Fri, May 28, 2010
Four Recent Uncontained Engine Failures Prompt The Move
The NTSB issued two urgent safety recommendations to the FAA
Thursday. The first asks that the FAA require operators of aircraft
equipped with a particular model engine to immediately perform
blade borescope inspections (BSI) of the high pressure turbine
rotor at specific intervals until the current turbine disk can be
redesigned and replaced with one that can withstand the unbalance
vibration forces from the high pressure rotor. The second asks the
FAA to require the engine manufacturer to immediately redesign the
disk. The NTSB issued an additional recommendation for a
requirement that operators perform a second type of inspection and
another recommendation related to the engine manufacturer regarding
the installation of the replacement disk.
All four recommendations apply to the low pressure turbine (LPT)
stage 3 (S3) rotor disk in the General Electric (GE) CF6-45/50
series turbofan engines that can fail unexpectedly when excited by
high-pressure (HP) rotor unbalance.
An uncontained engine event occurs when an engine failure
results in fragments of rotating engine parts penetrating and
exiting through the engine case. Uncontained turbine engine disk
failures within an aircraft engine present a direct hazard to an
airplane and its passengers because high-energy disk fragments can
penetrate the cabin or fuel tanks, damage flight control surfaces,
or sever flammable fluid or hydraulic lines. Engine cases are not
designed to contain failed turbine disks. Instead, the risk of
uncontained disk failure is mitigated by designating disks as
safety-critical parts, defined as the parts of an engine whose
failure is likely to present a direct hazard to the aircraft.
In its safety recommendations to the FAA, the NTSB cited four
foreign accidents, which it is either investigating or
participating in an investigation led by another nation, in which
the aircraft experienced an uncontained engine failure of its GE
CF6-45/50 series engine.
The date, location, and circumstances of these four events (none
had injuries or fatalities) are as follows:
- On July 4, 2008, a Saudi Arabian Airlines (Saudia) Boeing
47-300 experienced an engine failure during initial climb after
takeoff from Jeddah, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. This investigation
has been delegated to the NTSB.
- On March 26, 2009, an Arrow Cargo McDonnell Douglas DC-10F,
about 30 minutes after takeoff from Manaus, Brazil, experienced
loss of oil pressure in one engine. The pilots shut down the engine
and diverted to Medellin, Columbia. This investigation has been
delegated to the NTSB.
- On December 17, 2009, a Jett8 Cargo Boeing 747-200F airplane
was passing through 7,000 feet agl when the flight crewmembers
heard a muffled explosion and immediately applied left rudder. With
one engine losing oil pressure, the airplane returned to land at
Changi, Singapore. The NTSB is participating in the investigation
that is being led by the Air Accident Investigation Bureau of
Singapore.
- On April 10, 2010, an ACT Cargo Airbus A300B4 experienced an
engine failure while accelerating for takeoff at Manama, Bahrain.
The crew declared an emergency, rejected the takeoff, activated the
fire suppression system, and evacuated the airplane. The NTSB is
participating in the investigation that is being led by the Bahrain
Ministry of Transportation - Civil Aviation.
The four recommendations to the FAA are as follows:
- Immediately require operators of CF6-45/50-powered airplanes to
perform high pressure turbine rotor blade borescope inspections
every 15 flight cycles until the low pressure turbine stage 3 disk
is replaced with a redesigned disk that can withstand the unbalance
vibration forces from the high pressure rotor. (Urgent)
- Require operators of CF6-45/50-powered airplanes to perform
fluorescent penetrant inspections of CF6-45-50- low pressure
turbine stage 3 disks at every engine shop visit until the low
pressure turbine stage 3 disk is replaced with a redesigned disk
that can withstand the unbalance vibration forces from the high
pressure rotor.
- Immediately require General Electric Company to redesign the
CF6-45/50 low pressure turbine stage 3 disk so that it will not
fail when exposed to high pressure rotor unbalance forces.
(Urgent)
- Once General Electric Company has redesigned the CF6-45/50 low
pressure turbine (LPT) stage 3 disk in accordance with Safety
Recommendation [3], require all operators of CF6-45/50-powered
airplanes to install the newly designed LPT S3 at the next
maintenance opportunity.
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