US emergency directive after Boeing jet crash in
Indonesia
Navy personnel carry the remains of a victim of
Lion Air jet that crashed into the sea near Jakarta, Indonesia, last month.
Boeing has issued a safety bulletin that reiterates guidelines on how pilots
should respond to erroneous data from an "angle of attack" sensor. (AP
Photo/Tatan Syuflana, file)
JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) - The U.S.
Federal Aviation Administration issued an emergency airworthiness directive on
how to handle erroneous data from a sensor that investigators believe
malfunctioned on a new Boeing jet that plunged into the sea in Indonesia,
killing all 189 people on board.
The directive gives regulatory weight to
Boeing's safety bulletin that it sent to operators of Boeing 737 MAX 8 and MAX 9
planes based on findings from the ongoing Indonesian investigation into the Oct.
29 crash of a Lion Air jet. FAA directives are usually followed by other airline
regulators internationally.
The FAA said erroneous data from the "angle
of attack" sensor, which helps prevent the plane from stalling and diving, could
cause flight crew to have difficulty controlling the airplane and lead to
"excessive nose-down attitude, significant altitude loss, and possible impact
with the terrain."
The directive instructs airlines to make specific
changes to flight manual procedures for responding to the problem. Boeing's
bulletin said it was directing flight crews to existing
guidelines.
Indonesian investigators on Wednesday said the sensor was
replaced on the Lion Air plane the day before its fatal flight and may have
compounded other problems with the aircraft.
The 2-month-old Boeing 737
MAX 8 crashed into the Java Sea 13 minutes after takeoff from Jakarta. Both that
flight and its Oct. 28 flight from Bali to Jakarta had erratic speed and
altitude shortly after takeoff.
On Wednesday night, Lion Air aborted a
flight when one of its planes damaged a wing tip when it struck a lamp pole
before takeoff from Bengkulu. The airline faulted the airport's aircraft
movement control personnel who directed the plane from the apron to the
taxiway.
Indonesia's National Transportation Safety Committee earlier
this week had said the plane that crashed had a malfunctioning airspeed
indicator on its last four flights, based on analysis of the flight data
recorder. Chairman Soerjanto Tjahjono said the airspeed indicator and sensor
problems are related.
Lion Air's first two attempts to address the
airspeed problem didn't work, and for the jet's second-to-last flight the "angle
of attack" sensors were replaced, Tjahjono said.
On that Oct. 28 flight,
from Bali to Jakarta, the pilot's and copilot's sensors disagreed by about 20
degrees. The plane went into a sudden dive minutes after takeoff, from which the
pilots were able to recover. They decided to fly on to Jakarta at a
lower-than-normal altitude.
On the fatal flight, the plane hit the water
at very high speed after the flight crew had been cleared to return to the
airport several minutes after takeoff.
"The point is that after the AOA
(sensor) is replaced, the problem is not solved but the problem might even
increase. Is this fatal? NTSC wants to explore this," Tjahjono
said.
Airline safety experts said pilots are trained to handle a plane
safely if those crucial sensors fail and backup systems are generally in place
as well.
There are audio signals and physical warnings that can alert the
pilot to malfunctioning equipment or other dangers, said Todd Curtis, director
of the Airsafe.com Foundation.
"They should have been completely engaged
in what was going on inside that cockpit, and any kind of warning that came up,
they would have been wise to pay attention to it," Curtis
said.
Investigators are likely focused on how a single sensor's failure
resulted in a faulty command that didn't take into account information from a
second sensor, said John Cox, CEO of Safety Operating Systems.
"We don't
know what the crew knew and didn't know yet," Cox said. "We
will."
Indonesia's search and rescue agency has extended the search until
Sunday. Body parts are still being recovered and searchers continue to hunt for
the cockpit voice recorder.
Indonesia's transportation safety committee
said it had agreed with Boeing on procedures that the airplane manufacturer
should distribute globally on how flight crews can deal with the sensor
problems.
The flight procedure recommendations to Boeing were based on
how the flight crew responded to problems on the Bali-to-Jakarta flight, said
investigator Nurcahyo Utomo.
Lion Air is one of Indonesia's youngest
airlines but has grown rapidly, flying to dozens of domestic and international
destinations.
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