The Pak Banker

Damage to Boeing 777 engine consistent with metal fatigue

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Damage to a fan blade on an engine that failed on a United Airlines Boeing 777 flight is consistent with metal fatigue, based on a preliminar­y assessment, the chairman of the U.S. air accident investigat­or said.

The Pratt & Whitney PW4000 engine failed on Saturday with a "loud bang" four minutes after takeoff from Denver, National Transporta­tion Safety Board (NTSB) Chairman Robert Sumwalt told reporters following an initial analysis of the flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder. There was minor damage to the aircraft body but no structural damage, he said.

He said it remained unclear whether the incident is consistent with an engine failure on a different Hawaii-bound United flight in February 2018 that was attributed to a fatigue fracture in a fan blade. "What is important that we really truly understand the facts, circumstan­ces and conditions around this particular event before we can compare it to any other event," Sumwalt said.

The engine that failed on the 26-year-old Boeing Co 777 and shed parts over a Denver suburb was a PW4000 used on 128 planes, or less than 10% of the global fleet of more than 1,600 delivered 777 widebody jets. In another incident on Japan Airlines (JAL) 777 with a PW4000 engine in December 2020, Japan's Transport Safety Board reported it found two damaged fan blades, one with a metal fatigue crack. An investigat­ion is ongoing.

The focus is more on engine maker Pratt and analysts expect little financial impact on Boeing, but the PW4000 issues are a fresh headache for the planemaker as it recovers from the far more serious 737 MAX crisis. Boeing's flagship narrowbody jet was grounded for nearly two years after two deadly crashes. The United engine's fan blade will be examined on Tuesday after being flown to a Pratt laboratory where it will examined under supervisio­n of NTSB investigat­ors. The U.S. Federal Aviation Administra­tion (FAA) said on Monday it had already been evaluating whether to adjust fan blade inspection­s in the wake of the December incident in Japan after reviewing maintenanc­e records and conducting a metallurgi­cal examinatio­n of the fan blade fragment.

Boeing recommende­d that airlines suspend the use of the planes while the FAA identified an appropriat­e inspection protocol, and Japan imposed a temporary suspension on flights. Pratt & Whitney, owned by Raytheon Technologi­es Corp., has recommende­d airlines increase inspection­s in a plan that is being reviewed by the FAA, sources with knowledge of the matter said. Pratt did not respond immediatel­y to a request for comment.

The FAA has said it plans to issue an emergency airworthin­ess directive soon that will require stepped-up inspection­s of the fan blades for fatigue.

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