Escalating scandal grips airlines including American and Southwest, as nearly 100 planes find fake parts from company with fake employees that vanished overnight::Why are so many flights getting canceled or delayed? Blame a mysterious British supplier accused of falsified documents for plane components.

  • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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    My father has been designing and building bespoke aircraft for 45 years, was an FAA test pilot, inspector, and trainer for most of that time, and was in the US Air Force during the Korean War. He has more aviation experience than most.

    His license plate reads GO RAIL and he won’t fly commercial if he can avoid it.

    e: I am not surprised.

      • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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        Most planes in general don’t crash, fwiw. Most trains and cars don’t, either.

        But would you rather your Uber was a Camry or a Lada Niva?

        • Odelay42@lemmy.world
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          Planes are vastly safer than trains.

          “Passenger vehicles are by far the most dangerous motorized transportation option compared. Over the last 10 years, passenger vehicle death rate per 100,000,000 passenger miles was over 20 times higher than for buses, 17 times higher than for passenger trains, and 595 times higher than for scheduled airlines.”

          https://injuryfacts.nsc.org/home-and-community/safety-topics/deaths-by-transportation-mode/

          • PM_Your_Nudes_Please@lemmy.world
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            Worth noting that the per-mile and per-trip stats are different. Planes have low per-mile rates because nobody sane is using a plane to get across town. They only use planes for long-distance trips where driving/taking the train isn’t feasible. So by default, planes will have low per-mile rates because virtually every trip is a high mileage event. In short, planes drastically water down their per-mile averages.

            When you look at it from a per-trip viewpoint, cars are safer. Which makes sense. You drive to work hundreds of times per year, but maybe ride a plane twice? So a single car crash is going to be a drop in the bucket when compared to the thousands of car trips you’ve taken in your life, but a single plane crash will be a massive spike in the numbers.

            I just wanted to point out how statistics can be used to justify either side. Lots of people want to rely on numbers for everything, as if statistics can’t be manipulated. But they can, and you can bet your ass that if a party has a vested interest in stats showing one result over another, a team of statisticians can figure out a way to make it happen.

            • Brownian Motion@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              In 95% of all car accidents, the driver has eaten carrot in the week prior to the accident.

              you may now draw your own conclusion

            • raspberriesareyummy@lemmy.world
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              Additional consideration: How safe a car trip is, can be influenced a lot by the driver. As a frequent driver (I wished I could use trains instead, but our train system regularly sucks for many connections :( ), I feel that 95+ per cent of accidents could be avoided if the driver was driving careful themselves plus anticipating the errors of other drivers. I get into so many situations that could be dangerous for me as well, but I typically avoid the danger because I see the crazy people maneuvers coming before they execute them. My hopes are that on the occasions when I make a driving mistake, someone else will be there to watch out for me as well.

              Long story short: In a plane, you\re putting your life into someone else’s hand. In a car, you at least have the illusion of control, but I claim that you actually do have some control over avoiding accidents.

              • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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                How safe a car trip is, can be influenced a lot by the driver.

                The same could be said of issues with flights. The difference is you’re not the driver, but also there are many, many more layers of safety in flying.

                Only one thing has to go wrong for a car crash, which could easily be completely out of control of the driver and their vehicle (eg another driver). Several things have to go wrong for a plane to crash, the holes in many layers of Swiss cheese have to align.

                • raspberriesareyummy@lemmy.world
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                  Only one thing has to go wrong for a car crash, which could easily be completely out of control of the driver and their vehicle (eg another driver). Several things have to go wrong for a plane to crash, the holes in many layers of Swiss cheese have to align.

                  True, but statistically, the cases where a single thing going wrong causes an accident make up only a tiny fraction of car accidents. And freak accidents like “rockfall as you exit a tunnel” can also happen to planes - e.g. being shot out of the sky by russian war criminals.

                  Edit: additionally, capitalist corporations are by definition looking to maximize profits, meaning they cut corners - often outright criminally - which is what led to the article we’re commenting on, and also to the murder of the full crew & passengers of two Boeing 737-MAX.

                  Still, I see no Boeing CEO charged with murder - or even manslaughter.

            • Ryantific_theory@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Thank you, PM_Your_Nudes_Please, for an wonderfully insightful comment on the nature of statistics in transportation accidents.

            • nBodyProblem@lemmy.world
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              If you are considering two modes of transportation for a airplane-suitable trip, the per-trip stat is effectively irrelevant. If we consider a 1,000 mile trip and want to choose the safest manner of travel to the destination aircraft will statistically be the safest transportation method.

            • wantd2B1ofthestrokes@discuss.tchncs.de
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              I don’t really agree. If I have two choices to make a long distance trip, drive or fly, it is safer to fly. If I’m going to the grocery store, there’s no option to fly, so using those type of trips in the calculation doesn’t make sense.

              If we talk about the safety of cars vs planes, we should really only be considering trips of a distance where planes are a viable option. Even then a trips per crash seems like a far worse metric than miles per crash. You want to account for complexity of the trips still.

            • IDriveWhileTired@lemmy.world
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              Do you have any statistics about the total number of miles driven by cars every day vs. miles flown by planes daily? Somehow, just based on the amount of cars worldwide, I’d bet that there are far more miles driven by cars daily than miles flown by planes, so accidents per mile would still be a significant statistic. Because even though planes fligh thousands of miles per trip, cars are numbered in millions, in the US alone. So I’d bet that if every car trip was one mile, which is very conservative, you’d still have more miles driven daily than flown in the US. Which makes deaths per mile a lot more scary.

              Accidents per trip would be relevant as well, but how many commercial airliners crash every day vs. how many cars crash every day? How many people die a year from commercial airline crashes vs. from car crashes? I’d bet that even per trip cars are less safe than planes.

              I live in a mostly rural area, and we have had 4 deaths on the motorway nearby over the past 3 or 4 months. And that is just in one region,with low to moderate traffic and low population density (lots of farms and woods around here). Also, never knew anyone who died in a plane crash, in over 40 years, but have had 2 close friends die in car crashes, never mind acquaintances or friends of friends. And I bet everyone, in developing or developed countries, knows someone who died in a car crash, whereas I’d bet that most people don’t have even acquaintances or friend of friends that died in plane crashes.

              So I’d really like to see numbers on that claim that, per trip, cars are safer, because in 2021, with no deaths from commercial planes in the US, that claim does not stand, because you could have an infinite number of car trips that year, and still be less safe than commercial planes with one single dead person.

          • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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            That’s true in general. Planes are very safe overall.

            My father has some airlines he’s okay with and some he won’t fly under any circumstances. I’m not talking about overall statistics, but what he knows about the industry’s practices, including mechanical and pilot issues.

            Just my .02$

          • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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            Yes, sorry, I meant commercial planes. I should have clarified.

            When I was young and learning to fly, he told me if I ever got into ultralites he’d disown me (he was sort of kidding).

          • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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            When I’m driving down the highway, I spend as little time as possible next to semi-trailers because I’ve met loads of drivers and know how many are on heavy drugs or haven’t slept for far too long so they can meet their deadlines.

            Probability-wise, it’s safe, but I don’t like it. Not everything is about raw numbers, Mr Spock.

    • Stovetop@lemmy.world
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      After all of the high profile train derailments in recent history, primarily caused by decaying infrastructure, bad standards, and cutting corners, makes me wonder if there’s someone with an extensive background in rail out there with a license plate that says “FLY AIR”.

      I guess it’s really just a question of whether you take the risk you know or the one you don’t.

      • jonne@infosec.pub
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        That’s cargo rail tho. Fatal passenger rail accidents are very rare and involve multiple human and system failures.

    • peanutyam@lemmy.world
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      I am an Aerospace Engineer (I was an Aircraft Maintenance Engineer by trade prior to going to University) and I have spent the last 30 years in the airline industry….it isn’t as bad as you are allegedly making it out to be….pilots are not engineers either……

      Experience from the 60’s and 70’s isn’t really relevant to today’s industry- I started in the early 90’s and it’s massively different today from back then….so your point is?

      I am also based in Australia so that might also make a bit of a difference because we have had no airline crashes in this country and we have a very strict Potentially Unwanted Parts (PUP’s) system and other checks and balances that because we are under EASA based regulations and not FAA ones (who, by the way allowed the PMA part system….where parts are no longer required to be manufactured by the OEM for aircraft….and I’ve got plenty of stories about that nonsense…)

      So yeah…. I quite happily still fly everywhere around the world….

      • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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        My dad is both a pilot and engineer. I’m aware not all pilots are. Sorry if I didn’t make that clear. If you’re in the industry, this will dox me, but my dad designed the Taylorcraft tri-gear (the F-22; there are still Taylorcrafts out there with rivets I put in them in the early 80s, because I basically grew up in the factory), and converted the original WACO biplane blueprints from the Smithsonian to modern specs so they could be manufactured again. He also designed the WACO Super class and their conversion to sea floats about ten years ago or so (the YMF-5; as an aerospace engineer, I’m sure you know that’s not a simple engineering task). He designed and engineered all the features this video from last year talks about; I don’t mean ancient history.

        He’s currently 88 and still works full-time at WACO. He knows what he’s talking about. He still travels to the EU about every year for WACO. His knowledge is not outdated.

        My point is just to relay what I’ve heard from my dad on this topic for US airlines specifically, and that I trust his opinion personally. Nothing more.

        e: sorry for all the edits, my Lemmy client hates me. FWIW, one of my dad’s current titles at WACO is ‘Airworthiness Manager’. You can find him on LinkedIn. Just search ‘waco classic airworthiness manager’.

    • agent_flounder@lemmy.one
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      Yikes.

      For a while I hated flying. Freaked me out even though I knew statistically it is a safe form of travel. Then I watched a bunch of Air Disasters shows and realized how many fixes they have put in place and I felt a lot better about flying.

      Then I subbed to /r/AviationMaintenance. I really don’t want to fly anymore.

        • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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          Flying is still safer than driving, FWIW. Not sure if that makes you feel better about flying or worse about driving (for me it’s the latter).

          • CoderKat@lemm.ee
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            It’s kinda weird actually how normalized driving is. There’s a lot of people who are so scared of flying that they won’t do it. But far fewer people take such an approach to being in a personal vehicle, despite being massively more dangerous.

            I think it’s because car deaths are just so normalized that most people are numb to them. It’s kinda like that iconic Joker monologue about how it’s “all according to the plan”. People are afraid of exemplary things, not the mundane things that will actually kill them.

            • andros_rex@lemmy.world
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              Also, not driving is not really an option in a lot of places. Driving terrifies me, but I just have to deal or not eat 🤷‍♂️

            • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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              I’m personally more afraid of driving. The learning and tests for pilots are extensive (I’ve done a lot of it), but any moron can get a driving license, and most lose much of that knowledge shortly after.

              Other drivers are fucking scary.

      • PM_Your_Nudes_Please@lemmy.world
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        The first time I went skydiving, my instructor was a retired aircraft mechanic. He said something along the lines of “People always ask me why I’d want to jump out of a perfectly good airplane. I tell them that I worked on planes for 30 years, and there is no such thing as a perfectly good airplane.”

    • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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      Sounds like my dad, who after working as a computer programmer consultant since the early 70s, has become a Luddite, to the point that he won’t even wear a digital watch. I wonder what a railroad engineer would tell your father.

      • jimbolauski@lemmy.world
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        It would not take much for a boiler on a train to blow, I’m sure there were all sorts of corners cut.

        • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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          Do Diesel engines even use boilers? I know electric ones don’t. You don’t see a whole lot of functioning steam engines these days. They are neat though. Noisy AF.

          • jimbolauski@lemmy.world
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            I thought you were talking back in the day when you referenced railroad engineers talking to op’s father. Ie even way back when the people that ran old steam locomotives had the same opinion.

            Funny enough my FIL was a train engineer for steam engines but transitioned to maintaining boilers at a hospital as most steam engines were being phased out early in his career.

      • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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        My dad is the opposite of a Luddite. At 88, he still works for the airplane manufacturer, builds his own computers, and is getting into VR.

        • PM_Your_Nudes_Please@lemmy.world
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          That’s freight rail. Freight rail is a full blown late-stage capitalist hellscape. Aging infrastructure that hasn’t seen maintenance since the New Deal, companies that refuse to update equipment because paying out lawsuits when it breaks is cheaper, overworked employees who aren’t even allowed to call out sick, etc…

          Compared to that, passenger rail is a fucking pipedream.

          • llama@midwest.social
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            But doesn’t Amtrak share the same rails with freight? Sure maybe the trains themselves are better maintained but if the rails themselves are in bad shape the train won’t get far.

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        Perhaps, but you don’t have as far to fall.

        (e: oh, I mistook your comment for sarcasm. Ignore my reply; I agree.)

    • unoriginalsin@lemmy.world
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      Once you’ve seen the sausage made it’s hard to love sausage. Doesn’t mean the sausage is terrible, it just makes you think of watching it get made.

    • Roboticide@lemmy.world
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      Earlier this year a bunch of people got stuck on a 4 hour Amtrak ride for like 18+ hours, without power, toilets or water. Were told they couldn’t leave and not allowed/able to transfer to another train.

      I’d rather just die in an incredibly rare plane crash than trust AmTrak to get me across the country in days versus a flight which can get me there in hours.

  • ChrisLicht@lemm.ee
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    I remember watching an American 60 Minutes episode about commercial airlines buying fake plane parts, maybe 20+ years ago. Depressing to see it still happens.

    • Ketchup@reddthat.com
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      I remember that one. They also discussed how most large airports had the ability to fully service aircraft and how there were only a few depots such as Texas and hiring skilled illegals as mechanics to service the majority of aircraft to cut costs and take advantage of those workers.

      • iforgotmyinstance@lemmy.world
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        There are several carriers who only perform maintenence in Mexico and South America to save money and avoid unexpected FAA peeks at the maintenance records.

        • stevehobbes@lemmy.world
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          There are many places things get done for refurbishment of seats and interiors - lots in China.

          All places doing heavy C and D checks are FAA certified, for US registered airlines regardless of where they do the work.

          https://airwaysmag.com/abcds-aircraft-maintenance/

          Delta Techops does lots of work on their own planes and others.

          Small airlines won’t be able to afford to run their own heavy check facilities and will certainly outsource.

  • Gsus4@feddit.nl
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    So what happened to the whole “every part is tracked from production to installation and through maintenance checks?”

    • elshanerino@lemmy.world
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      that’s how they figured this out.

      if aviation parts were like auto parts, it would be next to impossible to trace which jets had the bogus parts and how long it had been installed

        • Stumblinbear@pawb.social
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          You’ve tracked them, but that doesn’t mean you’ve followed up at every second of every day to see if the company still exists.

          • nucleative@lemmy.world
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            This is the right answer. When we perform maintenance on our aircraft there’s a logbook entry that contains very specific details about the part that went in, such as its serial number, but really that’s so the insurance company can track down the culprit after the crash. Not many individuals are doing the tracing themselves.

            • RunningInRVA@lemmy.world
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              I think there is trust in the system because the part came with all the necessary paperwork and everything checks out. In this case the shady parts company was forging certification documents from other manufacturers. That’s going to be hard to catch no matter how effective the system is.

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                Several of the filings are riddled with typos, including misspelled executive titles and oddly capitalized words that appear to have happened when someone hit caps lock instead of the “A” key.

                Everything checking out:

                “Several of the filings are riddled with typos, including misspelled executive titles and oddly capitalized words that appear to have happened when someone hit caps lock instead of the “A” key.”

              • Kimano@lemmy.world
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                Yeah, it’ll be easy to catch if you actually dig into it, but if you’re not given a reason to, it might take a while to catch; which is exactly what happened

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            Nor did they ensure the credentials were legitimate, which is super hard if you’re not specifically looking for it and aware it’s occurring. Someone had insider knowledge and exploited a vulnerability.

        • kaput@jlai.lu
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          Dock To stock policies and “there is no added value in inspection” LEAN sucks.

    • Wooki@lemmy.world
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      It’s called outsourcing. You outsource the risk and it magically goes away….

      Or does it.

      • JonEFive@midwest.social
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        It sort of does. “Our vendor signed legally binding documents that they were responsible for vetting and verifying all parts. Sue them, not us.”

        Unless by risk you mean an airplane falling out of the sky…

        • Wooki@lemmy.world
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          Risk impact comes in all forms from: it did nothing, to it destroyed our reputation, or even we killed people. Measuring risk impact and understanding the risks are incredibly important and outsourcing & hiding the risks behind a contract can’t protect your company’s reputation or the people killed at the end of the day

  • Verdant Banana@lemmy.world
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    this is occuring in other industries as well to the point of affecting a lot of stuff surprised there is not more articles pertaining to this

    • grayman@lemmy.world
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      Right to repair your tractor? Hell no!

      Fake ass parts with MTBF of a few hundred hours installed by the dealer? Yeah that’s cool!

      Thanks regulatory capture and corrupt govt!!!

  • Agent641@lemmy.world
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    When we looked for the autopilot computer, we just found a small, tired indian man in a compartment

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    I am very glad my next international trip will by by train.

  • Restaldt@lemm.ee
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    Oh cool wardogs 2: the enshittification with jonah hill should be dope

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    It has had two consecutive summers plagued with seemingly constant flight delays and cancellations as “revenge travel” grips a worldwide public eager to get out after a pandemic-era hibernation.

    Instead these parts “get sold cheaply to customers who need inexpensive replacements.” Black market dealings can be slightly more nefarious in nature, often entailing sale of military technology to countries that are under international sanctions, such as selling spare F-14 fighter jets to Iran.

    In addition to allegedly forging documents for airplane parts it appears that AOG Technics created several fake LinkedIn profiles claiming to be company executives, according to Bloomberg.

    Several of the filings are riddled with typos, including misspelled executive titles and oddly capitalized words that appear to have happened when someone hit caps lock instead of the “A” key.

    Other documents show a series of shifting corporate addresses, some of which end up back at either a coworking space in London and the offices of a now-retired accountant in a sleepy West Sussex town.

    A Certificate of Incorporation filed with the Registrar of Companies for England and Wales in January 2021 listed Kensho’s headquarters at the same London address of AOG Technics—the North Nova building just a few blocks from Buckingham Palace.


    The original article contains 1,523 words, the summary contains 204 words. Saved 87%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

    • fubo@lemmy.world
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      Several of the filings are riddled with typos, including misspelled executive titles and oddly capitalized words that appear to have happened when someone hit caps lock instead of the “A” key.

      Which just goes to show, if you’re gonna type in fraudulent things, get a keyboard with no caps-lock key.

  • Etterra@lemmy.world
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    Sir, we’ve discovered that these fuselages that we have been installing for the last 3 months are all made out of paper mache.

    CEO: Shit we’re going to get sued! Do anything else to tell me?

    We opened up a black box and nothing was inside except for Three paper clips and a dead AA battery.