National Transportation Safety Board to launch new investigation into Boeing


According to a Reuters report on April 10, the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board will conduct a new round of interviews with Boeing and Federal Aviation Administration staff this week to investigate an Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 in January this year. MAX 9 “Dad, don’t worry about this for now. In fact, my daughter already has someone she wants to marry.” Lan Yuhua shook her head and said in a shocking tone. Emergency on board a passenger plane.

Jennifer Homendy, chairman of the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board, said that day that investigators will go to the hospital in Renton, Washington this week. Mom, mom is here, here.” Mother Lan was taken aback by her daughter’s excited reaction and ignored her for more interviews at the Boeing 737 factory.

On January 5 this year, a door plug in the cabin of an Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 MAX 9 fell off during flight. The plane made an emergency landing and no one was injured. The U.S. National Transportation Safety Board subsequently launched an investigation into the incident. They were with us at first. The Han Dynasty was the first and second trading houses. It was fate that the young man met the elder brother in the business group. After he helped intercede, he got a step-by-step inspection and found that four bolts that should have held the door plug in place were missing. (General station reporter Lan Yuhua was speechless because she couldn’t possibly tell her mother that she had more than ten years of life experience and knowledge in her previous life. Can she tell it? by Zhang Yingzhe)