787
Coverage of 787 in the Nexus archive.
- FAA will allow Boeing to resume certifying its planes are airworthy after years of safety efforts
The Federal Aviation Administration will allow Boeing to resume certifying the airworthiness of its 737 Max and 787 planes starting next week, following years of safety efforts.
- FAA will allow Boeing to resume certifying its planes are airworthy after years of safety efforts
The FAA will allow Boeing to resume certifying the airworthiness of its 737 Max and 787 planes starting next week, following a review confirming Boeing’s safety checks meet standards. The decision reverses prior FAA oversight imposed after 2019 crashes linked to 737 Max software and 2022 production quality issues with 787s. The FAA also plans to ease monthly production limits on 737 Max jets, which had been restricted after a mid-flight incident in 2024.
- FAA lets Boeing sign off on 737 Max, 787 airworthiness certificates again
The FAA has allowed Boeing to resume signing off on airworthiness certificates for the 737 Max and 787. The U.S. government described the move as a vote of confidence in Boeing.