Airlines inspecting Boeing 737 engines
after fatal Southwest incident
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[April 18, 2018]
By Jamie Freed
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Some major customers
of Boeing Co's popular 737 jets including Korean Air Lines Co Ltd said
on Wednesday they were inspecting engines of the type that blew apart
mid-air on a fatal Southwest Airlines Co flight on Tuesday.
European regulators this month began requiring an inspection by early
next year, and a person familiar with the matter said U.S. regulators
were near a similar rule, which affects a number of 737s in operation
globally.
Southwest Flight 1380 made an emergency landing in Philadelphia on
Tuesday after an engine ripped apart mid-air, shattering a window on the
737 and nearly sucking a passenger through. One of 144 passengers died.
The actions by regulators show that there has been some concern, albeit
non-urgent, about the engine, a workhorse of the global civil aviation
fleet that has logged more than 350 million hours of safe travel but was
also being examined after a 2016 accident.
The CFM56-7B engine type involved in the Southwest incident was produced
by a joint venture of U.S. firm General Electric Co and France's Safran
SA called CFM International. It is one of the most common engines,
paired with the world's most-sold plane, the Boeing 737.
Southwest said it is speeding up inspections of all related engines out
of extra caution, which it expects to complete within 30 days.
An early review of the failed Southwest engine found apparent metal
fatigue where a fan blade had broken off, Robert Sumwalt, chairman of
the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), told reporters on
Tuesday.
"We are very concerned" about metal fatigue, Sumwalt said. "There needs
to be proper inspection mechanisms in place to check for this before
there's a catastrophic event."
Korean Air said on Wednesday it had not yet been prompted by its
regulators for a check but it planned to inspect engines used on its
entire 737 fleet by November following the Southwest incident.
About 20 percent to 30 percent of its 35 Boeing 737 jets use the same
type of fan blade as the one on the Southwest jet, a Korean Air official
said.
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U.S. NTSB investigators are on scene examining damage to the engine
of the Southwest Airlines plane in this image released from
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S., April 17, 2018. NTSB/Handout via
REUTERS
A Japan Airlines Co Ltd spokesman said two 737 jets in its fleet had
engines with affected fan blades and inspections were due to be
completed by the end of the day on Wednesday.
In August 2016, a Southwest flight made a safe emergency landing in
Pensacola, Florida, after a fan blade separated from the same type
of engine, and debris ripped a foot-long hole above the left wing.
Investigators found signs of metal fatigue.
The 2016 incident prompted the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration
(FAA) to propose ultrasonic inspections of similar fan blades and
their replacement should they fail the test.
Sumwalt said the NTSB will review whether the engines involved in
Tuesday's incident might have been subject to the directive, which
is not yet finalised.
The FAA proposal estimated that checks would require two hours of
labor per inspection.
Not all airlines operating 737s are affected.
Australia's Qantas Airways Ltd, a large 737 operator, said its
engines were of a slightly different model than those targeted for
inspection.
Spokespeople for several other major airlines operating 737s could
not be reached immediately for comment.
(Reporting by Jamie Freed in Singapore; Additional reporting by
Jeffrey Dastin, David Shepardson, Joyce Lee, Sam Nussey, Byron Kaye
and Tim Hepher; Editing by Christopher Cushing)
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