But if they remove the entire MCAS, then the 737 will fly like a pig due to the bigger engines / pylons / wing / CG interactions. No ?
Wasn't the MCAS introduced to correct some kind of exaggerated nose down attitude ?
MCAS was introduced to fix a commercial problem not a technical one. However the commercial problem had a technical origin.
The new engines for the MAX were so big they had to be moved forward to clear the wing. Their huge cowlings also moved the aerodynamic centre forwards, leading to reduced stability in pitch. This in turn led to a tendency to pitch up even steeper at high angles of attack during takeoff and landing, risking the plane stalling.
Normally this would have been dealt with by enhanced warning devices and pilot training compared to the previous models, possibly also some tweaks to the main flight control parameters or even a third flight control system (FCS) making it triple-redundant. The design would and should have been perfectly flyable.
However
this would have required the MAX to be re-certified as a new type, with not only all the extra analysis and testing involved but also pilot re-training. Boeing were so desperate to get MAX flying, due to competition from Airbus, they did not want to wait that long.
So they introduced MCAS to mimic the behaviour of the old models and hid it from the pilots so that the plane appeared to all intents and purposes the same as before. Thus, MCAS was a technical solution to a commercial problem.
thanks for the explanation.
Let me ask the following question...
The move from A320 to A320 Neo did just introduced a SECOND generation of A320 to a plane first flown in 1987.
The 737MAX by contrast was the FIFTH generation of 737 first flown in 1967 - from memory: 100/200, then 300-400-500, then 800NG, and then MAX.
So I ask the question, didn't simply the 737 basic airframe ran into its
ultime limits ? Born in 1967, no shame, that was 42 years ago... the younger A320 just has more growth potential. No ?
for example, the 737 was born with JT8D, then in the 90's an engine change (on the 800 / NG - can't remember, CFM56 ?) led to a flattened bottom nacelle because the engines were already uncomfortably too large and close from the ground... and then that engine mount issue returned, with a vengeance, on the MAX, causing all the present horror.
And then it bring us back, to both aircraft eventual successors - a huge investment for both aircraft makers... they prefer stretching old designs, not a bad thing, but isn't the MAX a cautionary tale against stretching too much an old airframe ?
Just asking...