EACarlson
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jan 27, 2019
- Messages
- 5,062
That's what I've been led to believe from other sources. There was a pressurization issue on Thursday that meant the ETOPS certification was pulled. ETOPS is what is need to fly long overwater segments like those to Hawaii.Thanks for the explanation. So, this plane, essentially brand new....had pressure issues on Thursday and so instead of figuring it out....Alaska just took the flight off of longer flights to shorter ones? It would seem incredibly dangerous to do that.
And you're saying this has nothing at all to do with the 8....just the 9? Do any of the 8's have these "plugs" in them? I'm just guessing, but now assuming all planes have the possibility of having "plugs" in them....and now for someone like me this is just a new terrifying fact I didn't want to know....lol. I'll know have to scrub the internet for flights I'm taking to figure out if my plane has "plug" rows.
Max8s do not have plugs. There is no configuration of a Max 8 or Max7 that would accomodate enough passengers to require additional emergency exits. The only two planes that have these plugs are the Max9 and the 737-900NG, sometimes labeled as a 737-900ER.
Only two US airlines fly the Max9 currently, Alaska and United. 739NG I don't know about, but it's a very new type.