Airbus To Recommend A300, A310 Rudder Inspections

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Airbus To Recommend A300, A310 Rudder Inspections
Action Comes After Air Transat Rudder Separation 

Acting out of "an abundance of caution," Airbus says it will 
recommend visual and aural inspections of rudders aboard its 
A300-600 and A310 aircraft. This, after the bizarre separation of 
an entire rudder from the tail of an Air Transat flight at altitude 
on its way from Cuba to Canada. 

An Airbus spokesman told Bloomberg News the company will 
recommend these inspections -- a visual once-over and a "tap" 
inspection -- take place within the next few weeks. Those 
inspections usually come up every five years. 

The recommendation, which could come as early as Tuesday, comes 
on the heels of an in-flight incident involving a Air Transat 
flight from Varadero, Cuba to Quebec City, Canada, more than a week 
ago. Departing in the wee hours of the morning, the aircraft, with 
270 people on board, was at cruise altitude 30-minutes into the 
flight when the rudder suddenly departed the aircraft. There was 
virtually nothing left of the composite rudder -- it had separated 
at the hinges. 

The crew was able to use ailerons and differential thrust to 
nurse the aircraft back to Cuba where it landed without incident. 
Air Transat immediately grounded the rest of the A310s in its fleet 
-- all ten of them. Some flights were delayed for hours during the 
inspections, but all ten aircraft were returned to service later 
that day. 

As for the incident aircraft, "We don't know yet what happened'' 
with the Air Transat plane, Airbus spokesman Clay McConnell told 
Bloomberg News. "We feel that this event is so unusual it really 
does require that we do something to be sure that there's not a 
problem out there.'' 

The Canadian Transportation Safety Board is investigating the 
Air Transat incident. But there's a problem. "Structure-wise we 
don't have much left of the rudder there, so what we've decided to 
do is remove the whole tail of the aircraft,' 'Canadian 
Transportation Safety Board Senior Investigator Marc Fernandez told 
Bloomberg. A CTSB team will travel to Cuba Thursday to further its 
investigation. 
FMI: www.tsb.gc.ca/en/index.asp 

For the WHOLE story, go to 
http://www.aero-news.net/news/commair.cfm?ContentBlockID=cdcc806c-c37a-4cd9-82e1-9f09ee95bf8b


Airbus Rudders: Are Visual Inspections Enough?
In The Wake Of AAL 587, One Expert Calls Dependence On Them 
"Naive" 

As ANN reported earlier on Tuesday, Airbus 
will recommend owners of its A300-600s and A310s inspect the rudder 
assemblies of their aircraft in the wake of an incident more than a 
week ago, where an Air Transat A310 lost its rudder in 
flight. Now comes word that some American Airlines 
pilots have demanded to be transferred off Airbus duty. And there 
are nagging questions about those visual inspections: Are they 
enough to ensure the aircraft's safety? 

The Air Transat incident is eerily reminiscent of the American 
Airlines Flight 587 mishap in November, 2001. As the nation reeled 
from the 9/11 terror attacks, AAL 587, an Airbus 300-600, went down 
near the New York shore, just moments after taking off from JFK on 
a flight to the Dominican Republic. Terrorism was quickly ruled 
out. Investigators quickly focused on the way the copilot 
manipulated the rudder to avoid wake turbulence from a Boeing 747 
not far ahead. 

The NTSB later ruled the copilots abrupt rudder manipulations 
probably caused the downing of Flight 587. Investigators also ruled 
"design flaws" in the rudder actuation system aboard the A300 also 
contributed to the accident. 

Since then, some US pilots have started to view the A300 as an 
anathema. The London Observer reports, since the crash of AAL 587, 
approximately 20 American Airlines Airbus pilots have asked to be 
transferred to Boeing aircraft. One pilot told the London paper he 
was so convinced of a design flaw in the rudder system that he paid 
extra money not to fly on an Airbus while vacationing. 

"That is how convinced I am that there are significant problems 
associated with these aircraft," he told the Guardian. 

Are visual inspections adequate to the task of determining 
whether potentially fatal problems exist in the rudder assembly of 
A300-600s and A310s? Just after the AAL 587 mishap, MIT Professor 
James Williams -- considered one of the leading experts in aviation 
composites -- wrote a report in which he baldly stated the visual 
inspection recommendations is "a lamentably naive policy. It is 
analogous to assessing whether a woman has breast cancer by simply 
looking at her family portrait." That report was also quoted by the 
Observer. 

Instead of a visual inspection or even a "tap" test to seek out 
hollow areas within a composite structure, Williams and others in 
the field say inspectors need to use ultrasound to actually get a 
glimpse inside the tail structure. Williams said flight 
after flight, climbing into sub-zero temperatures at altitude, the 
composite material can fall victim to condensation. In turn, he 
said, that would cause the carbon fibers inside the tail structure 
to separate as water first freezes, then thaws. "Like a pothole in 
a roadway in winter, over time these gaps may grow," he told the 
London paper. 

But Airbus doesn't buy that argument. Spokeswoman Barbara Crufts 
calls Williams' theory "unproven," according to the Observer. 
"You quote him as an expert. But there are more experts within the 
manufacturers and the certification authorities who agree with 
these procedures," she said. Crufts said the aircraft that suffered 
the rudder separation over the Caribbean earlier this month had 
been visually inspected just five days before the flight, although 
she didn't know whether the inspection included a look at the 
rudder assembly. 
FMI: www.airbus.com 

For the WHOLE story, go to 
http://www.aero-news.net/news/commair.cfm?ContentBlockID=c588e6fc-7e06-473e-85fa-55b14dd5daa4



		
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