Shan Jan Posted March 23 Posted March 23 TLDR: Boeing krenuo u pregovore sa Spiritom da ih kupi, Airbus razmislja da preuzme deo kompanije koji pravi delove za njih. Obe kompanije zele da imaju vise kontrole nad kvalitetom delovao aviona koji se prave za njih.
Zaboravan Posted March 23 Posted March 23 Bila je zanimljiva emisija o fake rezervnim delovma koji sa crnog tržišta uspevaju da dođu do aviokompanija. Čak su ih nalazili u Air Force 1. 1
Shan Jan Posted March 25 Posted March 25 Cek bre, na kraju 2024.? Meni ovo vise zvuci kao da je rekao dajte mi fore 9 meseci da sredim sranje.
jms_uk Posted March 25 Posted March 25 7 hours ago, Shan Jan said: Cek bre, na kraju 2024.? Meni ovo vise zvuci kao da je rekao dajte mi fore 9 meseci da... ...mogu da sakupim bonuse... 4
Mel Posted March 29 Posted March 29 On 25. 3. 2024. at 14:22, Shan Jan said: Cek bre, na kraju 2024.? Meni ovo vise zvuci kao da je rekao dajte mi fore 9 meseci da sredim sranje. Ono shto je meni bilo neobichno je da sve neke C-promene koje sam j aispratila, fakat ih nije bilo odmah, ali sve su bile odmah, najkasnije par mesci unapred najavljene, a ovo samo shto ne reche do septembra 2025 kad ispuni uslov za penziju...
Shan Jan Posted March 29 Posted March 29 Mozda projektujem, al meni to deluje kao da je vezano za generalan pad morala u celom drustvu, nekad se smatralo obavezom kad se napravi sranje da neko plati, sad je ono, ok imamo sranje, ko ga jebe, ionako smo svi ovde da se bogatimo, shit happens, sad cu da vidim gde mogu jos da cut-ujem cost da napravim profit u sledecem kvartalu a drzimo palceve da se u medjuvremenu ne srusi jos neki avion. 3
Radoye Posted March 29 Posted March 29 35 minutes ago, Shan Jan said: Mozda projektujem, al meni to deluje kao da je vezano za generalan pad morala u celom drustvu, nekad se smatralo obavezom kad se napravi sranje da neko plati, sad je ono, ok imamo sranje, ko ga jebe, ionako smo svi ovde da se bogatimo, shit happens, sad cu da vidim gde mogu jos da cut-ujem cost da napravim profit u sledecem kvartalu a drzimo palceve da se u medjuvremenu ne srusi jos neki avion. Dogma neregulisanog slobodnog trzista dosla po svoje. Kad razgradis sve mehanizme kontrole i pustis "greed is good" ekipu da radi sta hoce ovo je rezultat. Vise puta ciklicno proveravano u istoriji i uvek sa istim rezultatima. Al' jbg mozda sledeci put kad probamo potpuno istu stvar bude drugacije... 7
Zaboravan Posted April 10 Posted April 10 Ako možete, birajte mlađe 777 787. https://www.cnn.com/2024/04/09/business/boeing-787-whistleblower/index.html
jms_uk Posted April 10 Posted April 10 (mojih) preko 10 letova po tipu: Airbus 320 161 Boeing 737 147 Airbus 319 87 Airbus 321 71 Boeing 777 56 Airbus 330 43 Embraer 195 29 BAe Avro 28 Airbus 380 28 Boeing 767 20 Dash 8 19 Boeing 747 18 Boeing 757 17 Boeing 787 17 Fokker 100 17 Embraer 190 13
Roger Sanchez Posted April 11 Posted April 11 On 10. 4. 2024. at 14:19, Zaboravan said: Ako možete, birajte mlađe 777 787. https://www.cnn.com/2024/04/09/business/boeing-787-whistleblower/index.html Letio sam jučer na F-HRBE i osto živ
Zaboravan Posted April 11 Posted April 11 55 minutes ago, Roger Sanchez said: Letio sam jučer na F-HRBE i osto živ Ih taj je mlad, zviždač kaže™ da parafraziram, potrajaće ali ne baš planirano dugo. Mada pored zviždača može biti i onih koji sviraju q.
Engineer Posted April 12 Posted April 12 Dobar tekst o propasti našeg društva Boeinga https://prospect.org/infrastructure/transportation/2024-03-28-suicide-mission-boeing/ 4 1
Shan Jan Posted April 14 Posted April 14 TLDR: Otvorene dve kriminalne istrage protiv Boeinga ali ne slavite unapred. Bila je vec jedna posle dva MAX udesa i dobili su samo da plate neku kaznu.
Shan Jan Posted April 18 Posted April 18 Poceo Senat hearing u vezi Boeingovog nacina rada, svedoce razni uzbunjivaci. Ne znam koja je funkcija ovog tipa procesa, mozda neko moze da objasni. https://edition.cnn.com/2024/04/17/business/boeing-whistleblower-safety-hearing/index.html Quote Washington DCCNN — Boeing’s already battered reputation took another hit at two Senate committee hearings Wednesday on Capitol Hill, with witnesses questioning how the company builds airplanes and the safety of those planes. One of the key witnesses was Boeing engineer Sam Salehpour, a whistleblower who said he’s been threatened for bringing safety concerns to his managers over several years, but that he was testifying due to his belief that “they are putting out defective airplanes.” “I have serious concerns about the safety of the 787 and 777 aircraft and I’m willing to take on professional risk to talk about them,” he said in his opening statement. He said when he raised concerns, “I was ignored. I was told not to create delays. I was told, frankly, to shut up.” He said that Boeing used “unmeasured and unlimited” amount of force – including people jumping on pieces of the airplane – to correct misalignment between sections of jets, and that the gap ended up being much more than the 5/1000th of an inch allowed by Boeing’s own standards. Boeing did not have any witnesses at either hearing Wednesday, but at a briefing earlier this week it defended the standards used to build planes. It said the 5/1000th of a inch gap is only the width of a human hair or two pieces of paper, and was a “hyper-conservative” standard. It said even when the gap is wider than what was originally proscribed, inspections of the jets showed no signs of fatigue or other problems even after years in service. But Salehpour said that Boeing’s assurances are invalid. “When operating at 35,000 feet, the size of a human hair can be a matter of life and death,” he said. “I have a very negative attitude toward the safety culture,” he said later in the hearing. “When I bring something to my boss, he prevents me from even documenting or sending information. When a quality manager says don’t send to a subject matter to an expert… that’s concerning.” Another witness, Ed Pierson, a former Boeing manager and the executive director of The Foundation for Aviation Safety, said the lack of paperwork that has been provided to National Transportation Safety Board investigators after a door plug blew out of a Boeing 737 Max flight by Alaska Airlines in January amounted to “a criminal cover-up.” “Records do exist documenting in detail the hectic work done on the Alaska Airlines airplane and Boeing’s corporate leaders know it too, because they fought to withhold these same damning records after the two Max crashes,” he said in his opening comments. But Boeing has yet to provide documentation to federal investigators of which employees worked on the door plug that blew off the Alaska Air flight due to it missing four bolts needed to hold the plug in place. Boeing recently said it has searched for records but believes its employees did not document the work. Senators on both sides of the aisle expressed concerns about the testimony. “This story is serious, even shocking,” said Democratic Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, the chairman of the Senate permanent subcommittee on investigations. “There are mounting, serious allegations that Boeing has a broken safety culture, and a set of practices that are unacceptable.” He said that since the hearing was announced, his committee has heard from other whistleblowers inside of Boeing. He said one mechanic from its nonunion South Carolina factory wrote that when he brought concerns, he was “told that hundreds of others were waiting outside the gates for our jobs.” “Boeing is at a moment of reckoning,” Blumenthal said. “It’s a moment many years in the making. It’s a moment that results not from one incident or one flight or one plane.” At its briefing on Monday ahead of the hearing Boeing said it has encouraged employees to bring forward safety concerns and since the Alaska air incident they have been doing so in much greater numbers. But ranking committee member Republican Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin said that while “we all want Boeing to succeed,” he said it is also important to hear from whistleblowers. “What I don’t want this committee to do is to scare the you-know-what out of the American public,” he said. “In the end I want the public to be confident getting on an airplane. But I have to admit, this testimony is more than troubling…We have to be concerned. We have to get to the bottom of this.”
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