Exclusive: Boeing software engaged
repeatedly before crash - sources
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[April 03, 2019]
By Eric M. Johnson and Tim Hepher
SEATTLE/PARIS (Reuters) - Boeing anti-stall
software on a doomed Ethiopian Airlines jet re-engaged as many as four
times after the crew initially turned it off due to suspect data from an
airflow sensor, two people familiar with the matter said.
It was not immediately clear whether the crew had chosen to re-deploy
the system, which pushes the nose of the Boeing 737 MAX downwards, but
one person with knowledge of the matter said investigators were studying
the possibility that the software had kicked in again without human
intervention.
A Boeing spokeswoman declined to comment. Ethiopian investigators were
not immediately available for comment.
Boeing's anti-stall software known as MCAS is at the center of
investigations into both the Ethiopian Airlines crash last month and a
Lion Air accident in Indonesia in October that together killed nearly
350 people.
People familiar with the investigation have said the anti-stall software
- which automatically pushes the aircraft's nose down to guard against a
loss of lift - was activated by erroneous 'angle of attack' data from a
single sensor.
The investigation has now turned toward how MCAS was initially disabled
by pilots following an emergency checklist procedure but then appeared
to repeatedly start working again before the jet plunged to the ground,
the people said.
A directive issued after the Indonesian crash instructed pilots to use
cut-out switches to disengage the system in the event of problems and
leave it switched off.
Doing so does not shut down the MCAS system completely but severs an
electrical link between the software and aircraft systems, a person
familiar with the technology said.
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Airplane engine parts are seen at the scene of the Ethiopian
Airlines Flight ET 302 plane crash, near the town of Bishoftu,
southeast of Addis Ababa, Ethiopia March 11, 2019. REUTERS/Tiksa
Negeri/File Photo
Investigators are studying whether there are any conditions under
which MCAS could re-activate itself automatically, without the
pilots reversing the cut-out maneuver. Boeing is in the midst of
upgrading the software while adding extra training.
A preliminary report is expected within days.
The pilots maneuvered the plane back upwards at least two times
before hitting the stabilizer cut-out switches to disable the
system, the other person familiar with the matter said.
However, initial flight data indicates the aircraft was not in a
"neutral" attitude when pilots hit the stabilizer cutout switches to
disable the MCAS system, the person added, making the situation
harder to manage.
After the pilots turned off MCAS, the airplane over the next few
minutes gained roughly 2,000 feet, but dived into the ground after
the renewed succession of nose-down inputs from MCAS.
None of the parties involved in the investigation was available for
comment.
(Reporting by Eric M. Johnson in Seattle, Tim Hepher in Paris, Jamie
Freed in Singapore, Editing by Laurence Frost and Richard Lough)
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