Airline cockpit systems can’t be safely rendered tamper-
proof to prevent crews from sabotaging flights, the FAA
told the National Transportation Safety Board in a letter
crash in Europe, found to have been premeditated by
the co-pilot, and the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines
MH370 last year has prompted a variety of security-
related discussions within the industry and its regulators worldwide.
The NTSB, for one, has renewed its calls
for enhanced cockpit security including video cameras
to record pilots’ actions. The board has called for
changes in cockpit systems since 2000, after its finding
that a SilkAir captain in 1997 disabled flight recorders
and crashed a Boeing 737 in Indonesia, killing 104
people, according to Bloomberg’s report.
In its response to the NTSB, the FAA argues that
pilots must be able to cut power to flight and voice
recorders in case of electrical overheating or fire.
“There appears to be no safe way to ensure recorders
cannot be intentionally disabled while keeping the
airplane safe from electrical failure that could become hazardous,”
FAA Administrator Michael Huerta wrote
to the NTSB, as quoted in Bloomberg’s report. “The
FAA does not want to introduce design requirements
that could expose the airplane to system risks that can
lead to cascading failure and fires.” As far as video
recorders in cockpits -- which pilots unions also have
opposed -- the agency says there is “no compelling
evidence” the equipment would be useful, Bloomberg
reported.
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