+

Cookies on the Business Insider India website

Business Insider India has updated its Privacy and Cookie policy. We use cookies to ensure that we give you the better experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we\'ll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies on the Business Insider India website. However, you can change your cookie setting at any time by clicking on our Cookie Policy at any time. You can also see our Privacy Policy.

Close
HomeNewslettersNextShare

I flew on United Airlines' first Boeing 737 Max flight in nearly 2 years and it was just the boring flight the airline needed

  • United Airlines became the second US airline to resume Boeing 737 Max flights on Thursday.
  • The first flight flew from Denver to Houston in the first step to rebuilds consumer confidence.
  • United plans to fly the jet across the US initially from bases in Denver and Houston.

United Airlines resumed flying the Boeing 737 Max on Thursday after a 23-month hiatus that began in March 2019 when the aircraft was grounded worldwide.

The first flight departed from Denver International Airport with just under 170 passengers, including United's chief commercial officer, Jonathan Roitman, in the first step towards reestablishing consumer confidence for an aircraft family that's killed 346 passengers. In total, Thursday saw 24 departures, just six fewer than the same day in 2019, one month before the aircraft's grounding.

United follows American Airlines - which began flying the Max in December 2020 - as the second US airline to return the Max to passenger service. By the end of March, as more aircraft arrive from Boeing, United will use the Max for as many as 98 daily flights from bases in Denver and Houston, Cirium data shows.

The Federal Aviation Administration ungrounded the aircraft in November 2020 after mandating fixes to the aircraft's software and systems that caused the two crashes. United pilots now also receive four hours of simulator training and three hours of computer-based training specific to the aircraft before climbing in the cockpit, a requirement that wasn't in place during the aircraft's initial debut.

Read More: The 16 most outrageous things Boeing employees said about the company, 737 Max program, and each other in released internal emails

Thursday's flight was the culmination of over 1,300 test flights and 400,000 hours of engineering hours, according to Bryan Quiqley, United's senior vice president of flight operations. And with the plane going from the most infamous to the safest in the skies, Insider was onboard the first flight to see the end result.

Here's what it was like to fly on a newly-ungrounded United Airlines Boeing 737 Max.

Advertisement

You are subscribed to notifications!
Looks like you've blocked notifications!