tirsdag 17. juli 2012
Boeings megabot - Fuel fumes forklares
NTSB Explains More about
TWA 800 CrashDealing with explosive mixtures in
the fuel tanks of transport aircraft used to be high on the NTSB’s most-critical
list. The subject evolved after the 1996 explosion of the center fuel tank of a TWA Boeing 747
just after departure from JFK Airport. The TWA crash and the ensuing
investigation raised important issues that explain the difference between
government agencies and why the NTSB is considered independent of political
influence. After duct-taping thousands of bits of the fuselage of TWA 800 back
together, the Safety Board determined the cause of the accident was the
explosion of flammable fumes inside the aircraft’s nearly empty center fuel
tank. That led to an NTSB recommendation to develop a method to prevent another
such mishap. NTSB Chairman Deborah Hersman told AIN
that creating “The recommendation turned out to be the easy part. The real work
began when the FAA [the recipient of the recommendation] pushed back, claiming
there was no technology available to solve the problem.” The NTSB continued to
pressure the agency. Twelve years later, the FAA and the industry developed a
fix that was eventually applied to the affected aircraft of fleets around the
globe. In 2008, the FAA published a final rule that required the fuel/air
mixtures in all fuel tanks remain below a prescribed flammability level for all
newly manufactured aircraft that have more than 30 seats, as well as
modifications to passenger-carrying aircraft manufactured after January 1, 1992,
to achieve the same level of protection. The issue came up again on July 13 when
the FAA proposed a $13.57 million penalty against Boeing for failing to meet a
number of FAA-mandated deadlines for the delivery of service instructions to
prevent additional explosions in center fuel tanks. A Fuel Tank Flammability
Rule gave both Airbus and Boeing until December 27, 2010 to provide those
instructions to the agency for approval. Airbus met the deadline, while Boeing
was 301 days late delivering the paperwork on the Boeing 747 and 401 days late
with information on the Boeing 757. The delays affected 383 Boeing aircraft then
in service
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