The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Boeing grounds some 777s after Denver engine fire

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WASHINGTON: Boeing called for the grounding of 128 of its 777 planes across the world on Sunday as US regulators investigat­ed a United Airlines flight whose engine caught fire and fell apart over a suburban American community.

United, Korean Air and Japan’s two main airlines confirmed they had already suspended operations of 62 planes fitted with the same family of engine which scattered debris over Denver on Saturday.

The US National Transporta­tion and Safety Board is also investigat­ing the incident, in which no one was hurt.

Boeing warned similarly fitted planes should be taken out of service until the Federal Aviation Authority had determined an inspection procedure.

“While the NTSB investigat­ion is ongoing, we recommende­d suspending operations of the 69 in-service and 59 in-storage 777 aircraft powered by Pratt & Whitney 4000-112 engines,” the company said.

Japan Airlines (JAL) and All Nippon Airways (ANA) said they had respective­ly grounded 13 and 19 planes using PW4000 engines but had avoided flight cancellati­ons by using other aircraft.

The Japanese transport ministry said it had ordered stricter inspection­s of the engine after a JAL 777 plane flying from Haneda to Naha experience­d trouble with “an engine in the same family” in December.

United said it had voluntaril­y removed 24 Boeing 777 planes from service and expected “only a small number of customers to be inconvenie­nced.”

South Korea’s transport ministry said it had no immediate plans to ground planes, adding it was monitoring the situation.

But Korean Air, the country’s largest airline and flag carrier, said it had grounded all six of its Boeing 777s with PW4000 engines currently in operation.

“We have decided to ground all our PW 4000 powered 777s, and we expect the FAA’s updated protocol soon,” the company told AFP in an emailed statement.

The FAA earlier ordered extra inspection­s of some passenger jets.

Steve Dickson, the head of the regulator, said he had consulted with experts and that some airplanes would “likely” be removed from service.

“I have directed them to issue an Emergency Airworthin­ess Directive that would require immediate or stepped-up inspection­s of Boeing 777 airplanes equipped with certain Pratt & Whitney PW4000 engines,” he said in a statement.

Dickson added that a preliminar­y safety data review pointed to a need for additional checks of the jet engine’s fan blades, which were unique to the engine model and only used on 777 planes.

Officials from the FAA were meeting with Pratt & Whitney and Boeing representa­tives on Sunday evening, he added.

Flight UA328 had been headed from Denver to Honolulu when it experience­d an engine failure shortly after departure.

Residents in the Denver suburb of Broomfield found large pieces of the plane scattered around their community.

No one onboard or on the ground was injured.

But the engine failure marks a fresh blow for Boeing after several high-profile aviation accidents.

The manufactur­er’s 737 MAX was grounded worldwide in March 2019 after 346 people died in two crashes -- the 2019 Lion Air disaster in Indonesia and an Ethiopian Airlines crash the following year.

Investigat­ors said a main cause of both crashes was a faulty flight handling system known as the Maneuverin­g Characteri­stics Augmentati­on System, or MCAS.

Boeing was forced to revamp the system and implement new pilot training protocols.

The 737 MAX was a big hit with airlines, becoming Boeing’s fastest-selling aircraft until its grounding, which has now been lifted.

After the Covid-19 crisis decimated demand, airlines canceled hundreds of orders for the plane. — AFP

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 ?? — AFP photos ?? An aerial view from a drone shows people walking past a home with a hole in the roof from falling debris from an United Airlines airplane engine in Broomfield, Colorado.
— AFP photos An aerial view from a drone shows people walking past a home with a hole in the roof from falling debris from an United Airlines airplane engine in Broomfield, Colorado.
 ?? — AFP file photo ?? The Boeing logo is seen on the fuselage of a Boeing 787-10 Dreamliner test plane presented on the Tarmac of Le Bourget on the eve of the opening of the Internatio­nal Paris Air Show.
— AFP file photo The Boeing logo is seen on the fuselage of a Boeing 787-10 Dreamliner test plane presented on the Tarmac of Le Bourget on the eve of the opening of the Internatio­nal Paris Air Show.

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