BFF-42 Boeing issues advice over sensors after Indonesia crash

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Boeing issues advice over sensors after Indonesia crash

JAKARTA, Nov 7, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Boeing issued a special bulletin
Wednesday addressing a sensor problem flagged by Indonesian safety officials
investigating the crash of a Lion Air 737 that killed 189 people last week.

The planemaker said local aviation officials believed pilots may have been
given wrong information by the plane’s automated systems before the fatal
crash.

“The Indonesian National Transportation Safety Committee has indicated that
Lion Air flight 610 experienced erroneous input from one of its AOA (Angle of
Attack) sensors,” Boeing said.

“Boeing issued an Operations Manual Bulletin (OMB) directing operators to
existing flight crew procedures to address circumstances where there is
erroneous input from an AOA sensor.”

An AOA sensor provides data about the angle at which wind is passing over
the wings and tells pilots how much lift a plane is getting. The information
can be critical in preventing the plane from stalling.

Lion Air JT610 plunged into the Java Sea less than half an hour after
taking off from Jakarta on a routine flight to Pangkal Pinang city. There
were no survivors.

The doomed jet was a Boeing 737-Max 8, one of the world’s newest and most
advanced commercial passenger planes, and there is still no answer as to what
caused the crash. A preliminary report is expected at the end of the month.

Search teams have filled some 186 body bags with remains found after the
devastating crash, but only 44 victims have been identified so far.

Indonesian officials said on Wednesday they would extend by three days the
search for bodies.

Divers have recovered one of the two “black boxes” — the flight data
recorder — but are still searching for the cockpit voice recorder, in the
hope it will shed more light on the cause of the disaster.

Indonesian investigators said this week the plane had an air-speed
indicator problem on the doomed flight and on three previous journeys.

The glitch had been repeatedly serviced and Lion Air’s technical team
declared the plane to be airworthy.

The new details — gleaned from the flight data recorder — came after the
government said it was launching a “special audit” of Lion Air’s operations.

The accident has resurrected concerns about Indonesia’s poor air safety
record, which until recently saw its carriers facing years-long bans from
entering European Union and US airspace.

BSS/AFP/ARS/1654 hrs