Audio By Carbonatix
Checks are to be carried out on a second Boeing aircraft model following the blowout of an unused door on one of its planes earlier this month.
The US Federal Aviation Administration grounded more than 170 of the 737 Max 9 fleet after a cabin panel broke away thousands of feet above the ground.
On Sunday, the agency said airlines should also inspect older 737-900ER models, which use the same door design.
The FAA described the move as an "added layer of safety".
It said there had been no reported issues with the 737-900ER, but that it uses the same style of panel to "plug" an unused door as the plane involved in the terrifying 5 January incident.
An Alaska Airlines flight en route to California from Portland, Oregon was forced to make an emergency landing after the panel came away, leaving a gaping hole in the side of the aircraft.
The incident prompted the FAA to ground all 737 Max 9s featuring that style of panel and sent Boeing's share price tumbling.
The agency is investigating the firm's manufacturing practices and production lines, including those linked to subcontractor Spirit AeroSystems, which provided the panel.
Earlier this week, the FAA said it had carried out inspections on 40 of the grounded planes but did not say when they would be able to fly again.
In a statement on Sunday, the agency said: "The safety of the flying public, not speed, will determine the timeline for returning these aircraft to service."
Boeing has said it will increase the quality of inspections in its manufacturing process in wake of the incident.
The 737-900ER models have carried out 11 million hours of operations without similar incident to the newer 737 Max 9s.
The FAA did not order the older model to be grounded while the visual inspections are carried out by operators.
Latest Stories
-
Back to books – Sweden’s schools give up digital learning
21 minutes -
From One Day to One Ring: Leo Woodall joins new The Lord of the Rings cast
32 minutes -
India to decide women’s quota bill as row over parliamentary seats intensifies
43 minutes -
Australia’s richest person must share part of her mining fortunes, court rules
53 minutes -
BBC to cut almost one in 10 staff to make ÂŁ500m savings
1 hour -
Google to punish sites that trap people in with back button tricks
1 hour -
Booking.com customers warned of ‘reservation hijacking’ after hack
1 hour -
Mahama’s words can slow Parliament – Bishop Gyamfi worried over LGBTQ bill delay
2 hours -
LGBTQ Bill: We don’t want a repeat – Catholic Bishop warns Mahama could follow Akufo-Addo’s path
2 hours -
Congo to receive first group of deportees from US this week, sources say
2 hours -
Rabat launches UNESCO World Book Capital 2026 celebrations with major international book fair
4 hours -
Gabon reaffirms support for Morocco’s sovereignty over Sahara, welcomes UN Resolution 2797
4 hours -
SĂŁo TomĂ© & PrĂncipe backs Morocco’s sovereignty over Sahara, endorses autonomy plan
4 hours -
Police grab two suspects in possession of 40 bundles of suspected stolen ECG cables
4 hours -
Information Services Dept of Upper East Region receives ultramodern vans
5 hours