U.S.
board urges helicopter manufacturers to add crash-data recorders
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) on
Tuesday urged six major manufacturers to equip turbine-powered helicopters with
crash-resistant systems to record data, audio and images, after former NBA star
Kobe Bryant and eight others were killed in a helicopter crash in January.
The NTSB asked Airbus Helicopters, Bell - a unit of Textron Inc Leonardo, MD
Helicopters, Robinson Helicopter Co and Sikorsky, a unit of Lockheed Martin
Corp - to act after U.S. regulators have not backed mandating the equipment
despite a series of recommendations since 2013.
Bryant, 41, his 13-year-old daughter Gianna and seven other people died when a
twin-engine Sikorsky S-76B helicopter slammed into a hillside outside Los
Angeles in heavy fog on Jan. 26. The helicopter did not have a flight data
recorder or cockpit voice recorder.
The safety board found that a "lack of recorded data hindered their
understanding of several crashes that could have serious flight safety
implications."
The manufacturers did not immediately respond to requests for comment or
declined immediate comment. The Federal Aviation Administration did not
immediately comment.
Some helicopters are required by the FAA to have crash-resistant systems to
record flight data and cockpit audio but none are required to have
image-recording capability. Some operators have voluntarily equipped their
helicopters with recording systems, including image-recording capability.
The NTSB cited seven helicopter investigations between 2011 and 2017, in which
the lack of access to recorded data impeded their ability to identify and
address potential safety issues.
The NTSB said 86% of 185 turbine-powered helicopter accidents it investigated
between 2005 and 2017 had no recording equipment installed. The NTSB also asked
manufacturers to provide a way to retrofit existing helicopters with recording
systems.
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