Home Transport Aviation FAA tracking all 737 Max flights around world with satellites The Max was grounded worldwide in March 2019 after a second fatal crash in less than five months by Bloomberg February 27, 2021 All Boeing Co. 737 Max flights around the world are being tracked by US regulators who are keeping watch on the plane after its 20-month grounding. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is using a network of satellites capable of tracking planes in even the most remote regions as if they were under surveillance by local radars, according to the agency. The data is being provided by Virginia-based Aireon, the FAA said in an emailed statement. Aireon, which reached an agreement in November to provide the FAA with expanded flight data, is tracking Max flights for unusual events, such as rapid descents, said Vincent Capezzuto, the company’s chief technology officer. The monitoring began January 29, Capezzuto said during a February 12 webinar hosted by Aviation Week. “Recently, we engaged with them on a 737 Max monitor,” he said. “You can literally monitor it on a situational awareness display.” If any unusual events occur on the plane, “safety engineers and inspectors will use the early notification to further analyse the incident,” the FAA said. The Max was grounded worldwide in March 2019 after a second fatal crash in less than five months. The two incidents caused the deaths of 346 people. The FAA required extensive redesigns of the plane’s flight-control systems. Other regulators, such as the European Aviation Safety Agency, have also begun lifting the flight ban. Aireon was formed in 2012 by Iridium Communications and Nav Canada, a nonprofit company that guides air traffic in Canada. A constellation of 66 satellites monitor radio beacons from aircraft, providing tracking data that is equivalent to existing ground stations. The system is helping nations including Canada and the UK track planes over the ocean. Within weeks of the Aireon system going live, its data was used by US officials, before they’d entered into an agreement with the company, to justify grounding the Max after other nations had done so. The Ethiopian Airlines jet that crashed March 10, 2019, wasn’t tracked by local radar, but the Aireon system showed its flight path in detail. Tags boeing FAA Max Satellites Tracking 0 Comments You might also like Saudi Arabia’s PIF reportedly plans new cargo airline in logistics hub push Boeing names industry veteran Kelly Ortberg as CEO We want them to return to their former glory: flydubai CEO Ghaith Al Ghaith on Boeing Farnborough Airshow: Qatar Airways expands Boeing 777-9 order