Baltimore Sun

Ordeal on fatal Southwest flight detailed

Failure in April of engine fan blade probed by NTSB

- By David Koenig and Claudia Lauer

There was a loud bang, and suddenly the Southwest Airlines jet rolled 41 degrees to the left. Smoke began to fill the cabin, and flight attendants rushed row by row to make sure all passengers could get oxygen from their masks.

When flight attendant Rachel Fernheimer got to Row 14, she saw a woman still restrained by her lap belt but with her head, torso and arm hanging out a window.

Fernheimer grabbed one of the woman’s legs while flight attendant Seanique Mallory grabbed her lower body. They described being unable to bring the woman back in the plane until two male passengers stepped in to help. A passenger died on April 17 when she was partially pulled through a shattered window of Southwest Flight 1380.

The harrowing details from the April fatal flight were released for the first time as the National Transporta­tion Safety Board began a hearing Wednesday into the engine failure on Southwest Flight 1380, which carried 144 passengers and five crew members.

After several failed attempts to reach the pilots by intercom because of the rush of air and noise, Mallory was finally able to relay the situation to Tammie Jo Shults and Darren Ellisor, who had already planned to make an emergency landing of the crippled Boeing 737-700 in Philadelph­ia.

“We got (unintellig­ible words) a window open and somebody — is out the window,” Mallory said. According to a transcript, she adds a little later, “Yeah everyone still in their seats, we have people have been helpin’ her get in I don’t know what her condition is, but the window is completely out.”

The flight attendants told investigat­ors at least one of the male passengers put his arm out of the window and wrapped it around the woman’s shoulder to help pull her back in. Fernheimer said when she looked out the window, she could see that one of the plane’s engines was shattered, and there was blood on the outside of the aircraft.

The passenger in the window seat, Jennifer Riordan, was fatally injured — the first death on a U.S. airline flight since 2009.

Eight other passengers including at least one of the men who helped pull Riordan back in the window, suffered minor injuries.

The accident was triggered by an engine fan blade that broke off. A piece of engine cover struck and shattered the window next to Riordan, a 43-year-old mother of two from Albuquerqu­e, N.M.

Wednesday’s hearing in Washington focused on design and inspection of fan blades on the engine, made by CFM Internatio­nal, a joint venture of General Electric and France’s Safran S.A

spokeswoma­n for CFM said in an emailed statement Wednesday that the company could not comment on an active investigat­ion, but noted that it had “responded aggressive­ly” to complete blade inspection­s after the fatal flight before an Aug. 31 deadline.

The blade that broke had made about 32,000 flights. An examinatio­n indicated that it probably was beginning to suffer cracks from metal fatigue when it was last inspected in 2012, said Mark Habedank, an engineerin­g official at CFM. But the crack was smaller than could be detected by the test used at the time, which used fluorescen­t dye.

After the fatal accident, CFMrecomme­nded the use of more sophistica­ted tests using ultrasound or electrical currents. The company also recommende­d much more frequent inspection­s and lubricatio­n of the blades.

A broken fan blade had triggered a similar engine failure with shrapnel on another Southwest flight, in August 2016 over Florida.

An FAA expert on engines, Christophe­r Spinney, said the agency considered the Florida incident “very unexpected.”

“We determined early that we would require some corrective action in that it was an unsafe condition,” Spinney said, “but we also determined we had some time.”

Fan blades have been thought to have no real lifetime limit. CFM and FAA officials said they were now considerin­g whether blades must be replaced at some point even if they don’t show wear.

 ?? DAVID MAIALETTI/AP ??
DAVID MAIALETTI/AP

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