Bowing - The Early Years of Contract Manufacturing
Bowing is sort of at the forefront of it, sort of by luck. There's no real great reason why bowing serts winning these contracts. They develop some tey ere some of the first f good internal processesand that's about it. And eventually int the thirties, they had a cole big moves that they started to make. So this is when you first started to see the beginnings of passenger planes.
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In 2019, Airbus surpassed for the first time Boeing as the largest aerospace company in the world, as two crashes of Boeing’s 737-Max airplane forced a grounding of the fleet and a halt in sales, eventually costing it $20 billion in associated fines and delays. While Boeing maintains a relatively strong overall safety record as measured by crashes per million departures, the production problems with the 787 Dreamliner in the mid 2010s and the recent 737 debacle has cast some doubt as to the management and engineering practices at the century-old American icon of industry. Tonight we delve into the roots of what made the company as successful as it was, as well as some of the key events that arguably led to its current troubles that date back well into the 1990s and beyond.