A Delta Air Lines Airbus A220-100 aircraft as seen on final approach landing at New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport. A220s contain parts made with titanium whose sourcing was falsified.
Boeing and Airbus emphasized that there are no safety concerns after revealing Friday that some titanium parts used in their aircraft had falsified documentation, triggering a federal investigation.
Boeing and Airbus, the two biggest commercial airline makers, may have used titanium sold using fake documents, according to evidence from a supplier that has triggered a Federal Aviation ...
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The 7.3-foot hoodwinker sunfish, thought to only live in waters in the southern hemisphere, washed up on the state's northern ...
STORY: Boeing has found more quality problems on its jets. Reuters sources say the issues this time concern its 787 widebody planes. They say the aerospace giant has found hundreds of incorrectly ...
LONDON — Even as he prepared to embark for the battlefields of Normandy, Pvt. Mervyn Kersh was summoned by his commanding ...
Lawyers want to share depositions of Boeing employees from the civil case. A federal magistrate judge in Chicago on Monday granted a request from families of victims of the 2019 Ethiopian Air ...
The CEO of Boeing got his day in front of Congress, and it was a rocky flight Boeing CEO David Calhoun defended the company’s safety record during a contentious Senate hearing Tuesday, while ...