New Straits Times

‘Ethiopian 737 pilots followed guidelines’

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The pilots of the Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 MAX plane that crashed last month initially took the emergency steps outlined by the manufactur­er but still could not regain control, The Wall Street Journal reported yesterday.

The airliner went down soon after taking off on March 10, killing 157 people in the second deadly crash of a 737 MAX aircraft in less than five months, forcing a worldwide grounding of the model.

The first — a Lion Air crash in Indonesia that killed 189 people in October last year — led to Boeing issuing a bulletin reminding operators of emergency guidelines to override a specially developed anti-stall system on MAX planes.

The pilots trying to regain control of the Ethiopian jet at first followed those procedures to switch off the Manoeuvrin­g Characteri­stics Augmentati­on System (MCAS) but failed to recover control, the WSJ said, citing people briefed on the crash investigat­ion’s preliminar­y findings.

They then switched the system back as they tried to find other ways to control the jet before it crashed, the newspaper added.

Its sources said “the latest details are based on data downloaded from the plane’s black-box recorders”.

The preliminar­y report on the accident will likely be issued this week, the Ethiopian government said.

The MCAS is believed to have been a key factor in both 737 MAX crashes. It is designed to automatica­lly lower the aircraft’s nose if it detects a stall or loss of airspeed.

Before it crashed, the pilots of the Lion Air 737 MAX struggled to control it as the MCAS repeatedly pushed the plane’s nose down, according to its flight data recorder.

Both the Lion Air and Ethiopian planes — MAX 8 models — reportedly experience­d erratic steep climbs and descents, as well as fluctuatin­g airspeeds, before crashing shortly after takeoff.

Ethiopia has said there were “clear similariti­es” in the two crashes.

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