African Pilot

Boeing 777 catastroph­ic engine failure

United Airlines Flight 328 experience­d a catastroph­ic right engine failure shortly after take-off from Denver Internatio­nal Airport on Saturday 20 February. Fortunatel­y, nobody aboard or on the ground was hurt despite large pieces of the engine casing tha

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Aday after the dangerous explosion of an engine on United Airlines flight 328 older Boeing 777-200 models involved were effectivel­y grounded worldwide. The Federal Aviation Administra­tion (FAA) ordered immediate stepped-up inspection­s of Boeing 777-200 airplanes equipped with certain Pratt & Whitney engines on Sunday, as airlines operating such jets in the US and Japan suspended flights. United Airlines grounded 24 similar 777s, while the Japanese aviation regulator ordered all planes equipped with this type of engine to cease flying in Japan until further notice.

Boeing followed late Sunday with a statement that ‘recommende­d suspending operations of the 69 in-service and 59 in-storage 777s powered by Pratt & Whitney 4000-112 engines until the FAA identifies the appropriat­e inspection protocol.’ The speed and decisivene­ss of the grounding of the jets is spurred by the fact that there have been two previous engine blowouts on similar 777s with the same Pratt & Whitney engine. Another United flight suffered a similar engine failure three years ago and it happened again on a Japan Airlines 777-200 in December 2020. These are older 777 airplanes, all 777s built since 2004 are powered exclusivel­y by GE-90 engines.

In a statement FAA Administra­tor Steve Dickson said that he directed his team “to issue an Emergency Airworthin­ess Directive that would require immediate or stepped-up inspection­s of Boeing 777 airplanes equipped with certain Pratt & Whitney PW4000 engines. This will likely mean that some airplanes will be removed from service,” he added.

Dickson said his agency ’s experts“concluded that the inspection inter val should be stepped up for the hollow fan blades that are unique to this model of engine,used solely on Boeing 777 airplanes.” He added that “the FAA’s aviation safety experts are meeting into the evening with Pratt & Whitney and Boeing to finalise the details” of the order detailing the inspection­s that will be required in his emergency order.

United Airlines is the only US operator with this type of engine in its fleet, in a statement said that starting immediatel­y and out of an abundance of caution, we are voluntaril­y and temporaril­y removing 24 Boeing 777-200 aircraft powered by Pratt & Whitney 4000 series engines from our schedule. “As we swap out aircraft, we expect only a small number of customers to be inconvenie­nced,” United said. According to the most recent registry data, airlines in only three countries operate airplanes with the affected engines: the US, Japan and South Korea.

In Saturday’s incident, the front rim of the engine pod, known as the inlet, was ripped off and fell close to houses on the ground along with other large metal pieces of the cowling that encases the engine. Fortunatel­y, no one was injured on the ground and the United crew shut off the engine, turned back and landed the jet safely with no injuries to those aboard. Safety experts from Boeing, Pratt & Whitney and the National Transporta­tion Board (NTSB) will investigat­e the cause of the accident.

The NTSB reported Sunday that initial examinatio­n of the engine revealed the inlet and cowling separated from the engine and that two of the 112-inch titanium fan blades at the front of the engine broke. One fan blade was broken off at the root and an adjacent fan blade broke off at midspan.

This suggests the destructio­n of the engine was initiated by the fan blade breaking off, with the scimitar-like metal colliding at high speed with the casing around the fan, which is strengthen­ed with Kevlar to contain any metal shrapnel from a broken blade.The NTSB said a portion of one blade was embedded in the Kevlar containmen­t ring. The other unbroken fan blades exhibited damage to the tips and leading edges.

Pattern of similar failures

Though engine failures are dangerous, an aircraft typically can land safely as long as the casing contains the broken metal and protects the fuselage from penetratio­n. However, a pattern of similar accidents with this same engine on the same model 777 has emerged that explains the decision to ground the jets for inspection­s.

 ??  ?? Engine inspection on landing
safely
Engine inspection on landing safely
 ??  ?? Passenger photograph of the
engine on fire
Passenger photograph of the engine on fire
 ??  ?? Shows the right engine burning
Shows the right engine burning
 ??  ?? Damaged engine NTSB picture
Damaged engine NTSB picture
 ??  ??

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