The FAA is grounding the entire Boeing 737 MAX fleet, a day after the agency said the planes were safe to fly. The U.S. ban comes as more nations suspended flights of the jets following the fatal Ethiopian Airlines crash. Photo: GettyThe black boxes from Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 arrived in France early Thursday for analysis, a key step in a probe that could help determine how long Boeing Co.’s 737 MAX jetliner remains grounded around the world. The devices store key data, like flight parameters and cockpit voice recordings, which investigators will unlock and read to help them determine the cause of the crash. The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration joined regulators around the globe in grounding the 737 MAX, the type of jet that went down in Ethiopia...
Source: Wall Street Journal March 14, 2019 12:37 UTC