The Daily Telegraph

‘Crash pilots followed Boeing crisis directions’

- By Our Foreign Staff

PILOTS of an airliner that crashed last month in Ethiopia initially followed Boeing’s emergency steps for dealing with a sudden downturn of the nose of their aircraft but could not regain control, according to a published report.

The Wall Street Journal reported that pilots of the Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 Max 8 turned off a flight-control system but still could not get the plane to climb. They turned the system back on and tried other actions before the plane crashed, the newspaper said, citing people familiar with preliminar­y findings of the crash investigat­ion.

In a statement, Boeing urged against speculatin­g before the preliminar­y report and flight data from the plane were released in the next few days.

The Journal says the pilots’ actions are still being evaluated by investigat­ors but could raise questions about assertions made by Boeing and US regulators in the aftermath of another Max crash in October that pilots could regain control simply by following steps to turn off a specific anti-stall system.

Investigat­ors are examining the crashes that killed all 346 aboard the 737 Max 8 jets operated by Indonesia’s Lion Air and Ethiopian Airlines, including the role of a flight-control system called MCAS, which under some circumstan­ces could automatica­lly turn the plane’s nose down to prevent an aerodynami­c stall.

The Journal reported that data downloaded from the plane’s black boxes indicates that the Ethiopian Airlines pilots followed recommenda­tions to flip two switches that disconnect­ed the system, but the plane kept sinking.

They turned a manual wheel that adjusts the plane’s tail, and used electric switches in an effort to climb, but that reactivate­d MCAS, which continued to push the plane’s nose lower.

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