Time Is Ticking for NTSB Battery Investigation
The NTSB has issued an
"urgent" procurement request to have a Maryland company perform computed
tomography (CT) scans starting May 6 on as many as 48 Boeing 787 lithium-ion
battery cells.
The work signals a rush for
the Board to find a root cause for the battery issues that grounded the fleet as
airlines begin revenue service with modified 787s this month and into June.
"[The tests] must also be
completed within the shortest timeframe possible to provide the fastest possible
receipt of this information to avoid potential future accidents involving this
type of aircraft battery," says the NTSB in a "sources sought" notice published
on May 3. "Since the FAA has recently approved a plan intended to result in the
Boeing787 being approved for a return to service, the information from these
tests (and the CT scans required to support these tests) is needed as soon as
possible," says the NTSB.
The work is expected to take one
week, with a final report issued no later than 10 days thereafter.
The request comes two weeks
after the FAA on April 19 approved Boeing's fix for the battery problems that
grounded the 50-aircraft fleet in January following two battery incidents, one
on the ground and one in the air.
At issue are as of yet
unexplained thermal runaways that began in one or more cells in the APU battery
and spread to adjacent cells. Boeing's fix, which technicians are now installing
on the fleet, includes batteries with more insulation between cells and a
1/8th-in.-thick stainless steel battery enclosure with a vent line assembly to
dump smoke overboard if a thermal runaway in one cell does occur.
Based on the urgent procurement,
the NTSB remains concerned that the root cause of the problem has not been
identified, a stance the Board took during a two-day investigative hearing on
April 23 and 24 regarding the troubled path to certification for the
battery.
In the sources sought
notification, the NTSB says it is planning to "conduct teardown examinations as
soon as possible" of several aircraft batteries similar to the "one involved in
an aircraft incident" as part of its Boston investigation.
Highlighting the continued
concern in the aviation industry about lithium-ion battery technology, the NTSB
mandated that the contract be issued to a local company, as the cells cannot be
shipped via air cargo.
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