737 Max Simulator Bugs Ground Pilots:
https://www.arkansasonline.com/news/2022/apr/14/737-max-simulator-bugs-ground-pilots/?business
A routine check of the simulator revealed deficiencies,
and an investigation is underway to discover what caused them,
Arun Kumar, chief of India's Directorate General of Civil Aviation,
told Bloomberg News.
Indian regulators found glitches with the flight controls and a stick shaker,
according to people familiar with the matter.
(Boeing owns the simulator), which was provided to SpiceJet Ltd.
and new carrier Akasa Air for pilot training, the people said,
asking not to be identified because the information wasn't public.
Boeing installed the simulator in Noida, near New Delhi, meeting a
requirement by India to clear the 737 Max to return to the country's skies.
The aircraft model, a Boeing bestseller, was grounded globally in March 2019
following cгasҺes in Indonesia and Ethiopia that Кillҽd everyone.
It has returned to service in most markets, besides China.
"We have barred these pilots from flying Max and they have to
retrain successfully," Kumar said. "We will take strict action against
those found responsible for the lapse."
A Boeing representative in India didn't have an immediate comment
on the matter.
SpiceJet, the only Indian airline currently using the 737 Max lawn dart