FAA Orders Emergency Safety Inspections on Aging Boeing 737s

The federal government is ordering extensive emergency inspections of aging Boeing 737 jetliners, spurred by a Southwest Airlines plane that suffered a terrifying five-foot fuselage tear while in flight on Friday.

As USA Today reports, the Federal Aviation Administration order covers three different variations of the Boeing 737, and will focus on planes that  already have been through 30,000 takeoff and landing cycles. It applies to 175 planes worldwide and 80 in the U.S., 78 of those belonging to Southwest, and the other two serving Alaska Airlines.

The incident that precipitated the inspections came on Southwest Flight 812 on Friday, when a hole opened up in the fuselage about 20 minutes after takeoff, causing the cabin to lose pressure. The plane made an emergency landing at an Arizona military base, and none of the 118 passengers was hurt.

Southwest then temporarily grounded and inspected its other  737-300s, the specific model used for Flight 812. That caused more than 650 hundred flight cancellations in the following days, although the airline’s schedule was returning to normal Tuesday.

According to Reuters, by Tuesday the airline discovered five planes with small cracks in the fuselage, the problem thought to have caused the tear on Friday. The FAA-mandated inspections, which are to employ an electromagnetic process that can detect tiny, subsurface cracks, are searching for flaws in additional 737s.

Experts say that the incident represents a warning sign as many of the nation’s airlines deal with aging aircraft. “This could change the conversation regarding the risk of aging aircraft,” Bill Voss, president of the Flight Safety Foundation, told USA Today.

Related Post:
Southwest Cancels More Flights After Discovering Cracks on 3 Planes

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