737 Max: Boeing refutes new safety
concerns
By
Theo Leggett
Business correspondent, BBC News
It has been called "the most scrutinised transport aircraft in history", but some critics believe Boeing's 737 Max is still not safe.
It was cleared
to fly passengers again by US regulators last year, having been grounded
following two catastrophic accidents.
Since then,
however, a number of potentially serious problems have been reported during 737
Max flights.
Boeing insists
the aircraft is both safe and reliable.
On 14 October,
a 737 Max took off from Boeing Field airport in Seattle, bound for Brussels. It
was a delivery flight, taking the brand-new plane to start work for its owners,
the travel group Tui.
But minutes
into the 5,000-mile journey, the pilots reported an urgent "flight control
problem" and had to turn back. The aircraft landed safely shortly
afterwards.
The issue,
linked to the autopilot, was rectified relatively quickly. The plane set off
for Brussels again the following day, and has been flying regularly since then.
However, this
was not an isolated incident.
Emergencies
Whenever a US
carrier or repair station discovers any serious failure, malfunction or defect
aboard an aircraft, it has to inform the US regulator, the Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), via a so-called "service difficulty report".
There have been
more than 180 such reports since the 737 Max returned to service.
Most faults
were found on planes that were on the ground. But on 22 occasions, they
occurred in-flight, and on four of those the pilots declared emergencies.
·
Former
Boeing 737 Max pilot charged with fraud
·
Boeing
agrees deal with Ethiopia crash families
·
Coronavirus:
Boeing says air travel to recover by 2024
US pilots also
declared emergencies on two further occasions due to engine failures. These
events do not currently appear in the FAA's database, but have been reported on
the Aviation Herald website, which lists accidents and incidents in commercial
aviation.
The problems
occurred in a US fleet that is still relatively small, with fewer than 160
aircraft delivered as of mid-October - some of which were grounded for several
weeks early in the year after the discovery of electrical issues.
Service
difficulty reports are also made public by the Canadian regulator, Transport
Canada. Its database shows that the Canadian fleet of 56 737 Max aircraft has
generated 19 reports, five of them relating to in-flight incidents.
The 737 Max
remains under intense scrutiny. The plane was grounded for 20 months from March
2019, after being involved in two major accidents, in which 346 people died.
Its flight control software was modified, to remove a serious flaw implicated in both crashes. Other physical changes were made to the aircraft.
It is important
to stress that none of the issues reported to the FAA and Transport Canada are
directly related either to the causes of these crashes, or to the changes made afterwards.
But they do
include problems with some critical systems, including the motors used to
adjust the horizontal stabiliser - the wing on the tailplane of the aircraft.
There have also
been faults with engines, flight control systems, hydraulics and wiring.
The horizontal
stabiliser, in particular, is vital for keeping the aircraft in controlled
flight.
It can be
adjusted manually, using a wheel by the pilot's knee. But under certain
conditions, for example if the aircraft is going too fast, that may not be
possible due to the aerodynamic loads involved.
Joe Jacobsen is
a former senior safety engineer at the FAA, which has been deeply critical of
the way in which the agency originally certified the 737 Max.
He says the
reports do give cause for concern, particularly regarding the stabiliser
motors, wiring and flight control systems. Such issues, he says, are most
likely to be blamed on manufacturing.
"If they
are not manufacturing-related", he says "then we have a problem with
the system safety analysis, as I don't believe we would have predicted this
number of failures is such a short time span with such a small fleet of
aircraft."
Gilles Primeau, a Canadian expert in flight control systems, is also alarmed. He has previously testified to Canadian lawmakers that in his opinion the stabiliser trim system on all 737 variants, not just the Max, is "obsolete", and does not have enough in-built redundancy in case of failures.
He says "a
fundamental concept for safety-critical systems is that if the effects and
severity of a failure cause a hazard, then the frequency of occurrence should
be made infrequent enough by design... loss of horizontal stabiliser position
can be catastrophic".
·
Coronavirus:
Boeing says air travel to recover by 2024
·
Boeing's
737 Max aircraft under scrutiny again
·
Signs
of 'metal fatigue' on Denver plane engine
Ed Pierson is a
former senior manager at Boeing's 737 plant, near Seattle, who has previously
voiced serious concerns about manufacturing standards at the plant. He says the
number of failure and defect reports is "very troubling".
"I'm
concerned this is just the tip of the iceberg", he says, adding: "It
makes one wonder what the airline's own maintenance reports say about the condition
of these airplanes, if the mandatory reporting looks like this."
'Not unreasonable'
However, not
all experts are so alarmed. Dai Whittingham, chief executive of the UK Flight
Safety Committee, has also seen the data.
"I don't
think it's an unreasonable rate of occurrences," he explains. "With a
fleet that size, it's not an unexpected level of problems, for the length of
time.
"They are
complex systems, so these things happen"
Boeing did not
respond to specific questions about the failures featured in the service
difficulty reports.
In a statement,
it said: "Since the 737 Max returned to service, airlines have flown
nearly 240,000 flights around the world, and are conducting more than 1,300
flights every day.
"The
in-service reliability is greater than 99%, and is consistent with other
commercial airplane models".
People close to
the 737 Max programme do, however, acknowledge that there have been specific
issues with stabiliser trim motors, and that changes have been made to rectify
them.
The BBC also
understands that regular weekly meetings take place between the aerospace giant
and representatives of the engine manufacturer CFM International, in part to
address the root causes of failures and in-flight shutdowns.
The FAA,
meanwhile, said: "When we returned the 737 Max to service, we noted that
routine incidents would occur with the aircraft, just as they do with every
other make and model of aircraft.
"The FAA
addresses these issues through the same Continued Operational Safety process
that we provide for the entire US commercial fleet. We have seen no reported
incidents attributable to the redesigned automated flight control system on the
Max."
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.