Aircrashreportpoints toBoeing design flaw
Investigators also questioned pilot’s training, crew’s role
JAKARTA: A design flaw, inadequate pilot training and poor flight crew performance contributed to a Boeing jet crashing in Indonesia last year, killing all 189 people on board, investigators said on Friday.
The Lion Air disaster was followed months later by a second crash - involving the same model of aircraft - when an Ethiopian Airlines plane went down with 157 people aboard, leading to the global grounding of Boeing’s entire 737 MAX fleet.
Indian national Bhavye Suneja, the pilot of the plane, was also killed in the crash.
The crashes had thrown a spotlight on the MAX model’s Manoeuvring Characteristics Augmentation System (MCAS), an anti-stall mechanism, that pilots in both planes had struggled to control as the jets careered downwards.
On Friday, Indonesia’s National Transportation Safety Committee said there were flaws in Boeing’s design of the anti-stall system and of its certification by US regulators. “The design and certification of this feature was inadequate,” a summary of the report said, referring the MCAS.
The MCAS was vulnerable to a sole sensor that it relied on for inputs, and 737 MAX pilots were not properly briefed on how to handle a malfunction, it said.
“The aircraft flight manual and flight crew training did not include information about MCAS,” the report said.
A sensor on the doomed jet’s system was “miscalibrated” and the problem was not caught by Lion Air maintenance crews, it said, after the plane’s previous flight also experienced loss-ofcontrol problems.
The report also said the emergency was not “effectively managed” by the crew, who had previous performance issues.
An earlier report released by international regulators said the
US Federal Aviation Administration lacked the manpower and expertise to evaluate the jet’s MCAS when it certified the plane.
Friday’s report comes after Boeing replaced the chief of its commercial plane division this week, the most significant executive departure since the 737 MAX grounding plunged the company into crisis seven months ago.
Boeing has faced fresh scrutiny following the revelation of text messages from 2016 in which a test pilot described the MCAS during a simulation as “running rampant” and behaving in an “egregious” manner.
On Friday, following the release of the report, Boeing expressed its “heartfelt condolences” to victims’ families, and said it had since fixed the flight-control system’s software.
“These software changes will prevent the flight control conditions that occurred in this accident from ever happening again,” Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg said in a statement.