“I solve practical problems. Like where all the necessary holes should be on passenger aircraft, and when they should appear.”

  • @rockSlayer@lemmy.world
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    1566 months ago

    Calling it right now, it had little to do with the engineers and almost everything to do with corporate cost cutting at the expense of people.

      • @Vespair@lemm.ee
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        136 months ago

        If you want to blame someone, blame Wall Street.

        I like how this sentence applies to like 90% of the problems in this world

    • NaibofTabr
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      216 months ago

      It’s also possible that the problem had nothing to do with engineering and everything to do with improper maintenance/safety checks. Which could still be corporate cost cutting, but at Alaska rather than Boeing.

      • @Takumidesh@lemmy.world
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        316 months ago

        It’s unlikely that the plug door came off for maintenance in the first three months of the plane’s life.

        I used to do maintenance (specifically on Alaska 37s) at an mro as an A&P. I worked on Alaska planes for about 5 years and compared to other airlines that I worked on, Alaska was almost always conforming to higher standards, they required more inspection buy offs, and were more likely to replace parts that technically were airworthy.

        Also after Alaska had their jackscrew run-in, they overhauled their maintenance program and effectively handed it off to the FAA.

        I agree that the problem is likely not with engineering, my opinion is that it lies with manufacturing and QC at Boeing though.

        • NaibofTabr
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          36 months ago

          Looks like you’re right:

          The findings aboard the five United aircraft will likely significantly widen the fall-out from the grounding, intensifying the focus on Boeing and Spirit AeroSystems. The pair together is responsible for the assembly, installation and quality checks of the aircraft structure.

          It seems that panel would have been installed by the manufacturer and probably not altered by any airline maintenance teams, and fleet inspections have found several of them with loose hardware.

          What does “inspection buy offs” mean?

          • @Takumidesh@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            Inspection buy offs are an industry term related to getting an inspectors approval on work accomplished, sorry I shouldn’t have used it since it doesn’t really translate.

            So Alaska required more inspector intervention than other airlines I worked on.

            We use the term ‘selling’ and ‘buying’ to refer to presenting the work and demonstrating that it is airworthy (before we go to lunch, let’s try to sell this to inspection, or, I won’t buy that until you verify that it is torqued properly)

            Think of it like you saying you cleaned your room, and your parents going ‘i don’t buy that’.

            It has nothing to do with money.

    • @agitatedpotato@lemmy.world
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      136 months ago

      Boeing lost all respect when they opend a production plant in North Carolina so they didn’t have to follow as strict labor laws as they do in WA. It’s no coincidence we’re seeing more groundings more frequently since then, company priorities on full display.

      • @Vespair@lemm.ee
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        36 months ago

        Fr. I think they’re trading on a lot of previously-earned good will that no longer accurately applies to the company today. The standards that made Boeing what they are simply aren’t the same today as when the reputation was built.

    • @takeda@lemmy.world
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      -56 months ago

      You don’t need to call it that. When designing the airplane they changed the location of the engines, which also changes how the airplane handles. Normally that would require retaining the pilots, but that’s expensive. So what they did is they solved it in software to emulator old behavior and didn’t tell it to the pilots.

      What I find interesting is that in 2018 (one year before the crash) trump mentioned it if nowhere that there was no single plane crash during his presidency. Kind of crazy thing to mention, when we got used to planes generally not crashing.

      I have feeling that around that time sometime graded his hand and he pulled some strings in FAA and forced them to approve it.

      Another thing that makes me thing he was involved is that after the crashes, he started suggesting that Boeing should rebrand the plane to recover publicly. I mean, why does he care so much about that plane success if he was not involved with it in any way?

    • Chill Dude 69OP
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      6 months ago

      Ahh. A slight variation on the “just following orders” excuse.

      That doesn’t work for “I was ordered to murder people through incompetence” any better than it works for “I was ordered to directly murder people.”

      If you designed the part of the airplane that shouldn’t have a hole in it, and it suddenly develops a hole in it, that shit is your fault. Like, unless you blow the whistle. If you go to the FAA and the press, and you say “these fucking planes need to be grounded, because the suits insisted on a dangerous design,” then you’re kinda off the hook.

      If nobody dies, that is.

      But if you do some DEMONSTRABLY SHODDY AND DANGEROUS engineering work, sign off on it, take your fucking paycheck for that week, and then some people die? Well, in that case, you fucking murdered those people.

      Capitalism needs fixing. Society needs fixing. All that is true. But people still have their own responsibility, when they act like fucking incompetent pieces of shit.

      If you’re too stupid to be an engineer OR too spineless to be an engineer, fuck off from that profession. Period.

      • @EndlessApollo@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        What, you think they just have the option to not sign off on it? What do you think the odds are them saying “hey this isn’t ready, we need more time” is gonna be met with anything other than being ignored or fired and the unfinished product being rolled out anyway? Blaming the engineers for corporate being cheap and lazy is ridiculous imo, I seriously doubt there’s much, if anything, they could’ve done to actually prevent this. Again, they’d be ignored or fired, meaning the problem is present no matter how “complicit” they were or not

        • Chill Dude 69OP
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          6 months ago

          What, you think they just have the option to not sign off on it?

          Are they being held captive, by force?

          If they’re being physically detained and/or threatened, that would reduce their responsibility. Possibly. Depending on the exact circumstances.

          But if they’re not, then they absolutely CAN say “nope, I’m not doing that shit. Engineer this shit yourself, if you want to kill people. Someone can have a fine old time, trying to teach the CEO how to open the computer aided design software.” And then they should still go to the authorities and say “these guys are about to ship some deathtrap-ass planes.”

          If your choices are literally get fired or kill people, yes, I do expect you to get fired rather than actively participate in murder. I am shocked that you somehow find a way to disagree.

          • @EndlessApollo@lemmy.world
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            166 months ago

            Oo what a tough and morally pure person you are, you would simply prevent everyone from dying if you were in their position. You don’t sound any less ridiculous than a keyboard warrior saying if you were in Nazi Germany you would’ve just joined the resistance xD just admit you don’t know jack shit about what you’re talking about (or provide some credentials that you’re an engineer, then maybe I’d take you slightly seriously)

            • Chill Dude 69OP
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              6 months ago

              “If I refuse to build a deathtrap, they’ll just get someone else to do it, so I might as well get paid to murder people.”

              That’s your fucking concept of ethics? Really?

              And you go ahead and bring up nazi Germany. It disturbs me that you’re also basically saying “well, we all know that most people totally will just go along with sanctioned murder.” Maybe it’s true, but I’m condemning that truth. You’re just accepting it. Almost cheering it.

              My dude, the basic standard for humanity IS supposed to be “no, I won’t participate in murder.” I don’t have to build a time machine to condemn people who went along with the fucking nazis and I don’t have to show you an engineering degree to say that ENGINEERS ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR UPHOLDING THE BASIC ETHICS OF THEIR PROFESSION.

              Yes, I will demand ethical behavior. I WILL judge anyone who fails to uphold the most basic and simple ethical principles. I will not just throw my hands up and say “whattayagonnado? It was the corpos that killed all those people. Don’t even worry about it, engineer guy. You probably did your best, as far as I know.”

              Fuck that attitude. Like I said, the CEOs can’t design the fucking aircraft themselves. If all the engineers refuse to make deathtraps, then there won’t be deathtraps. Once again, it’s called fucking responsibility. No two ways about it.

              EDIT: It is MESSED UP that I’m this many replies deep into this conversation, and I’m not seeing anyone chiming in to say “yeah, I’m an engineer, and I do think we have a responsibility to uphold basic ethics.”

              Instead, I’m just getting downvoted and casually insulted by edgelords, who think they “kn0w H0w teH r3al w0Rld w3rks”

              Professional ethics and standards are a thing. I am categorically NOT the weirdo, here. Can an engineer PLEASE back me up, on this?

              • DarkenLM
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                126 months ago

                Buddy, I’m an engineer, and let me tell you: You don’t know shit about what you’re talking about. You can have the highest ethics in the entire world, it won’t weight shit opposed to management.
                I worked on a project that was constantly rushed and forced to add things that neared the computationally impossible. Every single engineer on my team was BEGGING the management to not ship into production as it was, because there was no way in hell it would work without causing serious problems. They did not care, and when we said that it was impossible to meet the deadline, what was management’s solution? Lay off the entire team and hire a batch of juniors that did not know better, and the product was still shipped, and even if the juniors hadn’t, they’d still find someone that could make it barely work enough to be delivered.

                Surprise, surprise, the product failed on a critical time and it cost MILLIONS (not thousands, not hundreds of thousands. millions) of dollars. And you are saying that I should be held responsible for my moronic supervisors’ actions? Fuck off and never come back, idiot.

                • Chill Dude 69OP
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                  5 months ago

                  hire a batch of juniors that did not know better

                  Lack of workplace experience is no excuse for unethical behavior. I don’t know if you took an oath at the end of your engineer’s training, but there are a lot of colleges and training programs where they actively participate in that process. You go through a ceremony, where you swear a solemn oath to deal fairly and honestly, and never misuse your skills as an engineer.

                  Whether any specific engineer has actually taken one of these oaths really doesn’t matter to me. I still hold you all accountable. If ALL of you refuse to do unethical shit, then the suits won’t be able to do it themselves.

                  No matter how many times you hide behind the coward’s whine of “you don’t know anything about the real world, mate,” I will still know what ethics actually are. Once again, all you’re doing is regurgitating the old “I was just following orders” argument. That’s where we came in, on this conversation.

                  That’s not a valid excuse. The responsibility for fucked up engineering projects lies with the engineers who perform the work. You DO have a choice. “B-b-b-but my boss told me to do it” will never be an excuse, no matter how many times you repeat yourself.

                  EDIT: I realize you are contending that, in your example, the suits eventually would have found someone who would have been able to finish the project. That IS STILL NOT A VALID EXCUSE. At the very least, those people who finally did the task, even if they weren’t qualified engineers, are indeed responsible for the fuck-up. Do you believe assassins should be let off the hook, and only the mafia bosses who hire them are responsible for those crimes? Sure, the person who hires the hit-man should be held responsible, but the trigger-man IS equally responsible for his own actions.

                  You’re not a slave. You’re not a robot. If you take an action, it is your own responsibility. I don’t see how you can reasonably disagree.

              • Lath
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                46 months ago

                The day that ethical behaviour puts food on your table and pays your bills is the day that society will agree with you.
                Having ethics is nice, doesn’t keep you alive though.

                • Chill Dude 69OP
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                  6 months ago

                  Ohhhhkay. You’re an open psychopath/sociopath. Great to see you guys coming out into the open.

                  It’s genuinely better if everyone can spot you from a mile away.

  • Stoneykins [any]
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    166 months ago

    Someday maybe people won’t use attractiveness as a symbol for intelligence and morals, but not today…

  • Possibly linux
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    6 months ago

    Its more like “we need you to do a 2 week engineering job in 3 days”

    Although to be fair there was some serious “adjustments” to internal policies after several hundred people died.