Surprising? After the gross negligence and stonewalling on the 737 max?

--
Shmuel (Seymour J.) Metz
http://mason.gmu.edu/~smetz3

________________________________________
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [[email protected]] on behalf of 
Mike Schwab [[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, February 27, 2020 9:18 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: OT Boeing flight software

https://www.orlandosentinel.com/space/os-bz-boeing-safety-commercial-crew-20200226-bgvthodnjzgmlc36hsxcaopahu-story.html

Boeing didn’t perform full end-to-end test of its astronaut capsule
before troubled mission, ‘surprising’ NASA safety panel.

Critically, the panel learned early this month that Boeing did not
perform a full, end-to-end integrated test of Starliner in a Systems
Integration Lab with ULA’s Atlas V rocket. The test typically shows
how all the software systems during each component of the mission
would have responded with each other through every maneuver — and it
could potentially have caught the issues Boeing later experienced in
the mission.

“It’s pretty exhaustive. You gotta do that,” said Christopher Saindon,
a former member who ended his tenure on the panel in mid-February.
“That was somewhat surprising to us on the panel. There were certainly
gaps in the test protocol.”


It was software that ultimately did fail Boeing when it flew Starliner
on a Dec. 20 mission intended to dock with the International Space
Station. The capsule’s internal clock was 11 hours ahead, causing it
to miss critical maneuvers and fly into the incorrect orbit. Then,
communication issues potentially caused by cell towers in the area
blocked Boeing from sending a command to rectify the orbit. Starliner,
the company determined, wasn’t going to be able to reach the space
station.

But in the process of bringing it back down and re-checking its
software, the company caught yet another issue that could have caused
Starliner to collide with its service module when the two separated
prior to the capsule’s return to Earth. Teams were able to correct the
issue before to the capsule’s return on Dec. 22, but the multitude of
problems have led NASA to call for a full re-verification of Boeing’s
software — a process that will take analyzing about a million lines of
code.

Software issues are also plaguing another arm of Boeing, which is
dealing with the fall out of problems with its 737 Max airplanes that
led to the deaths of 346 people and has grounded the planes.


--
Mike A Schwab, Springfield IL USA
Where do Forest Rangers go to get away from it all?

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