BA crash at Heathrow caused by ice in the fuel system

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Dartzap
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BA crash at Heathrow caused by ice in the fuel system

Post by Dartzap »

My thread at the time

BBC
'Ice in fuel' caused BA jet crash
By Tom Symonds
BBC transport correspondent

The BA plane that crashed at Heathrow in January was probably brought down by ice in its fuel system, an accident report says.

The pilots of the Boeing 777 managed to land so that the 136 passengers and 16 crew escaped without serious injury.

The Air Accident Investigation Branch believes the flow of fuel dropped causing the engines to lose power less than a minute before touchdown.

But investigators say they still do not know how the ice could have formed.

Water is naturally present in aviation fuel and the investigators believe there may have been as much as five litres within this aircraft's fuel load.

But the report says levels of water found in fuel recovered after the 17 January crash were very low for a Boeing 777.

They dismissed the suggestion that the fuel itself froze or became "waxy" as icing occurred.

The report says the plane flew through unusually cold air over Siberia while en route from Beijing to Heathrow.


READ THE REPORT

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The fuel temperature fell to -34C (-29F). But jet fuel should not freeze until it is at less than -57C (-70F), and the report says the temperatures involved were not "unique".

The investigation into the crash of flight BA38 continues with testing at Rolls-Royce in Derby, and Seattle in the US, the home of Boeing.

Following Thursday's report, a spokesman for the US Federal Aviation Administration said it would be issuing an air-worthiness directive to US carriers operating Boeing 777 aircraft.

This was likely to be about "changes in procedures for pilots to follow in certain cold weather conditions" as well as "changes in certain fuel procedures on the ground", he said.

While it would not be an emergency directive, it was likely to be issued within 24 hours and would have immediate effect.

Fuel and water

Water in aviation fuel can be dissolved at the molecular level, or simply float as free water, suspended in the fuel. As the fuel gets colder tiny droplets can form and freeze.

The mystery facing investigators is why this might have happened on an apparently fully functioning aircraft.

Water in the fuel is controlled by draining it regularly out of the fuel tanks - and on the Boeing 777 a so-called "scavenge system" pumps it out.

Ice can form when the fuel temperature drops to around -1C (30.2F) to -3C (26.6F) Generally the ice crystals simply float and drift in the fuel without causing harm.

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Aerial video of the crash scene at Heathrow Only when the temperature falls further does the ice stick together.

Within the fuel system a heat exchanger is used to increase the fuel temperature, but it is possible the blockage might have occurred before this point.

The investigation team have built a test rig and introduced pre-prepared ice into the fuel system to see if it would clog up.

But the amounts they had to put in to make this happen were far greater than is normal.

Despite that, the scenarios being considered by the AAIB are based on the idea that the ice formed gradually in the system and was released as the plane prepared for landing.

But the report makes three safety recommendations:

* that the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and the European Aviation Safety Agency introduce interim measures to reduce the risk of ice forming on the Boeing 777 powered by Trent 800 engines
* the agencies should consider the implications for other aircraft types
* review the requirements for new engines

This accident remains an enormous challenge for the investigation team. But their report stresses the rarity of this crash.

'Unique' situation

It said: "The accident flight was unique in that this has been the only recorded case of a restricted fuel flow affecting the engine performance to the extent of causing HP pump cavitation" - the damage found within the pumps that alerted the investigators to the loss of fuel pressure.

The report goes on: "This is the first such event in 6.5 million flight hours and places the probability of the failure as being 'remote'."

In response to the recommendations, the European Aviation Safety Agency said it had agreed with the FAA to "interim measures" for "mandatory aircraft level action", but gave no further details.

It also said it would examine the other recommendations.

Long-haul flights

An FAA spokesman said it was still studying the report but felt the initial review indicated that the issue appeared to affect only Boeing aircraft with Rolls-Royce Trent engines.

He understood that Boeing was carrying out tests to establish whether other aircraft with other engine combinations could similarly be affected.

He emphasised that shorter-haul aircraft such as Boeing 737s would not be part of the directive as icing was a problem that affected only long-haul journeys.

Flight BA 38 from Beijing was extensively damaged when it touched down on 17 January, landing short of the runway but staying largely intact.

One person suffered a broken leg and others received minor injuries during the emergency evacuation.
I thought Broomstick and her fellow aviators would be interested, heh

I still refuse to be terrified by random incidents like this. The odds on such a thing happening must be minute.


....right? :shock: :wink:
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Post by Stuart »

I seem to remember a couple of Viscounts going down in the late 1950s as a result of the fuel system icing up. I also think a B-47 went in about the same time from the same cause but I haven't heard of any since then. I think chemical additives were introduced to stop this happening. Also, later aircraft had electrically-heated fuel lines.

Question, did the heating system fail and somebody forgot to put teh additive in? This smells like one of those "fate is the hunter" situations, a series of minor faults and errors that led to the crash
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Post by Wicked Pilot »

Many aircraft have fuel heaters where heat is transferred from the engine oil. But these systems are usually per engine so a failure would not explain this crash. Not having a B777 type that's all I can speculate.
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Post by Broomstick »

I confess I'm a bit baffled by the conclusions so far. I don't have a B-777 type rating either, and I'm certainly not a jet authority.

Fuel contamination has several sources. While there additives in aircraft fuel of all sorts to minimize various potential problems it won't prevent everything.

I wouldn't fret about this - it's a one-off accident so far, and they're trying to track down what exactly went wrong so they can prevent any future occurrences. However, this would let the pilots off the hook if it was a mechanical problem, and the guys who managed a survivable landing out of this should be praised for their quick and proper actions.

And "fate is the hunter" type situations are the norm for aircraft accidents at all levels - it is very, very seldom that you have just one clear cause instead of a chain of events. The FAA pilot seminars usually say it's three or more things going wrong that generate an accident.
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