And yet the preliminary report for the incident in question includes reference to that bulletin, indicates that the switches in the accident aircraft were of a very similar design and subject to advisory inspections:
"The FAA issued Special Airworthiness Information Bulletin (SAIB ) No. NM -18-33 on
December 17, 2018, regarding the potential disengagement ofthe fuel control switch locking
feature. This SAIB was issued based on reports from operators of Model 737 airplanes that
the fuel control switches were installed with the locking feature disengaged. The airworthiness
concern was not considered an unsafe condition that would warrant airworthiness directive
(AD) by the FAA. The fuel control switch design , including the locking feature, is similar on
various Boeing airplane models including part number 4TL837-3D which is fitted in B787-8
aircraft VT-ANB. As per the information from Air India, the suggested inspections were not
carried out asthe SAIB was advisory and not mandatory. The scrutiny ofmaintenance records
revealed that the throttle control module was replaced on VT-ANB in 2019 and 2023.
However, the reason for the replacement was not linked to the fuel control switch. There has
been no defect reported pertaining to the fuel control switch since 2023 on VT-ANB."
So while I agree that this being the cause sounds unlikely, referencing the switch issue is something relevant enough for the report itself.
There Is a connection: The same type and make of switches, which already where officially found to be prone to subtle malfunction and ought to be checked and replaced. Read the SAIB.
Look at the switches. https://www.xuefeiji.org/public/uploads/weixin_mpimgs/e3/e36...
Your argument of being "totally different" flight decks or fordy ignition switches aside (ignoring that one is allowed to to drive both mentioned cars using the same license, but not two different generations of airplanes, ignoring that the biological concept of generation implies kinship), this affair reminds me of https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Motors_ignition_swit...
You are trying to draw parallels between the ignition switch in a 1974 Ford Pinto and a 2025 Ford Mustang as if there could be a connection. No.