichés don't help either. The fact that the MAX has been cleared to fly again shows that the design decisions were not utterly flawed. |
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Bean counters bathing in blood, all the way down.
The forward mounting of the engine nacelles could have been countered with a small adjustment of the sweep or the surface area of the horizontal stabiliser, instead of the faulty flight control software solution, keeping the aircraft an aerodynamically safe aircraft as had been earlier generations. But that would have been a de-facto admission that the fundamental aerodynamic characteristics of the aircraft as certified were changed by the forward mounted nacelles.
They chose to monkeypatch the flight control system instead of making a minor change that would have produced the inherently safe aerodynamic characteristics that the aircraft was certified with.
They did this to avoid the delay and cost that would have resulted if they had been required to prove the aircraft design was still airworthy. There’s a reason that new designs must be certified to be used in passenger transport. They tried to work around the fact that the 737 max is a substantially new aircraft by monkeypatching the FCS to compensate for a potentially dangerous aerodynamic flaw that was introduced by the new location of the engines.
They chose to produce a more profitable but potentially dangerous aircraft instead of letting the engineers do their job and make the aircraft stable with the new engines. Regulators were also complicit in the regulatory evasion. Hundreds died as a direct result of this malfeasance.
Bean counters bathing in blood, all the way down.