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Fuel switches on the grounded Air India plane were found to be in compliance with Indian regulations

India's aviation regulator announced on Tuesday that the fuel switches on a grounded Air India Dreamliner were satisfactory after a pilot had reported a possible problem with the mechanism. Fuel switches were the cause of an Air India Dreamliner crash last year, which killed 260 people and led to a tighter examination of the airline. Switches regulate the flow of jet fuel to a plane's engine. Air India announced on Monday that it had grounded the Boeing Dreamliner after a pilot reported an alleged defect in the fuel control switch. The plane was scheduled to fly between London and Bengaluru. The regulator stated that during engine start in London the switch did not latch correctly under light vertical force on two occasions, before latching properly on the third. The regulator added that "the pull to unlock force on the fuel control switch was tested using the recommended procedures... and found within limits." Air India was instructed by the regulator to share with pilots Boeing's recommended procedure for operating the switches. Air India owned by Singapore Airlines and Tata Group had begun to 'check fuel switches on their fleet of Dreamliners following the pilot report, but they had found no problems so far.

According to Flightradar24, Air India has 33 Dreamliners.

According to a memo from Manish Uppal (Air India's head for flight operations), the airline's engineers had escalated the issue to Boeing earlier, requesting a "priority evaluation" of the switch defect.

A spokesperson for Air India did not respond immediately to a comment request. Reporting by Abhijith Gaapavaram and Aditya Kahra. Tom Hogue, Mark Potter and Tom Hogue edited the report.

(source: Reuters)