RadcliffeRick
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 27 Oct 2011
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- 9,092
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- Kuala Lumpur Via Radcliffe
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- Manchester City since 2008 Chelsea before that :-)
Being in the aero gas turbine industry that engine issue was used as a case study for improvement of our practices of build and maintenance. The issue was caused by an incorrectly made oil pipe that fractured and allowed pressurised oil to spray into the hp compressor and then into the combustors. This acted as additional fuel as it burnt, this additional fuel caused a engine overspeed which then caused a disc to fracture.Yep - the A380 had a catastrophic engine failure only a few years into service (QF32) which exposed a huge engine flaw. That incident could of ended very badly had it occurred slightly differently or had the pilots not acted so brilliantly. Rolls Royce equipped A380's were grounded for a long period following that.
Is the A380 unsafe as a result? Absolutely not and it'd be crazy to argue that. However, here we are arguing about whether the 737MAX is unsafe despite tens of thousands of flying hours proving otherwise. There were two fatal accidents but Boeing has satisfied regulators that they've fixed what caused those accidents. Hundreds more flights will take place today without issue so the evidence to say Boeing aircraft are unsafe just doesn't exist.
I think a lot of flying fear comes from a lack of knowledge and control. A train appears simple because it does one thing which is move in a straight line. Most people would probably say that that they could drive a train but not a plane because it appears far more complex and therefore most would assume that means it's dangerous.
This logic did make sense 50 years ago when flying was incredibly complex and aircraft were relatively dumb machines. This however isn't the case anymore, a plane flies itself 95% of the time and pilots now only effectively act as monitors. Aircraft are so intelligent nowadays that the weakest link in the chain is almost always the pilots themselves. Human error is still the single biggest contributor to virtually all accidents.
The single biggest reason why aviation is so safe nowadays is because of the huge efforts that have been made over the years to reduce that human error. That could be through automation, training or just teaching pilots to work together as a team.
It was not a huge engine flaw rather than one small component that got through quality control.
Agreed the flight crew were brilliant at managing the situation.