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Old 17-01-13, 13:06   #1
 
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Update U.S., Other Nations Ground Dreamliners Over Fire Risk

Updated 6:14 AM EST, Thu January 17, 2013


'Teething problems' for Dreamliner

Washington (CNN) -- Aviation authorities around the world have ordered airlines to stop flying their Boeing 787s until they can show they've fixed a fire risk linked to battery failures aboard the closely watched Dreamliners.

The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration said Wednesday that the planes should stay on the tarmac following an emergency landing in Japan this week that prompted that country's two major airlines to ground their fleets of 787s, and a similar problem aboard a Dreamliner on the ground in Boston nine days earlier.

Other countries where airlines operate Boeing's marquee jetliner swiftly followed the FAA's move. Authorities in Europe, Japan and India all issued orders for the planes to stay grounded while the battery problem was investigated.

"The battery failures resulted in release of flammable electrolytes, heat damage, and smoke on two Model 787 airplanes," the FAA announced Wednesday evening. "The root cause of these failures is currently under investigation. These conditions, if not corrected, could result in damage to critical systems and structures, and the potential for fire in the electrical compartment."

The only U.S. carrier to operate the eagerly awaited, long-delayed jetliner is United Airlines, which said earlier Wednesday that it had inspected its fleet of six 787s and would continue flying them. United spokeswoman Christen David said Wednesday evening that the airline would comply with the order "and will work closely with the FAA and Boeing on the technical review."

The FAA noted that its directive also signals that international aviation authorities should take "parallel action" regarding their own airlines.

The first commercial Dreamliner flight took off in October 2011, flying from Tokyo to Hong Kong, and the planes flew without major problems for months.

Since July, the growing list of reported troubles aboard the planes include a fuel leak, an oil leak, two cracked engines, a damaged ****pit window and a battery problem. The FAA announced a safety review of the aircraft last week.

In the most serious incident so far, an All Nippon Airlines (ANA) 787 with 129 people aboard made an emergency landing after a battery alarm Wednesday morning. Those on board reported a burning smell in the cabin, and an alarm indicated smoke in a forward electrical compartment.

Hours later, ANA and Japan Airlines announced that they were grounding their Dreamliners -- a total of 24 planes -- pending an investigation. And on Thursday, the Japanese ministry of transport ordered that all 787s be kept out of service until battery safety could be assured.

Japan Airlines later announced cancellations of eight flights between Tokyo and San Diego, affecting about 1,290 passengers.

Indian authorities also followed the U.S. example. The head of the country's civil aviation regulator, Arun Mishra, said it was complying with the FAA and had asked Air India to halt operation of its six Dreamliners for the time being.

The European Aviation Safety Agency said it, too, had adopted the FAA directive, which applies to the two 787s flown by the Polish carrier LOT.

And Ethiopian Airlines also announced it was temporarily grounding four Dreamliners, according to regional manager Yohannes Teklu.

In the previous alarming incident, a maintenance worker discovered an electrical fire aboard an empty Japan Airlines 787 slated for departure from Logan International Airport in Boston on January 7.

In a statement released Wednesday night, Boeing Chairman, President and CEO Jim McNerney said the company is confident that the planes are safe and is working with authorities to get them flying again.

"Boeing is committed to supporting the FAA and finding answers as quickly as possible," the statement said.

McNerney's statement Wednesday did not mention specifics about the recent incidents, but said the company "deeply regrets the impact that recent events have had on the operating schedules of our customers and the inconvenience to them and their passengers."

GS Yuasa, a Japanese company that supplies the batteries for the Dreamliners, said it had sent teams to the airports in Japan and the United States where the problems occurred. The investigation will take several weeks, it said.

The Dreamliner is the first private jet to use a lithium battery, according to Tsutomu Nishijima, a press officer for GS Yuasa.

Although lithium batteries heat up quickly because of their structure, they have systems and circuits in place to prevent overheating, Nishijima said.

Boeing has delivered 50 Dreamliners so far and has more than 800 additional orders for the aircraft from airlines around the world.

On Wednesday night, Chile-based LAN Airlines said it was temporarily grounding its three Boeing 787 aircraft in compliance with the FAA's recommendation.
And Qatar Airways said Thursday that it was grounding all five of its Dreamliners.

Carriers who have ordered planes but are still awaiting delivery, like Qantas of Australia and Etihad in the United Arab Emirates, expressed confidence that the problems would be sorted out by the time they received the planes.

Boeing's shares -- which had previously been resilient in the face of this month's negative publicity over the Dreamliner -- sank 2% in after-hours trading Wednesday, after falling 3.4% during the trading day.

After last week's incident in Boston, Boeing chief engineer Mike Sinnett expressed confidence in the aircraft's battery system. "I am 100% convinced the airplane is safe to fly," he said. "I fly on it all the time."

Longtime commercial pilot and industry analyst Patrick Smith said the battery issue did not appear to be a major problem, but called the FAA order "a positive and pro-active step."

"I don't think that it was dangerous for the plane to be flying, but it probably wasn't the best thing to be flying it on the heels of this latest emergency landing in Japan," Smith said.

"All airplanes have their teething problems, and this was trending in a bad direction," he added. "Now the authorities have said, 'Stop,' and that's a good thing."
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Old 25-01-13, 14:39   #2
 
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Default Re: U.S., Other Nations Ground Dreamliners Over Fire Risk

NTSB Says Boeing 787 Battery Shows Short-Circuiting

Published January 25, 2013
FoxNews.com

  • Jan. 17, 2013: The distorted main lithium-ion battery and its lid, left, of the All Nippon Airways' Boeing 787 which made an emergency landing. (AP/Japan Transport Safety Board)
WASHINGTON – Government regulators are far from completing their investigation into a battery fire on the Boeing 787 Dreamliner, a top official says, saying the incident is a "very serious air safety concern."

Deborah Hersman, chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board, said Thursday that though investigators have found evidence of an issue in the Dreamliner battery damaged in a Jan. 7 fire in Boston, they have not determined the underlying cause.

"We are early in our investigation, we have a lot of activities to undertake,'' Hersman said in a news conference. Hersman's statements led air safety experts to believe that the Federal Aviation Administration isn't likely to lift the order grounding the 787 quickly, The Seattle Times reported.

"I think you are looking at months, not weeks," Jim Hall, a former head of the NTSB told The Seattle Times.

"This is an unprecedented event. We are very concerned. We do not expect to see fire events on board aircraft. This is a very serious air safety concern," Hersman said.

Investigators say the damaged battery shows evidence of short-circuiting and a chemical reaction known as "thermal runaway," in which an increase in temperature causes progressively hotter temperatures.

It's not clear to investigators which came first, the short-circuiting or the thermal runaway, Hersman said. Nor is it clear yet what caused either of them, she said during a news briefing on the board's investigation.

The fire took place aboard a Japan Airlines 787 shortly after it landed at Logan International Airport on Jan. 7. All the passengers had left the craft, but a cleaning crew noticed smoke in the cabin 26 minutes after the plane arrived at its gate. It took firefighters nearly 40 minutes to put out a battery fire in the aircraft's rear auxiliary power unit.

Investigators are still dissecting the charred insides of the battery at the board's laboratory in Washington in an effort to piece together clues to the root cause of the fire. The focus of their painstaking work is a search for flaws in the battery that may have caused either the short-circuiting or thermal runaway.

The battery monitoring unit that might have provided answers was severely damaged in the blaze, Hersman said.

Investigators also tested the battery charger and another component related to charging. They found minor failures in both, but that would expected given the fire damage, officials said.

"We're still trying to determine the significance of those findings," Hersman said.

The Dreamliner, Boeing's newest and most technologically advanced airliner, was designed with safeguards aimed at preventing its two lithium ion batteries from catching fire, and containing a fire should one occur.
Former NTSB member John Goglia said Boeing is in limbo until the board can pinpoint the cause of both incidents.

"They've got to find the smoking gun," Goglia told The Seattle Times. "If there's no definitive cause, this airplane is going to be down for a while.”

"The expectation in aviation is to never experience a fire on board an aircraft, yet there were two battery failures on the 787 within two weeks," Hersman said. "We have to understand why this battery resulted in a fire when there were so many protections that were to be designed into the system."

After the battery fire in Boston, the Federal Aviation Administration ordered a review of the design, manufacture and assembly of the 787. On Jan. 16, after the second battery incident, the agency grounded the six 787s operated by U.S. carriers, all by United Airlines.

Authorities in Europe and elsewhere -- including Chile, Poland, Ethiopia, Qatar and India -- swiftly followed suit. Two Japanese airlines had voluntarily grounded their planes before FAA's order. Overall, 50 Dreamliners have been grounded worldwide.

NTSB investigators are working with the FAA and Boeing in the U.S., as well as with aviation regulators and manufacturers in Japan and France.
"There a tremendous amount of work going on around the world," Hersman said.

"We are working this issue tirelessly," Boeing said in a statement . Boeing has formed teams consisting of hundreds of engineering and technical experts who are working around the clock with the sole focus of resolving the issue and returning the 787 fleet to flight status, the company said in a statement Thursday.

The groundings have been a nightmare for Boeing, which competes with Airbus for the position of world's largest commercial aircraft maker. At the time of the groundings, Boeing had orders for more than 800 of the planes from airlines around the world attracted by the 787's increased fuel efficiency. The aircraft maker has said it has stopped delivering new planes to customers, although it is continuing to build them.

United received its first six 787s last year, and expects to get two more in the second half of this year, Jeff Smisek, the chairman, president, and CEO of United Continental Holdings Inc., said Thursday in a call with reporters.

"All new aircraft types have issues, and the 787 is no different. We continue to have confidence in the aircraft and in Boeing's ability to fix the issues, just as they have done on every new aircraft they have produced," Smisek said. United is working closely with Boeing and the FAA to return the plane to service, he said.

The 787 is the world's first airliner made mostly from lightweight composite materials. It also relies on electronic systems rather than hydraulic or mechanical systems to a greater degree than any other airliner. And it is the first airliner to make extensive use of lithium ion batteries, which are lighter, can hold more energy and are easier to fit into odd-shaped spaces in airplanes than other types of batteries.

The FAA certified the 787 battery system even though lithium ion batteries are more susceptible to catching fire when they overheat or short-circuit than other types of batteries.

Securaplane, an Arizona company that won a contract to design a battery charger unit for the Boeing 787, had a fire in November 2006 that ignited when the battery used by an engineering technician exploded during testing, destroying the firm's labs and production building, according to a summary of findings prepared by an administrative law judge who heard a whistleblower complaint filed by the technician. The technician went to court after he was fired.

Michael Leon, the technician, said he complained to his employer that the battery was damaged and unsafe and that there were discrepancies between the schematics and assembly documents used in building the battery charger. Administrative Law Judge William Dorsey, who heard Leon's complaint at trial, said in his ruling that one possible cause of the fire was Leon's misuse of the battery during testing.

The FAA investigated Leon's complaints in 2008 and 2009, the agency said in a statement. "The investigation determined that the battery charging units in the complaints were prototypes, and none are installed in Boeing 787 aircraft," the statement said. "Securaplane's production of a particular printed circuit board complied with FAA requirements."
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