Latest News

FAA says 787 Boeing fuel-control unit is not malfunctioning after Air India crash

The head of Federal Aviation Administration stated on Thursday that the fatal crash of an Air India Boeing 777 jet last month does not appear caused by a technical issue or accidental movement of the fuel-control unit or switches.

Bryan Bedford, FAA administrator, told journalists on the sidelines an airshow in Wisconsin that it does not appear to be a technical issue with the Boeing Fuel Control Unit.

He stated that FAA employees removed the units, tested them, and inspectors were sent to inspect them on board aircraft. He said that he was confident the fuel control system had not been manipulated inadvertently.

The investigation into the Air India crash that killed 241 out of 242 passengers on board, and 19 people on the ground is focusing on the fuel-control switches of the Boeing 787 aircraft.

The switches regulate fuel flow into aircraft engines. They allow pilots to manually shut down or start them on the ground or to intervene in case of engine failures during flight.

Air India announced on Tuesday that it had completed precautionary checks of the fuel control switches locking mechanisms on all 787 aircraft and 737 aircraft. No issues were detected.

The Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau of India released a preliminary report earlier this month that found the switches were almost simultaneously switched from "run" into "cutoff", shortly after takeoff. This caused the engines to lose their power.

reported last

Citing a source, we are citing this week

The cockpit recording of the Air India flight between Ahmedabad and London Gatwick suggests that the captain may have cut fuel to the engine. (Reporting and editing by Franklin Paul, Leslie Adler and David Shepardson)

(source: Reuters)