FAA seeks new safety measures for Boeing 737 planes:
report
(Reuters) - U.S. aviation regulators on Monday plan to
propose improving cockpit automation to help prevent pilot errors that have
caused fatal airline crashes, according to a media report.
The Federal
Aviation Administration wants cockpit automation fixes in nearly 500 Boeing Co
(BA.N) 737 planes to ensure pilots have adequate safeguards if airspeed falls
too low, particularly during landing approaches, the Wall Street Journal
reported on Sunday.
Foreign regulators are likely to follow suit, the
newspaper said.
The FAA was not immediately available for
comment.
Boeing, in an email to Reuters, said the company "works closely
with the FAA to monitor the fleet for potential safety issues and take
appropriate actions."
The U.S. aircraft manufacturer said "the proposed
rule mandates actions Boeing previously recommended to operators."
The
crash of Asiana Airlines Flight 214 into a seawall in San Francisco airport on
July 6 raised questions about whether pilots relied too much on automated flight
controls in large passenger jets.
Nå er FAA her:
FAA proposes fix for 737 autothrottles
The Federal
Aviation Administration is proposing that airlines update the autothrottles on
newer Boeing 737 aircraft, to avoid a problem with slowing down prematurely
before landing and potentially crashing.
A faulty altimeter reading
caused a Turkish Airlines flight to slow down inadvertently and crash Feb. 25,
2009, near Amsterdam, killing nine and injuring 117.
The Dutch Safety
Board blamed the crash on a faulty altimeter that automatically slowed down the
plane before it stalled and hit the ground. But U.S. investigators with the
National Transportation Safety Board said pilots could have recovered if the
crew detected and responded to the low decreasing airspeed.
Since that
crash, Boeing installed a warning that says "airspeed low, airspeed low" on the
same models of 737 involved in the latest proposal. But some safety experts have
criticized the lack of similar warning aboard other aircraft, such as the 777
involved in the Asiana Airlines crash that killed three people July 6 in San
Francisco, which the NTSB is still investigating.
The latest FAA
proposal, which was published Monday in the Federal Register, cited reports of a
single, erroneous altimeter reading causing the 737 autothrottle to prematurely
slow the plane down while approaching to land. The problem could result in a
crash, FAA said.
To correct the problem, the FAA proposed fixing the
autothrottle on about 500 planes, which are 737-600, -700, -700C, -800 and -900
series. The remedy costs about $85 per plane.
The pilots of that flight realized too
late that the plane was flying too low and much too slowly even though they had
set a control system, called an auto-throttle, to keep the Boeing 777 at a
constant speed.
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