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Boeing finalising software update and pilot training revision for its 737 MAX aircraft

Written by : IANS

Boeing has said it is finalising a software update and pilot training revision related to MCAS (Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System) in 737 Max, following two deadly air crashes in less than five months.

"Boeing is finalising its development of a previously-announced software update and pilot training revision that will address the MCAS flight control law's behaviour in response to erroneous sensor inputs," Dennis Muilenburg, President and CEO of the US aircraft manufacturer, said in a statement on Sunday, Xinhua reported.

Muilenburg's announcement came after Ethiopia's Transport Minister Dagmawit Moges said earlier on Sunday that information recovered from the flight data recorder of the Ethiopian Airlines plane showed the March 10 crash which killed all 157 people on board had "clear similarities" with Lion Air's crash in Indonesia in October, which killed 189 people aboard. Both of the doomed planes were 737 Max 8.

The MCAS is an automated safety feature on the 737 Max designed to prevent the plane from entering into a stall, or losing lift. 

Some pilots had complained about unintended nose-down situations while flying the Max 8 jet, according to US federal database.

There has been a global ban on flights of Boeing 737 Max following the Ethiopian Airlines crash. The US grounded all 737 Max 8 and 9 on Wednesday amid mounting pressure. 

Boeing announced last week that it will temporarily halt deliveries of its 737 Max fleet after the aircraft were grounded for an indefinite period globally in the wake of the crash.

Boeing however, said that it would still continue building the planes which came as a good news for thousands of the company's employees - machinists, technical employees and supervisors - who work on the assembly line in Renton, Washington, CNN reported. 

But Boeing did not give the number of workers who specifically work on the Max program. 

The company currently has 70,000 employees in the state, though not all are involved in manufacturing, and many of those work on planes other than the 737 Max.

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