Boeing deliveries are expected to slow substantially as a machinist strike continues.
Boeing managed to deliver a small number of 737 MAX jets after a strike by machinists shut down the Renton, Wash., factory that builds the planes.
But deliveries are expected to slow substantially as the walkout stretches into its second month. The jet maker delivered 33 planes last month, including 28 737s. That's down from 40 jets overall in August and 32 of the 737s. The company says it was able to slip out some delivery-ready planes after the strike started Sept. 13. Analysts estimate Boeing built 10 737s in September, well off the company's goal of 38 per month.
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Boeing said it has reminded operators of the actions that flight crews should take if they encounter rudder restriction.
The Federal Aviation Administration issued a safety alert to airlines regarding Boeing 737 airplanes equipped with certain rudder components.
The air-safety regulator said Tuesday the operators of Boeing 737 NG and 737 MAX airplanes with SVO-730 rudder rollout guidance actuators should instruct flight crews that the rudder control system could potentially become jammed or restricted in flight or during landing.
Boeing said in a statement it has reminded operators of the proper actions that flight crews should take if they encounter rudder restriction, and has also shared technical guidance from its supplier.
“We continue to work under the oversight of regulators regarding the actuator on an optional autoland system on a subset of 737s,” Boeing said.
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Manufacturer to book $5 billion in charges on troubled programs and warns of deeper quarterly loss amid machinists strike
Boeing will delay the launch of the 777X to 2026. Boeing will cut 10% of its global workforce, or roughly 17,000 jobs, and warned of deeper losses in its operations as a machinist strike compounds problems brewing at the jet maker for years.
Along with the job cuts, the manufacturing giant said it would further delay the launch of a new airplane, the 777X, that is already years behind schedule. It will also discontinue the 767 cargo plane.
Boeing will book $3 billion of pretax charges tied to the two jet programs and another $2 billion in write-offs tied to several troubled programs in its defense unit. The charges will result in a quarterly net loss of roughly $6 billion.
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The European plane maker said that it will book charges of about €900 million in the first half of 2024
Airbus said it will miss annual aircraft targets, and will book charges of about €900 million in the first half of 2024. Airbus AIR said it won’t be meeting its annual targets for the year, including the number of commercial aircraft it planned to deliver, after its space-systems management team identified further commercial and technical challenges.
The European plane maker on Monday said that it will also book charges of about €900 million ($962.5 million) in the first half of 2024 following an extensive review of its space-systems programs.
Airbus expects to end the year delivering 770 commercial aircraft, down from a prior outlook of 800 commercial aircraft deliveries a couple of months ago.
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