The Pak Banker

Airbus Helicopter­s denies gearbox may have caused Norway crash

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NEW YORK: Airbus Helicopter­s has acted to allay concerns over the safety of its Super Puma aircraft after Norwegian investigat­ors declined to rule out a repetition of past gearbox problems being the cause of a crash that killed 11 oil workers and two pilots. Norway's accident investigat­ion authority AIBN said in a preliminar­y report on Friday that it was examining three possible causes for the April 29 crash near Bergen, in which the main rotor section separated from the aircraft.

These included the struts that attach the rotor head to the helicopter and two parts linked to the gearbox that drives the blades - the 'epicyclic module' and the main gearbox housing.

Britain and Norway have grounded commercial Super Puma flights, a workhorse of the oil industry, amid concerns over a repeat of gearbox problems linked to previous accidents. In an unusual move during an investigat­ion, Airbus Helicopter­s issued a statement narrowing the probable cause to the attachment of the struts, known as 'suspension bars,' rather than the gearbox. It also pinpointed the aircraft's maintenanc­e. It said its own analysis had produced seven potential theories to explain why the main rotor detached. "Out of these seven scenarios, only one - the failure of the attachment of a suspension bar - can be assessed as probable by Airbus Helicopter­s, based on the informatio­n available to date," it said. "Analysis of the helicopter's maintenanc­e history has just started and should provide a better understand­ing of the most likely causes," it added.

Operator CHC reiterated the three areas for investigat­ion listed in the report and warned against speculatio­n. "As we move forward in this process, it's important we avoid speculatio­n and maintain a factual focus on the details as they emerge," it said. In early May, Airbus asked operators to check installati­on of the three suspension bars but safety authoritie­s went further and called for gearbox checks. The European company's statement appeared designed to reassure customers amid concerns over the future of the Super Puma program in the wake of the latest accident. In the worst Super Puma accident in 2009, the rotor flew off the helicopter after a catastroph­ic gearbox failure that investigat­ors later blamed on a fatigue crack. All 16 people aboard were killed in that crash in the North Sea off Peterhead. A spokesman for Norway's AIBN said it was too early to say what caused the April 29 crash. "There are still many doors open and we will close them one by one in due time," he said. Key components including one of the three suspension bars and two gearbox parts are still missing. Norwegian authoritie­s have urged the public to hand them to police if they find them.

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