From: Capt. Jack M. Schmidt, Ret.
Major Airline
No less than five people have called me to say, "Hey dude I'm booked on a MAX-8 to go to Timbuktu soon, what do I do? My answer...better get your affairs in order and, oh, by the way...that life insurance policy of yours...make sure it's paid up…and my full name is "Jack M. Schmidt, Jr." make sure you get the Jr. in there. If the money goes to my dad's estate my brother would get half...don't want that to happen now, do we?
Seriously, the short version is (ah s--t there ain’t no short version) in the fifties, sixties and seventies two-bit third world countries were starting up their own national airlines and they wanted their own citizens to fly the airplanes. But most couldn't ride a freaking camel, let alone fly an airplane, so at first the Americans, Brits, Aussies, Kiwis and a few Irishmen got these jobs. When I worked for Northwest we sold airplanes to Onassis (Olympic Airlines) in Greece (maybe 2nd world) and the Union of Burma Airline. We opened pilot bases in Athens and Rangoon. (I bid them both but the bids went senior so I got Honolulu.) The company staffed them with NW pilots to train the locals how to fly the Boeing 720 and 727.
Hell, the CEO at Emirates today, the world’s premier airline, is an Englishman.
Fast forward to the eighties, along comes Airbus with cockpit automation to die for (literally) which make it "almost" impossible to f--k...er screw up and crash the airplane. The French actually said "impossible" (yeah right). Even though their prototype A-320 crashed at the Paris Air Show in 1988, the “Bus” smoked Boeing's 737 in sales efforts (no pun intended). The 737 is still being cranked out on a Type Certificate that was issued by the FAA in 1967 even though today's versions bear no resemblance to the 1967 version. Especially on the MAX-8/9 series on which the wings, engines and cockpit automation have all been "upgraded."
Here is how s--t happens. My information is this: Boeing, on the MAX, moved the engines forward, but looking at the pictures, it appears to me that they may have moved the entire wing, engines and all, forward. This moves the CG forward along with the Mean Aerodynamic Cord which affects trim (tech talk but could be a bad thing). You do this because you think the computers that are flying the airplane most of the time can more easily recover from a stall with a forward CG. (I guess crashing is one way to recover from a stall but it’s never been my favorite.) Next you realize there might be a problem with a nose-heavy airplane (duh!) so you design software to counter act but you only give the computers that are flying the airplane access to one channel of data from the pitot-static and/or the air data computers which may deliver faulty or corrupted data. (Even though most every modern airplane has three complete and independent systems, the MAX only has two.) Next the guys you sold this turkey to put one (if not both) inexperienced and poorly trained pilots in the cockpit. Air France did this with a different model of the Airbus and they put it into the Atlantic off Brazil.
This is a disgusting exercise in technology for technologies sake (and to sell airplanes) that didn't work out, designed by aeronautical and software engineers just out of school who are supervised by 28-year old “senior” engineers, none of whom have a freaking clue how to fly an airplane. Ask my son, he went through this at General Atomics Aeronautical Systems on the Predator. Then you make sure the only real pilots you expose this fraud to are your in-house test pilots who like their jobs and wouldn't say
s--t if they had a mouth full.
Previously it was “If’n it ain’t Boeing, I ain’t going” now changed to “If it is Boeing, I ain’t going”
"THIS IS THE END MY FRIEND" – Jim Morrison of The Doors from the movie “Apocalypse Now”
First Airbus A320 Crash - French Air show -