FAA forms joint task force with NASA, aviation regulators to review Boeing 737 Max fix

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The Federal Aviation Administration is working with NASA and international aviation regulators on a joint task force to review Boeing’s fix for its popular 737 Max jets, the FAA said Wednesday.

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The Joint Authorities Technical Review team, or JATR, will evaluate the automated flight control system, or MCAS, many people suspect may have caused two fatal crashes of the popular jets that killed 346 people since October.

Chaired by former National Transportation Safety Board Chairman Chris Hart, the task force will also review the MCAS’ “design and pilots’ interaction with the system, to determine its compliance with all applicable regulations and to identify future enhancements that might be needed,” the FAA said.

Separately, Boeing said CEO Dennis Muilenburg accompanied pilots aboard a successful 737 Max jet test flight on Wednesday.

“The flight crew performed different scenarios that exercised various aspects of the software changes to test failure conditions,” Boeing said in a statement. “The software update worked as designed, and the pilots landed safely at Boeing Field.”

The FAA and Boeing have been under a microscope since the crashes and the plane has been grounded since mid-March following the deadly accidents that killed all 346 people aboard the jets.

Boeing said it will continue testing the aircraft and submit its safety updates to the FAA once that’s complete “in the coming weeks.”

Flight data retrieved from both planes black boxes show striking similarities between the two crashes, investigators have said. Boeing’s MCAS system, which is designed to prevent the plane from stalling by pushing its nose down if it climbs too high too fast, is suspected as contributing to both crashes.

Boeing stock closed down almost 2 percent on Wednesday.

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