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Alaska's 737-900s. Alaska became the launch customer for the 737-900 in 2001, which preceded the newer 737-900ER. At the time, it was the largest variant of Boeing's best-selling aircraft type.
Boeing plane was missing key bolts before door blowout, NTSB says 02:10. Four bolts meant to hold the Boeing 737 Max 9 door plug in place were missing last month when part of a plane blew out on ...
Alaska Airlines plans to completely retire its Boeing 737-900 fleet by 2025. However, its 737-900ERs should stay beyond 2026.
Alaska Airlines is in the process of enhancing its first-class and premium-class seats and features on select aircraft, the carrier announced Wednesday. On Boeing 737-800 and Max 737-8 aircraft, ...
On January 6, the FAA ordered all 737 Max 9 aircraft grounded after a panel blew off Alaska Airlines Flight 1282 from Portland, Oregon, to Ontario, California, a day earlier.
Alaska Airlines on Wednesday canceled hundreds of flights relying on Boeing's 737-9 Max airliner as inspections continue in the wake of Alaska Flight 1282's fuselage panel blowout Friday.
Alaska Airlines on Saturday cleared 18 Boeing 737-9 Max-9 airliners to return to service while investigators examine the rest of the fleet to determine why a fuselage side panel blew out mid-flight.
Alaska Airlines is making a crucial investment in pilot training, a little more than one year after it became entangled in the ongoing Boeing 737 drama. The carrier, which is in the midst of merging ...
Alaska Airlines grounded all of its Boeing 737-9 aircraft late Friday, hours after a window and piece of fuselage on one such plane blew out in midair and forced an emergency landing in Portland ...
ConsumerAffairs found there were 231 United flights and 163 Alaska flights listed as “canceled” for Sunday, Jan. 7, on FlightAware. For Monday, January 8, United has 204 flights canceled and ...
Alaska Airlines grounded all of its Boeing 737-9 aircraft, hours after a window on one such plane blew out midair and forced an emergency landing in Oregon. The airline said the plane landed safely.
Alaska Airlines on Saturday cleared 18 Boeing 737-9 Max-9 airliners to return to service while investigators examine the rest of the fleet to determine why a fuselage side panel blew out mid-flight.