Japan Airlines, or JAL, Reports Possible Battery Glitch On Boeing 787
Dreamliner Flight To Tokyo From Helsinki
Japan Airlines Co Ltd, or JAL (TYO: 9201), said that a
Tokyo-bound Boeing 787 Dreamliner flight from Helsinki, Finland, encountered a
possible glitch in the battery system that may be similar to the problem that
caused Dreamliner fleets worldwide to be grounded by the U.S. Federal Aviation
Administration, or FAA, earlier in the year.
JAL Reports Boeing 787
Battery Glitch On Helsinki-Tokyo Flight
A Boeing 787 Dreamliner caught t fire
at Boston's Logan International Airport after a battery in its auxiliary
electric system exploded, officials said. Reuters
JAL told the Boeing
Company (NYSE:BA) that its pilots reported a warning light linked to the battery
during the flight, although engine-monitoring systems did not show any abnormal
variations in voltage and electrical current, and the plane arrived in Tokyo
without any delay, Agence France-Presse, or AFP, reported on Sunday, citing a
JAL spokesman.
"After its arrival we changed the auxiliary battery and
charger, and the plane is now back in normal operation," the spokesman told
AFP.
JAL, which operates the second-largest number of Dreamliner
aircraft, was one of the first airlines to report burnt batteries on one of its
787 planes, a recurring issue that prompted the FAA to suspend Dreamliner
flights worldwide for four months starting on Jan. 16. Boeing redesigned the
battery system to prevent heat from spreading and causing electrical fires,
before resuming flights in the second quarter of 2013.
In October, JAL
diverted two of its Dreamliner flights bound to Tokyo from San Diego and Moscow
following electrical glitches that led to the failure of a system to prevent ice
from accumulating around the engine on one flight and rendered six toilets
unusable in the other. Other carriers around the world, such as Japan's All
Nippon Airways, Poland's LOT and Air India, have reported a variety of issues
with Boeing's pioneering Dreamliner aircraft since the FAA lifted the
ban.
Also in October, JAL snubbed Boeing, long its exclusive supplier, in
favor of its European rival, Airbus, in a deal to buy 31 A350 jets, although the
airline maintained that the decision to switch vendors had nothing to do with
the Dreamliner's troubles
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