THISDAY

FAA, EASA Tighten CFM56-7B Engine Inspection Deadline

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The US FAA and European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) have issued further updates for the inspection of CFM56- 7B engine fan blades, the type that failed on a Southwest Airlines aircraft last month, causing the death of one passenger.

Airwise.com reported that the updated airworthin­ess directives (ADs) tighten the timeframe for inspection­s, with fan blades that have completed between 20,000 and 30,000 cycles now required to be inspected by June 30. The previous AD’s deadline was the end of August.

The deadline for fan blades with over 30,000 cycles remains the same. A cycle comprises start up, take- off, landing and engine shut down.

EASA said in its AD that since the previous directive was issued, it had determined that “the initial inspection for certain fan blades must be accomplish­ed within a reduced compliance time.”

The fan blade on the Southwest Airlines B737 engine that failed last month was found to have signs of metal fatigue, the US National Transporta­tion Safety Board said.

The blades had over 32,000 engine cycles since new and were last overhauled 10,712 cycles before the accident, NTSB said in an update on its accident investigat­ion.

The CFM56 engine is manufactur­ed by CFM Internatio­nal, a joint venture between GE Aviation and Safran Aircraft Engines.

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