FAA orders inspections of some Boeing 777 engines after United fire
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[February 24, 2021] By
David Shepardson and Jamie Freed
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said on
Tuesday it was ordering immediate inspections of Boeing 777 planes with
Pratt & Whitney PW4000 engines before further flights after an engine
failed on a United flight on Saturday.
The engines are used on 128 older versions of the plane accounting for
less than 10% of the more than 1,600 777s delivered and only a handful
of airlines in the United States, South Korea and Japan were operating
them recently.
Operators must conduct a thermal acoustic image inspection of the large
titanium fan blades on each engine, the FAA said.
The National Transportation Safety Board said on Monday that a cracked
fan blade from the United Flight 328 engine that caught fire was
consistent with metal fatigue.
"Based on the initial results as we receive them, as well as other data
gained from the ongoing investigation, the FAA may revise this directive
to set a new interval for this inspection or subsequent ones," the FAA
said.
In March 2019, after a 2018 United engine failure attributed to fan
blade fatigue, the FAA ordered inspections every 6,500 cycles. A cycle
is one take-off and landing.
South Korea's transport ministry on Wednesday ordered the grounding of
all local airlines' Boeing 777s with PW4000 engines and would ban
foreign carriers with those planes from entering its airspace from
Thursday.
A day earlier it instructed airlines to inspect the fan blades every
1,000 cycles following guidance from Pratt. An airline would typically
accumulate 1,000 cycles about every 10 months on a 777, according to an
industry source familiar with the matter.
The U.S. FAA said in 2019 that each inspection was expected to take 22
man-hours and cost $1,870. It did not provide updated estimates on
Tuesday.
A spokeswoman for Pratt, owned by Raytheon Technologies, said fan blades
would need to be shipped to its repair station in East Hartford,
Connecticut, for the latest inspections, including those from airlines
in Japan and South Korea.
[to top of second column] |
United Airlines flight
UA328, carrying 231 passengers and 10 crew on board, returns to
Denver International Airport with its starboard engine on fire after
it called a Mayday alert, over Denver, Colorado, U.S. February 20,
2021. Hayden Smith/@speedbird5280/Handout via REUTERS.
Boeing said it supported the FAA's latest inspection guidance and would work
through the process with its customers.
It had earlier recommended that airlines suspend the use of PW4000-powered
planes while the FAA identified an appropriate inspection protocol, and Japan
imposed a temporary suspension on flights.
Japan's transport ministry said on Wednesday it was examining the FAA directive
and had not yet decided what action to take. ANA Holdings and Japan Airlines
(JAL) said they would comply with any directives from the Japanese regulator.
The FAA spent the last two days discussing the extent of the inspection
requirements, according to sources with knowledge of the matter.
On Monday, the FAA acknowledged that after a JAL engine incident in December it
had been considering stepping up blade inspections.
United, the only U.S. operator of the older PW4000-powered 777s, had temporarily
grounded its fleet before the FAA announcement. The airline said on Tuesday it
would comply with the airworthiness directive.
United has warned of possible disruptions to its cargo flight schedule in March
as it juggles its fleet after its decision to ground 24 Boeing 777-200 planes,
according to a notice sent to cargo customers.
Another 28 of United's 777-200 planes were already grounded before the incident
on Saturday, amid a plunge in demand.
(Reporting by David Shepardson in Washington and Jamie Freed in Sydney;
additional reporting by Tracy Rucinski in Chicago, Joyce Lee in Seoul and Eimi
Yamamitsu in Tokyo Editing by Gerry Doyle and Jason Neely)
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