The National - News

BOEING IN THE SPOTLIGHT AFTER LION AIR CRASH

▶ Manufactur­er of 737 says disaster could have been prevented if simple advisory had been followed

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The Lion Air jetliner plunged into the

Java Sea minutes after take-off from Jakarta airport, nosing downward so suddenly it may have hit speeds of 950kph

US aviation regulators plan to order airlines to follow Boeing’s advisory on how pilots should handle false readings from a plane sensor that authoritie­s linked to last month’s deadly 737 Max jet crash off the coast of Indonesia.

The Boeing bulletin, combined with statements by Indonesian investigat­ors, suggest that the pilots on the Lion Air 737 Max 8 were battling the plane as its computers commanded a steep dive. The issue is easily solved – Boeing’s notice said crews should follow an existing procedure to combat it – but can be difficult to address if pilots become confused.

The so called angle-of-attack sensor failed on Lion Air Flight 610 and had been replaced the previous day after earlier faults, the Indonesia National Transporta­tion Safety Committee said.

The malfunctio­n can cause the plane’s computers to erroneousl­y register an aerodynami­c stall, causing the aircraft to abruptly dive to regain the airspeed it needs to keep flying.

The US Federal Aviation Administra­tion last week said it would issue an airworthin­ess directive on the issue and “will take further appropriat­e actions depending on the results of the investigat­ion”. The FAA also notified regulatory counterpar­ts around the world, which typically follow the US agency’s lead on safety matters.

The Boeing bulletin only reminds operators of the plane to follow existing procedures and does not require any physical fixes that could disrupt service. It is still possible the FAA may order the Chicago plane maker to redesign the Max’s flight computers in the wake of the accident, which left 189 people dead.

The Lion Air jetliner plunged into the Java Sea minutes after take-off from Jakarta airport, nosing downward so suddenly that it may have hit speeds of 950kph before slamming into the water, Bloomberg said.

Moments earlier, the pilots radioed a request to return to Jakarta to land, but never turned back towards the airport, according to Indonesia’s National Transporta­tion Safety Committee and flight-tracking data. The committee said the pilots were dealing with an erroneous airspeed indication.

Boeing said it is co-operating fully and providing technical assistance as the investigat­ion continues.

Indonesia authoritie­s said on Saturday they had stopped the search for victims of the crash but would keep looking for the Lion Air flight’s second black box, the cockpit voice recorder.

“There is nowhere left to search and we have stopped finding victims’ bodies,” Muhammad Syaugi, the head of Basarnas, the national search and rescue agency, told Reuters. “We will limit our operations to monitoring.”

Authoritie­s have downloaded data from one of the black boxes found last week, the flight data recorder, but are still looking for the cockpit voice recorder.

Soearjanto Tjahjono, the head of the transporta­tion safety committee, said finding the voice recorder would be critical to understand­ing the cause of the crash.

“From the black box data, we know about 70 to 80 per cent of what happened but to 100 per cent understand the cause of the accident ... we need be able to know the conversati­on that took place in the plane’s cockpit,” he said, declining to elaborate on what the flight data recorder had revealed.

He said authoritie­s were searching for 15 aircraft parts, including an angle of attack sensor on the aircraft, which helps the plane’s computers understand if the aircraft is stable. Investigat­ors have said one of these sensors had provided erroneous data.

An wrong angle-of-attack reading while pilots are flying manually can cause the plane’s flight computers to command the Max models to dive, Boeing said. While planes such as the Max fly mostly on autopilot, pilots can fly manually if they are dealing with unusual situations like the malfunctio­ns that occurred on the Lion Air flight.

Pilots can override the nosedown movement by pushing a switch on their control yoke, but the plane’s computers will resume trying to dive as soon as they release the switch, the manufactur­er said.

Pilots should follow a separate procedure to halt the potentiall­y dangerous action by the plane, the bulletin said. Flight crews are taught to handle “uncommande­d nose-down stabiliser trim” by memorising a procedure to disengage the angle-of-attack inputs to the plane’s computer system.

That angle-of-attack sensor is intended to measure the direction of air flow over wings so that they maintain lift. If the flow is disrupted by a plane going too slow or climbing too steeply, that can cause an aerodynami­c stall and a plane will plummet. However, if the sensor malfunctio­ns, it can cause the plane’s computers to erroneousl­y think it is in a stall – which can then command the aircraft to abruptly dive.

The jet reported a discrepanc­y in its angle of attack sensor during a flight from Bali to Jakarta the day before it crashed. The device was replaced after pilots reported a problem with the airspeed reading, the Indonesian transporta­tion safety regulator said.

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

Boeing has more than 4,500 orders for the airliners, which feature larger engines, more aerodynami­c wings and an upgraded cockpit with larger glass displays. The single-aisle family is Boeing’s biggest source of profit.

Aircraft and engine manufactur­ers routinely send bulletins to air carriers noting safety measures and maintenanc­e actions they should take, most of them relatively routine. But the urgency of a fatal accident can trigger a flurry of such notices.

After an engine on a Southwest Airlines plane fractured earlier this year over Pennsylvan­ia, killing a passenger, CFM Internatio­nal issued multiple bulletins to operators of its CFM56-7B power plants.

Aviation regulators such as the US FAA and the European Aviation Safety Agency often follow such actions by mandating that carriers follow the bulletins.

Pilots raise and lower the nose of Boeing jetliners by pushing and pulling on a yoke in the cockpit, which controls panels at the tail known as elevators. In addition, a system known as pitch trim can be changed to prompt nose-up or nose-down movement.

The angle-of-attack readings are fed into a computer that in some cases will attempt to push down the nose using the pitch trim system.

In the early days of the jet age, this system was linked to several accidents. If pilots are not careful, they can cause severe nose-down trim settings that make it impossible to level a plane.

Such an issue arose in 2016 at Rostov-on-Don Airport in Russia, when a flydubai 737-800 nosed over and slammed into the runway at a steep angle, according to an interim report by Russian investigat­ors.

That case did not involve the angle-of-attack system. One of the pilots had trimmed the plane to push the nose down while trying to climb after aborting a landing, the report said. All 62 people on board died.

Lion Air’s latest crisis illustrate­s the challenge relatively new carriers face as they try to keep pace with unstoppabl­e demand for air travel in developing nations while striving for standards that mature markets took decades to reach.

Retired air force chief of staff Chappy Hakim, an adviser to the transport ministry, said he avoided flying with Lion Air or other Indonesian airlines, with the exception of Garuda, which has not had a fatal crash since 2007.

“I know Garuda,” he said of the national carrier. “The other airlines, I don’t believe they do the maintenanc­e and training properly.” He declined to elaborate further.

Lion Air managing director Daniel Putut disputed any laxity in the airline’s safety culture, stressing that it conducted maintenanc­e in accordance with manufactur­er guidelines.

The Directorat­e General of Civil Aviation, the Indonesian aviation authority, did not respond to multiple requests for comment about Lion Air’s safety record.

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 ?? EPA ?? Debris from the ill-fated Lion Air flight JT610 is removed for official investigat­ion
EPA Debris from the ill-fated Lion Air flight JT610 is removed for official investigat­ion
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