Ethiopian Airlines pilots said to have followed protocol before 737 Max crash - Los Angeles Times
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Ethiopian Airlines pilots said to have followed protocol before 737 Max crash

Rescuers work March 11 at the scene of an Ethiopian Airlines flight crash near Bishoftu, Ethiopia.
(Mulugeta Ayene / Associated Press)
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Pilots on the Ethiopian Airlines flight that crashed last month followed protocol set by planemaker Boeing Co. to manually disable an automated anti-stall system as they tried to save the Boeing Co. 737 Max jet, a person familiar with the situation said.

The Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System turned itself on numerous times during the short flight, the person said. MCAS, which is programmed to push down a plane’s nose to help prevent aerodynamic stalls in some situations, is a focus of concern by regulators and lawmakers after 346 people died in crashes of Boeing’s newest version of the 737 flown by Ethiopian and Lion Air, less than five months apart.

The Wall Street Journal reported earlier that the pilots on the deadly flight initially followed the emergency procedures laid out by Boeing, cutting power to electric motors driven by the automated system. The newspaper said pilots turned electric power back on after cranking a manual wheel that turned the same movable surfaces on the plane’s tail that MCAS had affected.

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FULL COVERAGE: Full coverage: Boeing 737 Max planes grounded in U.S. and around the world following 2 deadly crashes »

A Boeing representative in Singapore said she wasn’t able to comment, adding that the accident is under investigation and questions should be directed to the investigators in charge. An Ethiopian transportation ministry spokesman didn’t respond to requests for comment.

A preliminary report into the Ethiopian Airlines crash is nearing release but the exact timing is uncertain. The two disasters have rocked the credibility of Boeing as well as U.S. regulators who approved the new plane. Regulators around the world grounded the 737 Max, Boeing’s fastest-selling plane ever, before the U.S. Federal Aviation Authority followed suit.

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