Pilots of 777s and 787s warned over pitch-guidance
mode slip before take-off
By David
Kaminski-Morrow13 April 2022
US safety
authorities have cautioned Boeing 777 and 787 operators over a potential mode
confusion during take-off which can result in the aircraft departing with the
wrong pitch-control guidance.
Incidents have
been recorded in which the ‘altitude hold’ mode of the autopilot flight-director
system had been erroneously engaged before take-off.
While the US FAA
has not identified the specific operators involved, it says the result, in one
case, was an unusually low initial climb rate while another instance triggered
‘don’t sink’ alerts from the aircraft’s ground-proximity warning system.
Analysis of the
incidents, it says, found that the wrong pitch mode had been activated “without
the crew’s recognition” before departure
Once airborne, the
crews pressed the take-off/go-around switch to restore proper pitch guidance.
Source: Boeing
Boeing has
highlighted the potential mode-change scenario affecting 787s and 777s
The FAA says the
default roll and pitch mode, when the flight director is initially turned on,
is ‘take-off/go-around’.
But this pitch
mode can accidentally be switched to ‘altitude hold’ in several ways, on both
the 777 and 787.
These include
inadvertently selecting the altitude hold switch on the mode control panel, or
selecting the ‘flight level change’ or ‘vertical speed’ switches when the
selected altitude is within 20ft of the barometric altitude.
The FAA has also
highlighted other particular combinations of actions, unique to each aircraft
type, which can cause the transition – during re-alignment of air data inertial
reference systems on the 777, for example.
If the aircraft is
in ‘altitude hold’ mode on the ground, pressing the take-off/go-around switch
will have no effect on the pitch mode or guidance.
Should the
aircraft depart in this mode, and the selected altitude on the mode control
panel is close to the displayed barometric altitude, the flight director will
issue nose-down pitch guidance just after becoming airborne.
“While ‘altitude
hold’ latching and ‘take-off/go-around’ behaviours are described in the Boeing
flight crew operations manual, this specific scenario is not explicitly
described,” says the FAA in a special airworthiness bulletin.
“It is apparent
that this specific system behaviour may not be known to all pilots of these
aircraft.”
Boeing issued an
operator message on 4 March in reference to the matter, including procedures to
restore the correct ‘take-off/go-around’ mode while on the ground.
The FAA says
operators of the twinjet models should notify crews of the issue and
incorporate actions outlined at the earliest opportunity”. It adds that crew
should maintain situational awareness to ensure the aircraft is operating in
the correct mode for any specific phase of flight.
Analysis is underway to assess the
‘altitude hold’ and ‘take-off/go-around’ logic in other Boeing aircraft,
including the 757, 767, 747-400 and 747-8. The FAA says no similar events have
been recorded on these types to date.
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