Wednesday, August 1 2012 9:26 AM EDT2012-08-01 13:26:46 GMT
The National Transportation Safety Board says investigators will dismantle the engine from a Boeing 787 that failed during a taxi test last weekend.More >>
The National Transportation Safety Board says investigators will dismantle the engine from a Boeing 787 that failed during a taxi test last weekend.More >>
Monday, July 30 2012 6:30 PM EDT2012-07-30 22:30:29 GMT
The National Transportation Safety Board continues to investigate a Boeing 787 engine issue that may have sparked a grass fire Saturday at Charleston International Airport.More >>
The National Transportation Safety Board continues to investigate a Boeing 787 engine issue that may have sparked a grass fire Saturday at Charleston International Airport.More >>
Sunday, July 29 2012 1:11 PM EDT2012-07-29 17:11:17 GMT
A fire at Charleston International Airport closed terminals for more than an hour Saturday afternoon.More >>
A fire at Charleston International Airport closed terminals for more than an hour Saturday afternoon, and the National Transportation Safety Board is working to determine if debris from a Boeing 787 Dreamliner was the cause.More >>
CHARLESTON, S.C. (WCIV) -- The National Transportation Safety Board has released an update on the investigation into the GE engine malfunction from a Boeing 787 that started a grass fire at the Charleston International Airport.
The release is as follows:
WASHINGTON – The National
Transportation Safety Board continues its investigation of the July 28, 2012
contained engine failure that occurred on a Boeing 787 Dreamliner during a
pre-delivery taxi test in Charleston, South Carolina. A contained engine failure
is a specific engine design feature in which components might separate inside
the engine but either remain within the engine's cases or exit the engine
through the tail pipe. This design feature generally does not pose immediate
safety risks.
Last week, the NTSB sent an investigator to the scene to
gather information on the incident and subsequently launched a full
investigation into the cause of the failure, led by NTSB Investigator-in-Charge,
Mr. David Helson.
On August 1, 2012, a team of experts from the NTSB,
FAA, Boeing and GE Aviation specializing in engine systems and metallurgy
traveled to a GE facility in Cincinnati, OH to disassemble and examine the
failed GEnx engine. GE is the manufacturer of the GEnx engine. The parties to
the investigation have been extremely cooperative in assisting NTSB personnel in
its review and assessment.
As a result of the investigative work to
date, the NTSB has determined that a fan mid-shaft on the failed GEnx engine
fractured at the forward end of the shaft, rear of the threads where the
retaining nut is installed. The fan mid-shaft is undergoing several detailed
examinations including dimensional and metallurgical inspections.
The
GEnx engine is a newly designed aircraft engine. It is a "dual shaft" engine,
meaning that one shaft connects the compressor spool at one end to the high
pressure turbine spool at the other end. A longer "fan shaft" connects the fan
and booster in the front of the engine to the low pressure turbine in the back.
The cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder, which is a combined
unit on the 787 Dreamliner, was transported to the agency's Recorders Laboratory
in Washington, DC for processing and readout. Both recordings captured the event
and analysis is ongoing.
Moving forward, investigators will continue the
detailed examination of the engine and metallurgical analysis of its components.
The investigators have also begun reviewing the engine manufacturing and
assembly records.
This investigation is ongoing. The information
released today is factual in nature and does not include any analysis.
Additional factual information may be released as it is developed.
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