Popular on eTradeWire
- South Carolina Proclaims April 2026 Cambodian Heritage Month Following Advocacy by Generations For - 188
- Nimbus Wholesale to Host Denver B2B Trade Show & Customer Appreciation Event for Retailers on May 14–15, 2026 - 157
- Treasure Coast Automotive Swap Meet and Car Show Set for May 2-3 in Vero Beach - 146
- VCCCD Announces Selection of Dr. Luca E. Lewis as Ventura President - 143
- Albuquerque Turkish Festival On Saturday May 2nd 2026 - 136
- Rubber Inc. Launches Refreshed Website to Simplify Ordering and Improve Customer Experience - 134
- Muncle Mikes Expands Loose Hot Wheels Collection With New Customs and Collector Additions - 132
- BlackRock's 27% Revenue Surge Collides With Explosive Evidence of"Suspect Unapproved"(SUP) Infrastructure and a Federal Fraud Chain Spanning 2018-2025 - 131
- Bookish Lane Publishing Spotlights 13 Authors at LA Times Festival of Books - 131
- Club Moda USA Unveils 2026 Cruise & Resort Wear Collection Ahead of Memorial Day Weekend - 126
Similar on eTradeWire
- Reseda Contractor Launches Free Fire Rebuild Program for LA Wildfire Victims
- JetGlow Aviation Launches Premium Aircraft Condition Maintenance Services at Wittman Airport
- Monticello Equipment Named Authorized Forklift Dealer for LiuGong North America
- Unraveling the Canadian Housing Crisis: Could Steel Structures Be the Panacea?
- THE DASH CAM: THINKWARE Launches May Dash Cam Promotion with AUTOBARN Australia
- Trump Warned as 40‑Year Quality Expert Daryl Guberman Exposes Chinese Control of U.S. Aerospace Oversight
- T. Jones Group Named Finalist Across Multiple Categories at the 2026 Georgie Awards
- Munger Construction Announces New Role for Karen DelVecchio as Relationship Manager
- GLOBAL FORENSIC WARNING: 13- U.S. Federal Agencies Notified as Ten Are Implicated in ANSI–ANAB Governance During Worldwide Accreditation Collapse
- AI Universal Engine™ Launches a New Era of Strategic Intelligence
FAA Confirms Structural Cracking in Airbus Cargo Doors — Validating Earlier Warnings by QA Expert and Boeing Shareholder Daryl Guberman
eTradeWire News/10836202
FAA Confirms Structural Cracking in Airbus Cargo Doors — Validating Earlier Warnings by QA Expert and Boeing Shareholder Daryl Guberman
BOSTON - eTradeWire -- FAA Confirms Structural Cracking in Airbus Cargo Doors — Validating Earlier Warnings by QA Expert and Boeing Shareholder Daryl Guberman
FAA's New Airworthiness Directive Confirms the Exact Structural Door Weakness Guberman Identified in Earlier Public Warnings
The Federal Aviation Administration has issued a new Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) addressing structural cracking in the upper forward and aft corners of Airbus A320/A321 bulk cargo doors, confirming the exact type of fatigue‑related failure long identified by aerospace quality expert Daryl Guberman.
The proposed Airworthiness Directive (Federal Register Document No. 2026‑08594 (https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2026/05/04/2026-08594/airworthiness-directives-airbus-sas-airplanes ) cites fatigue‑test findings showing cracks forming around fastener holes in the cargo‑door structure — a door assembly composed primarily of aluminum with localized reinforcement, consistent with Guberman's prior public analysis of door‑plug vulnerabilities across the industry.
Guberman previously published findings related to the January 5, 2024 Alaska Air door‑plug failure, identifying manufacturing performed in an uncertified environment and highlighting the systemic risks of weakened oversight across both Boeing and Airbus supply chains.
"This is precisely what I warned about — aluminum door structures under cyclic stress (on going vibration) will crack, and the regulators are now acknowledging it," said Guberman.
The $2 Trillion Paperwork Trap: Why 9,000 Planes Are Legally "Scrap"
https://youtu.be/sj9m7tqcBvA
The FAA's NPRM- mandates conditional repairs, and potential cold‑working (strengthening the metal by squeezing it) of fastener holes to restore structural integrity. The agency notes that unaddressed cracking could compromise the aircraft's structural safety envelope.
More on eTradeWire News
"This new FAA action validates the core issue: when certification systems fail, metal fatigue wins — and passengers pay the price," Guberman added.
Historical FAA Notifications Warning Airbus About Fastener‑Hole Fatigue Cracking (2000–2024)
The newly proposed 2026 directive is only the latest in a long chain of FAA warnings issued to Airbus over more than two decades. These directives repeatedly identified fatigue cracking around fastener holes, frame feet, and fuselage structural joints on A319/A320/A321 aircraft:
Airbus was warned in 2000, 2014, 2022, 2024, and now again in 2025–2026 about fatigue‑related cracking around drilled fastener holes.
SECTION: Boeing Oversight and Structural‑Integrity Implications
As part of this broader industry‑wide structural‑integrity discussion, Boeing must also be addressed. As a Boeing shareholder and long‑time quality professional, Daryl Guberman emphasizes that the FAA's newly proposed Airbus directive is not an isolated event — it is part of a systemic pattern across the entire aerospace sector where fatigue‑critical structures, drilled fastener holes, and aging airframes continue to reveal vulnerabilities. This includes heat treatment and welding which are flight critical processes.
Boeing has faced its own series of FAA actions over the past decade involving structural fastener‑hole cracking, manufacturing deviations, and quality‑system breakdowns, including:
More on eTradeWire News
The Accreditation Collapse Affecting Both Boeing & Airbus
https://www.prlog.org/13140232-the-accreditation-collapse-affecting-both-boeing-airbus.html
Guberman stated:
"Airbus is now facing the same physics Boeing faced — and still faces. When you drill holes into aluminum or composite structures and then subject them to vibration, pressurization, and cyclic:(on going vibration) loading, fatigue is inevitable unless oversight is airtight. Boeing's history shows what happens when oversight weakens. Airbus is now learning the same lesson." Guberman sent a warning letter to Airbus in September 11, 2025.
He added:
"As a Boeing shareholder, I expect Boeing to treat this Airbus directive as a mirror — not a shield. This is not the time for competitive relief. It is the time for structural honesty."
A comprehensive analysis showing how both Boeing and Airbus operated under a compromised accreditation chain, resulting in aircraft that cannot be retroactively re‑inspected or re‑certified. https://guberman-quality.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/ACCREDITATION-COLLAPSE-2002-PRESENT-BOEING-AIRBUS.pdf
Closing Statement
"I've said it before, and I'll say it again: when you drill a hole in a vibratory environment, you create a stress‑concentration point. Over time, cracks will form. This is predictable, preventable, and inspectable — but only if the industry takes these warnings seriously. For decades, especially when it came to Boeing, both Boeing and the FAA made the general public and government think that an airworthiness certificate superseded AS9100 — but they were wrong, "DEAD WRONG!"
Boeing & Airbus 9,000-Airframe Crisis 2018–2026 https://www.prlog.org/13137988-boeing-airbus-9000-airframe-crisis-20182026.html
"The world is rarely healed by institutions. It is healed by the one individual who sees the wound clearly enough — and cares deeply enough — to close it.
I have seen the wound.
I have mapped the fracture.
I am offering the repair."
— Daryl Guberman, 2026
"All who rise while burying the truth will one day be buried by it."
-Anonymous (proverbial wisdom)
"People don't reject the truth because it's wrong. They reject it because it demands change."
- ANONYMOUS
FAA's New Airworthiness Directive Confirms the Exact Structural Door Weakness Guberman Identified in Earlier Public Warnings
The Federal Aviation Administration has issued a new Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) addressing structural cracking in the upper forward and aft corners of Airbus A320/A321 bulk cargo doors, confirming the exact type of fatigue‑related failure long identified by aerospace quality expert Daryl Guberman.
The proposed Airworthiness Directive (Federal Register Document No. 2026‑08594 (https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2026/05/04/2026-08594/airworthiness-directives-airbus-sas-airplanes ) cites fatigue‑test findings showing cracks forming around fastener holes in the cargo‑door structure — a door assembly composed primarily of aluminum with localized reinforcement, consistent with Guberman's prior public analysis of door‑plug vulnerabilities across the industry.
Guberman previously published findings related to the January 5, 2024 Alaska Air door‑plug failure, identifying manufacturing performed in an uncertified environment and highlighting the systemic risks of weakened oversight across both Boeing and Airbus supply chains.
"This is precisely what I warned about — aluminum door structures under cyclic stress (on going vibration) will crack, and the regulators are now acknowledging it," said Guberman.
The $2 Trillion Paperwork Trap: Why 9,000 Planes Are Legally "Scrap"
https://youtu.be/sj9m7tqcBvA
The FAA's NPRM- mandates conditional repairs, and potential cold‑working (strengthening the metal by squeezing it) of fastener holes to restore structural integrity. The agency notes that unaddressed cracking could compromise the aircraft's structural safety envelope.
More on eTradeWire News
- Peoplevine Launches Brand Activation Division Across 250+ Private Clubs
- The AI Direction Deficit: TripleTen Study Finds Staff Get Told to Use AI — But Not Trained to Use It
- Ship Overseas Inc. Launches AI-Driven Real-Time Tracking for 2026 International Shipments
- VConnect USA LLC Launches Dedicated B2B and B2C Commerce Platforms
- JetGlow Aviation Launches Premium Aircraft Condition Maintenance Services at Wittman Airport
"This new FAA action validates the core issue: when certification systems fail, metal fatigue wins — and passengers pay the price," Guberman added.
Historical FAA Notifications Warning Airbus About Fastener‑Hole Fatigue Cracking (2000–2024)
The newly proposed 2026 directive is only the latest in a long chain of FAA warnings issued to Airbus over more than two decades. These directives repeatedly identified fatigue cracking around fastener holes, frame feet, and fuselage structural joints on A319/A320/A321 aircraft:
- 2000 — FAA AD 2000‑12‑04
- 2014 — FAA AD 2014‑15‑16
- 2022 — FAA AD 2022‑14‑10
- 2024 — FAA AD 2024‑05‑02
- 2025–2026 — FAA Proposed AD 2025‑01379 / 2026‑08594
Airbus was warned in 2000, 2014, 2022, 2024, and now again in 2025–2026 about fatigue‑related cracking around drilled fastener holes.
SECTION: Boeing Oversight and Structural‑Integrity Implications
As part of this broader industry‑wide structural‑integrity discussion, Boeing must also be addressed. As a Boeing shareholder and long‑time quality professional, Daryl Guberman emphasizes that the FAA's newly proposed Airbus directive is not an isolated event — it is part of a systemic pattern across the entire aerospace sector where fatigue‑critical structures, drilled fastener holes, and aging airframes continue to reveal vulnerabilities. This includes heat treatment and welding which are flight critical processes.
Boeing has faced its own series of FAA actions over the past decade involving structural fastener‑hole cracking, manufacturing deviations, and quality‑system breakdowns, including:
- 2019 — 737NG pickle‑fork cracking
- 2020–2021 — 787 fuselage join nonconformities
- 2024 — FAA oversight findings following the Alaska Airlines door‑plug separation
More on eTradeWire News
- Poetry and Paint: A conversation with a poet and an artist
- The Greatest Film Director You Never Saw Comes to Blu-Ray from BayView Entertainment
- Renisis Wins National Jewelry Competition
- Global Edge Recruiting Awarded for Second Year in a row the Forbes America's Best Recruiting Firms
- Stream Releases Open-Source AI Agent That Reads Your Face and Adapts How It Speaks
The Accreditation Collapse Affecting Both Boeing & Airbus
https://www.prlog.org/13140232-the-accreditation-collapse-affecting-both-boeing-airbus.html
Guberman stated:
"Airbus is now facing the same physics Boeing faced — and still faces. When you drill holes into aluminum or composite structures and then subject them to vibration, pressurization, and cyclic:(on going vibration) loading, fatigue is inevitable unless oversight is airtight. Boeing's history shows what happens when oversight weakens. Airbus is now learning the same lesson." Guberman sent a warning letter to Airbus in September 11, 2025.
He added:
"As a Boeing shareholder, I expect Boeing to treat this Airbus directive as a mirror — not a shield. This is not the time for competitive relief. It is the time for structural honesty."
A comprehensive analysis showing how both Boeing and Airbus operated under a compromised accreditation chain, resulting in aircraft that cannot be retroactively re‑inspected or re‑certified. https://guberman-quality.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/ACCREDITATION-COLLAPSE-2002-PRESENT-BOEING-AIRBUS.pdf
Closing Statement
"I've said it before, and I'll say it again: when you drill a hole in a vibratory environment, you create a stress‑concentration point. Over time, cracks will form. This is predictable, preventable, and inspectable — but only if the industry takes these warnings seriously. For decades, especially when it came to Boeing, both Boeing and the FAA made the general public and government think that an airworthiness certificate superseded AS9100 — but they were wrong, "DEAD WRONG!"
Boeing & Airbus 9,000-Airframe Crisis 2018–2026 https://www.prlog.org/13137988-boeing-airbus-9000-airframe-crisis-20182026.html
"The world is rarely healed by institutions. It is healed by the one individual who sees the wound clearly enough — and cares deeply enough — to close it.
I have seen the wound.
I have mapped the fracture.
I am offering the repair."
— Daryl Guberman, 2026
"All who rise while burying the truth will one day be buried by it."
-Anonymous (proverbial wisdom)
"People don't reject the truth because it's wrong. They reject it because it demands change."
- ANONYMOUS
Source: GUBERMAN-PMC,LLC
0 Comments
Latest on eTradeWire News
- Boleros de Noche Presents Latin Grammy-winning Puerto Rican singer-songwriter iLe
- Summer Daily Activities Kick Off at Elklook
- Roofman USA Continues Providing Expert Roofing Services Across Michigan
- Cryolab Now Supplying CBS High Security Vitrification Kits to UK Laboratories
- Roofman USA Highlights the Pros and Cons of Pitched Roofs for Michigan Homeowners
- JMAC Highlights How a Karate School in Ann Arbor Can Reignite Fitness Motivation
- Inspire London College Expands Online Health and Social Care Training Across the UK
- The Village of Sayward Suddenly Withdrew Its Quorum Reduction Petition
- Biltmore Cosmetic & Restorative Dentistry Expands Dental Veneers Services in Phoenix
- iatroX surpasses 500,000 clinical queries and expands specialist exam coverage
- Adler & Associates Presents Kim Cameron's Seaper Powers Animated Trilogy at Cannes
- PitPat Launches Sports Club 42: Pedal to Win! Cycling Challenge to Expand Interactive Virtual Sport
- AIIH Launches Global CGST Supplier Tender Offering Multi-Billion Dollar, 25-Year Exclusive Contract
- Phinge To End The Era & Harms Of Unverified AI: Netverse Intelligence (NI) To Debut As The World's Only Verified Alternative
- JoinRCMP.ca Releases New Guide Explaining RCMP Career Paths After Depot Graduation
- JoinRCMP.ca Lifts the Lid on Depot Life and RCMP Training in New In‑Depth Guide
- China Paper Strengthens Strategic Presence in South America Through One-Month Market Expansion Initiative
- Inside-Out Hollywood: The Relentless Rise of Joseph Nybyk (AKA Joseph Neibich)
- Husband-and-Wife Photography Team Brings Personal Approach to Families Across the Triangle
- Lumetra Launches Engram, an MCP-Native Memory Layer Scoring 91.6% on LongMemEval
