The U.S. National Transportation Safety Boar will release its preliminary report on the Jan. 5 Boeing 737 MAX 9 door panel blowout on Tuesday, the agency said.
The Jan. 5 incident has become a full-blown safety and reputational crisis for Boeing that will slow plane production and risks it ceding further market share to rival Airbus (AIR.PA), opens new tab.
Until now, the independent U.S. National Transportation Safety Board has not said what caused the panel to rip off an Alaska Airlines-operated jet as the plane climbed to 16,000 feet after taking off from Portland, Oregon. The preliminary report is expected to be made public around 2 p.m. ET.
The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration grounded 171 of the Boeing 737 MAX 9 planes after the incident, most operated by U.S. carriers United and Alaska Airlines, for inspections. Those planes were cleared to return to service in late January.
The NTSB has been focused on how the panel – fitted into this MAX 9 model in place of an optional exit – detached from the plane. The plug is held down by four bolts, opens new tab and then secured by “stop fittings” at 12 different locations along the side of the plug and the door frame.
All 12 stop fittings became disengaged during the event, the NTSB said in January. The NTSB has not said if the bolts had been installed or not.
Both United Airlines and Alaska Air said in the days after the blowout that they had found loose parts on multiple grounded MAX 9 aircraft.
The plug was manufactured by Spirit AeroSystems (SPR.N), opens new tab, the onetime subsidiary of Boeing that separated from its parent in 2005. The production process involves work at both its Wichita, Kansas facility before plane bodies are railed to Boeing’s Renton, Washington, plant.
The FAA has taken a harder line than in the past on Boeing. In late January, it barred Boeing from expanding production of its 737 MAX planes due to the quality issues. That means it can continue producing MAX jets at its current rate, but it cannot increase that rate.
The FAA is conducting an audit of 737 MAX manufacturing, which is looking at all elements of production at Boeing and fuselage production at its supplier Spirit.
Boeing shares were up 1% in trading Tuesday; the stock has lost more than 20% of its value since the beginning of the year.