Cracks found on 5% of older Boeing 737 jets in inspections

Bloomberg

More than 5% of older Boeing Co 737 jets that underwent urgent inspections worldwide have cracks in a structure connecting the wings to the fuselage and will have to be temporarily grounded.
So far, 36 of the workhorse Next Generation models have evidence of cracking out of 686 that have been inspected, Boeing said in an email providing updated numbers. The company told airlines that 25 planes had been found with cracks, also at a rate of about 5%, said a person briefed on the discussions.
The US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), acting after an alert from Boeing, issued an urgent directive requiring the checks on planes with more than 30,000 total flights by October 10. There are an estimated 165 aircraft that fit that description in the US, including 737-600, 737-700, 737-800, and 737-900 models, the FAA said.
“This condition could adversely affect the structural integrity of the airplane and result in loss of control of the airplane,” FAA said in the order, which required jets with cracks to be grounded until they can be fixed. The FAA has no authority outside the US, but such orders are generally heeded elsewhere.
Initial inspections have focussed on the oldest aircraft, which appear to be most at risk for the cracking. That means that the percentage of Next Generation planes found to have problems could drop as newer jets are checked.
Aircraft with 22,600 to 29,999 flights must be inspected over the next 1,000 flights. There are about 6,800 737 Next Generation jets in service around the world, so the cracking has so far affected less than 1% of the entire fleet.
Brazilian carrier Gol Linhas Aereas Inteligentes SA said it would remove 11 of the jets from service. Grounding those planes to make repairs will affect 3% of passengers through December 15. Southwest Airlines Co has grounded two aircraft for signs of cracking after the initial round of inspections. The Dallas-based company has about 100 more aircraft to examine under FAA requirement.
Indonesia’s Lion Air said it will inspect its 737 fleet in accordance with the airworthiness directive, though its planes have a maximum 25,000 flight cycles and no jets have been grounded. Garuda, Indonesia’s flag-carrier, has idled one plane after finding cracks, out of three with more than 30,000 cycles.
After the FAA order earlier this month, Boeing said that “safety and quality” are its top priorities and it’s working with customers to address any needed repairs as soon as possible. Portions a phone call with Boeing and airlines were reported earlier by the website Leeham News and Analysis.
Boeing is setting up a repair station in Victorville, California, and expects fixes to take two to three weeks per plane, said the person familiar with the discussions. The cracks were first discovered on planes being overhauled in China, the FAA said earlier. The 737 Max, which was designed to replace the Next Generation models, has been grounded globally since March 13 as Boeing redesigns a flight-control system implicated in two fatal crashes.

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