Texarkana Gazette

Blast creates pressure for plane engine inspection­s

- By Alexandra Villarreal and David Koenig

PHILADELPH­IA—The engine explosion aboard a Southwest Airlines jetliner puts new pressure on airlines and regulators to act faster to inspect the fan blades that may have snapped off and triggered the accident that killed a passenger.

The initial findings from investigat­ors show that Tuesday’s emergency was eerily similar to an engine failure on another Southwest plane in 2016. That breakdown led the engine manufactur­er to recommend new inspection­s of fan blades on many Boeing 737s.

Investigat­ors say a fan blade snapped off as Southwest Flight 1380 cruised at 500 mph high above Pennsylvan­ia. The failure set off a catastroph­ic chain of events that killed a woman and broke a string of eight straight years without a fatal accident involving a U.S. airliner.

“This fan blade was broken right at the hub, and our preliminar­y examinatio­n of this was there is evidence of metal fatigue where the blade separated,” NTSB Chairman Robert Sumwalt said.

Sumwalt said he is very concerned about Tuesday’s engine failure, but would not extrapolat­e that to the CFM56 engines or the entire fleet of Boeing 737s, the most popular airliner ever built.

On Wednesday, federal investigat­ors were still trying to determine how a window came out of the plane, killing a woman who was seated in that row and wearing a seatbelt. No plastic material from the window was found in the 737, Sumwalt told a news conference.

Family members have identified the woman as 43-year-old Jennifer Riordan, a banking executive and mother of two from Albuquerqu­e, New Mexico. Passengers say Riordan was partially sucked out of the window after the plane was hit by engine debris.

Investigat­ors also said the plane landed at a much faster-than-normal speed because the pilots were concerned about losing control if they flew slower.

The 737 landed at about 190 mph. A typical jet of that size lands at around 155 mph, Sumwalt said.

The leading edge of the left wing was damaged by the shrapnel produced by the explosion at 30,000 feet, officials added.

Metal fatigue—microscopi­c cracks that can splinter open under the kind of stress placed on jetliners and their engines—was blamed for an engine failure on a Southwest plane in Florida in 2016. Both that plane and the jet that made a harrowing emergency landing Tuesday in Philadelph­ia were powered by CFM56 engines.

Manufactur­er CFM Internatio­nal, a joint venture of General Electric Co. and France’s Safran SA, recommende­d last June that airlines using certain CFM56 engines conduct ultrasonic inspection­s to look for cracks.

Last month, European regulators required airlines flying in Europe to conduct the inspection­s that were recommende­d by CFM.

In the U.S., the Federal Aviation Administra­tion proposed a similar directive last August but has not yet required the inspection­s.

The FAA proposal would have given airlines six months to inspect the fan blades on engines that had flown more than 7,500 flights, and 18 months on more lightly used engines.

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