San Diego Union-Tribune

FAA GROUNDS PLANES WITH CERTAIN ENGINES

United Airlines is only U.S. carrier affected by directive

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The Federal Aviation Administra­tion on Tuesday ordered airlines in the United States to ground planes with the type of engine that blew apart after takeoff from Denver this past weekend until they can be inspected for stress cracks.

The FAA’s order applies to U.S. operators of airplanes equipped with certain Pratt & Whitney PW4000 engines, which are used solely on Boeing 777s. Before the planes can fly again, operators must conduct a thermal acoustic image inspection of the large titanium fan blades at the front of each engine.

The technology can detect cracks on the interior surfaces of the hollow blades that can’t be seen by the naked eye, according to the order.

The FAA directive is a blow to United Airlines, which had 24 of the planes in service and is the only U.S. airline with the engine in its fleet.

“On Sunday, we voluntaril­y removed 24 Boeing 777 aircraft powered by Pratt & Whitney 4000 series engines from our schedule,” said United spokesman David Gonzalez. “We’ve been working with the NTSB on their investigat­ion and will comply with the FAA’s Emergency Airworthin­ess Directive to ensure all 52 of the impacted aircraft in our fleet meet our rigorous safety standards.”

A United flight from Denver to Honolulu made an emergency landing shortly after takeoff Saturday as pieces of the engine’s casing rained on suburban neighborho­ods. None of the 231 passengers or 10 crew were hurt, and the flight landed safely.

Robert Sumwalt, chairman of the National Transporta­tion Safety Board, said during a virtual news conference Monday night that a fractured fan blade found in the engine had visible signs of “damage consistent with metal fatigue.” The broken blade hit and fractured the blade next to it as the engine broke apart, according to a preliminar­y investigat­ion.

Sumwalt said the blade that fractured first was flown on a private jet to Pratt & Whitney’s headquarte­rs Monday night to be examined under the supervisio­n of NTSB investigat­ors.

“Our mission is to understand not only what happened, but why it happened, so that we can keep it from happening again,” he said.

The FAA directive said the agency would review the results of the inspection­s “on a rolling basis.”

 ?? CHAD SCHNELL VIA AP ?? The engine of United Airlines Flight 328 is seen on fire shortly after takeoff from Denver on Saturday.
CHAD SCHNELL VIA AP The engine of United Airlines Flight 328 is seen on fire shortly after takeoff from Denver on Saturday.

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