Safety system not working in Qantas A330 close call near
Adelaide
AIR Safety investigators have revealed that the
traffic collision avoidance system in one of two Qantas Airbus A330s which came
too close to each other near Adelaide last month was not working.
An
Australian Transport safety Bureau report confirmed, as revealed in The
Australian, that the aircraft were not in danger of colliding when the traffic
collision avoidance system of one aircraft issued an alert, called a resolution
advisory, which gives pilots instructions they are required to
follow.
Aircraft VH-EBO was travelling from Sydney to Perth at 38,000ft
on September 20 and the VH-EBS was travelling from Perth to Sydney at 39,000ft
when the crew of EBO was cleared by an air traffic controller to climb to
40,000ft.
"Soon after, the controller cancelled the clearance and the
aircraft descended back to FL 380 (38,000ft)," the report said.
"The
flight crew of EBS received a resolution advisory alert from their aircraft's
traffic collision avoidance system. However, EBO's flight crew advised that they
did not receive any indications on their traffic collision avoidance system of
the presence of EBS.
"A full system test conducted on EBO's traffic
collision avoidance system after the incident confirmed it was not
functioning."
Investigators said recorded data from the two aircraft
showed that the minimum vertical separation was 650ft when the two aircraft were
4.1 nautical miles (8 km) apart laterally.
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