Farnborough 2016 - Photo: Per Gram
Off-duty pilot hitching a ride saved Lion Air 737 Max 8 one day
before its deadly crash
As the Lion Air crew fought to control their diving 737 Max 8, they
got help from an unexpected source: an off-duty pilot who happened to be riding
in the cockpit.
That extra pilot, seated in the cockpit jump seat, correctly
diagnosed the problem and told the crew how to disable a malfunctioning
flight-control system and save the plane, according to two people familiar with
Indonesia's investigation.
The next day, on Oct. 29, under command of a different crew facing
what investigators said was an identical malfunction, the jetliner crashed into
the Java Sea killing all 189 aboard.
The previously undisclosed detail on the earlier Lion Air flight
represents a new clue in the mystery of how some 737 Max pilots faced with the
malfunction have been able to avert disaster while the others lost control of
their planes and crashed. The presence of a third pilot in the cockpit wasn't
contained in Indonesia's National Transportation Safety Committee's Nov. 28
report on the crash and hasn't previously been reported.
The so-called deadhead pilot on the earlier flight from Bali to
Jakarta told the crew to cut power to the motor driving the nose down, according
to the people familiar, part of a checklist that all pilots are required to
memorize.
"All the data and information that we have on the flight and the
aircraft have been submitted to the Indonesian safety committee. We can't
provide additional comment at this stage due the ongoing investigation on the
accident," Lion Air spokesman Danang Prihantoro said by phone.
The Indonesia safety committee report said the plane had had multiple
failures on previous flights and hadn't been properly repaired.
Representatives for Boeing and the Indonesian safety committee
declined to comment on the earlier flight.
The safety system, designed to keep planes from climbing too steeply
and stalling, has come under scrutiny by investigators of the crash as well as a
subsequent one less than five months later in Ethiopia. A malfunctioning sensor
is believed to have tricked the Lion Air plane's computers into thinking it
needed to automatically bring the nose down to avoid a stall.
after similarities to the Oct. 29 Lion Air crash emerged in the
investigation of the March 10 crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302. In the
wake of the two accidents, .
The Transportation Department's inspector general is conducting a
review of how the plane was certified to fly and a grand jury under the U.S.
Justice Department is also seeking records in a possible criminal probe of the
plane's certification.
The last week said it planned to mandate changes in the system to
make it less likely to activate when there is no emergency. The agency and
Boeing said they are also going to require additional training and references to
it in flight manuals.
"We will fully cooperate in the review in the Department of
Transportation's audit," Boeing spokesman Charles Bickers said in an email. The
company has declined to comment on the criminal probe.
After the Lion Air crash, two U.S. pilots' unions said the potential
risks of the system, known as the Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation
System hadn't been sufficiently spelled out in their manuals or training. None
of the documentation for the Max aircraft included an explanation, the union
leaders said.
"We don't like that we weren't notified,'' Jon Weaks, president of
the Southwest Airlines Pilots Association, said in November. "It makes us
question, 'Is that everything, guys?' I would hope there are no more surprises
out there.''
The Allied Pilots Association union at Group Inc. also said details
about the system weren't included in the documentation about the
plane.
There have been no reports of maintenance issues with the Ethiopian
Airlines plane before its crash.
If the same issue is also found to have helped bring down Ethiopian
Airlines Flight 302, one of the most vexing questions crash investigators and
aviation safety consultants are asking is why the pilots on that flight didn't
perform the checklist that disables the system.
"After this horrific Lion Air accident, you'd think that everyone
flying this airplane would know that's how you turn this off," said Steve
Wallace, the former director of the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration's
accident investigation branch.
The combination of factors required to bring down a plane in these
circumstances suggests other issues may also have occurred in the Ethiopia
crash, said Jeffrey Guzzetti, who also directed accident investigations at FAA
and is now a consultant.
"It's simply implausible that this MCAS deficiency by itself can down
a modern jetliner with a trained crew," Guzzetti said.
MCAS is driven by a single sensor near the nose that measures the
so-called angle of attack, or whether air is flowing parallel to the length of
the fuselage or at an angle. On the Lion Air flights, the angle-of-attack sensor
had failed and was sending erroneous readings indicating the plane's nose was
pointed dangerously upward.
Bloomberg's Mary Schlangenstein contributed.
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