The Capital

Crash raises questions over clearing flight

Aviation expert says plane ‘should have been grounded’

- By Angus Whitley, Alan Levin and Julie Johnsson Bloomberg News

Investigat­ors are slowly piecing together clues of how Indonesia’s worst air disaster in two decades transpired, raising questions over how a near brand-new Boeing jet that had recurring instrument failures was cleared for its ill-fated flight.

The Lion Air 737 Max 8 plane’s angle-of-attack sensor, which helps the aircraft maintain the correct pitch to stay airborne, was replaced the day before the Oct. 29 crash after erroneous readings on a previous trip, the Indonesia National Transporta­tion Safety Committee said Wednesday. Faulty airspeed readings plagued the jet on its last four flights before it plunged into the Java Sea with 189 people aboard.

The revelation­s spurred Boeing to alert operators of the 737 Max aircraft worldwide that the airflow sensor can provide false readings in certain circumstan­ces. Misleading data from that device could trick the plane into pointing its nose down.

That warning and the investigat­ion team’s statement suggest the pilots on JT610 may have been battling with the aircraft as its computers commanded a dive. In addition, the faulty cockpit data over multiple flights leading up to the accident and the replacemen­t of a wildly misleading sensor have raised questions about maintenanc­e, oversight and the plane’s suitabilit­y for service.

“The aircraft, with that recurring problem, should not have been released to fly,” Neil Hansford, chairman of Australian consultanc­y firm Strategic Aviation Solutions who’s worked with airlines worldwide for more than 30 years, said by phone Thursday. “It should have been grounded.”

The almost brand-new plane, with just 800 hours of flight time, was cleared for the Oct. 29 flight after maintenanc­e overnight, Lion Air has said.

On a previous flight from Bali to Jakarta, the same jet’s angle-of-attack sensor feeding the captain’s displays registered a 20-degree difference from the device on the copilot’s side of the cockpit, the committee said. The malfunctio­n can cause the computers to erroneousl­y detect a mid-flight stall in airflow, triggering a dive to regain speed to keep flying.

Moments into the aircraft’s final flight, the pilots asked to return to Jakarta but never turned back, according to Indonesia’s safety commission and flight-tracking data. Shortly afterward, JT610 plunged into the water, nosing downward so suddenly that it may have hit 600 mph.

Investigat­ors will want to examine the pilots’ actions, how flight crews were trained and whether maintenanc­e that was performed was adequate, said Roger Cox, a former U.S. National Transporta­tion Safety Board investigat­or.

“I would definitely be looking at the man-machine interface and how pilots respond,” said Cox, a former airline pilot who flew earlier versions of the 737 and specialize­d at the NTSB in cockpit actions.

The Boeing directive didn’t call for operators to carry out new inspection­s or take other action. It stressed that pilots should follow procedures in the flight manual when encounteri­ng erroneous data. Boeing has delivered 219 Max planes — the latest and most advanced 737 jets — since the models made their commercial debut last year with a Lion Air subsidiary.

American aviation regulators followed by issuing an emergency order Wednesday requiring that airlines follow Boeing’s instructio­ns and add informatio­n to pilot manuals showing how to diagnose the problem and respond.

Carriers will have three days to update their manuals under the order, issued by the Federal Aviation Administra­tion. The FAA said the problem “could cause the flight crew to have difficulty controllin­g the airplane, and lead to excessive nose-down attitude, significan­t altitude loss, and possible impact with terrain.”

Boeing, which is headquarte­red in Chicago, said it is cooperatin­g fully and providing technical assistance as the investigat­ion continues.

 ?? ULET IFANSASTI/GETTY ?? Investigat­ors looking into the crash of a Lion Air 737 want to know what actions pilots took to counteract a dive.
ULET IFANSASTI/GETTY Investigat­ors looking into the crash of a Lion Air 737 want to know what actions pilots took to counteract a dive.

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