Inner Pane Shatters, Cuts First Officer
Passengers on American Airlines Flight 1738 found themselves in
what could have been a made-for-TV movie script over the Atlantic
Ocean Wednesday night.

The Boeing 757 was carrying 139 passengers and a crew of seven
from San Juan, Puerto Rico to Philadelphia when a disturbingly
familiar problem cropped up. A burning smell wafted through the
cabin, followed by an announcement from the flight deck that the
plane would make an emergency landing at Palm Beach International
due to smoke in the cockpit.
Despite making an emergency descent to lessen the cabin pressure
pushing out on the damaged glass, the inner pane of the windshield
shattered, causing minor injuries to the first officer. He, along
with four other crewmembers and one passenger, were treated for
minor smoke inhalation and were released from Palm Beach area
hospitals.
The National Transportation Safety Board is not sending an
investigator, but reportedly has an engineer gathering information
from both American Airlines and the FAA. Both flight recorders were
removed from the 757, but American was allowed to replace the
broken windshield and heater, and return the plane to service.
Boeing identified a problem with the windshield heaters in some
of its planes four years ago, and issued service bulletins to
operators. The heater uses an electric current, passed through
conductors in the tempered glass, to defrost it, in much the same
way many auto manufacturers configure rear window defoggers.
The system works well, and the portion in the glass is
trouble-free... but the connector block behind the instrument panel
is prone to developing a poor connection where the wiring harness
is attached. When that happens, arcing can occur, acting like a
mini arc welder, overheating the wires, the block, and the
glass.
The Palm Beach Post reports the NTSB sent a letter to the
Federal Aviation Administration in September, citing five incidents
since 2004 in which the problem had resulted in overheating and
even fires. The letter said Boeing was placing a new design in new
planes. In the summer of 2006, Boeing sent service bulletins to
owners of affected models, including the 757.
The NTSB also said the
FAA agreed to issue bulletins requiring replacements... but the FAA
replied in November, saying only that it would "propose an
airworthiness directive" some time this year.
The Post reports the passengers handled the stress in different
ways. Twenty-four were students from Messiah College, a
3,000-student Christian school near Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. They,
along with two faculty advisors returning after three weeks of
study in the Caribbean were seated near the back of the plane. They
held hands and prayed aloud.
Philadelphia attorney Paul Null told the paper he wrote three
goodbye letters to his wife, his 4-year-old son and his 2-year-old
daughter. "It was just how much I loved them and some advice for my
son on being a man. Just that family is more important than
anything else." But, he said, "My wife doesn't want to read it. She
said I wrote it under the guise that I wouldn't be here and I was
here. "She said, "I know how you feel. Just continue to tell me
every day and I won't have to read it in a letter.'"
One of the passengers was illusionist Wayne Hoffman, on his way
home to Reading, PA after working on a cruise ship. After staging
an improvised, 45-minute mind-reading show to calm passengers after
the plane landed, he commented, "I'd say it was the most
interesting venue I've ever performed."
IDENTIFICATION
Regis#: AAL1738
Make/Model: B757 Description:
B-757
Date: 01/31/2008 Time: 0200
Event Type: Incident Highest Injury:
None Mid Air: N Missing:
N
Damage: Unknown
LOCATION
City: WEST PALM BEACH State: FL
Country: US
DESCRIPTION
AMERICAN AIRLINES FLIGHT 1738, A BOEING 757 AIRCRAFT,
DECLARED AN EMERGENCY
AND DIVERTED DUE TO SMOKE IN THE COCKPIT AND CABIN, AIRCRAFT
LANDED WITHOUT
INCIDENT, SIX PERSONS ON BOARD WERE TRANSPORTED TO THE
HOSPITAL WITH
UNKNOWN INJURIES, NO FIRE WAS REPORTED, WEST PALM BEACH,
FL
INJURY DATA Total
Fatal: 0
# Crew: 0 Fat:
0 Ser:
0 Min:
0 Unk: 5
# Pass: 0 Fat:
0 Ser:
0 Min:
0 Unk: 1
# Grnd:
Fat: 0 Ser:
0 Min:
0 Unk:
WEATHER: NOT REPORTED
OTHER DATA
Activity: Business Phase:
Unknown Operation: Air Carrier
FAA FSDO: SOUTH FLORIDA, FL
(SO19)
Entry date: 01/31/2008