DGCA directs airlines to check fuel switches of Boeing planes after Air India crash report

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New Delhi, July 14: The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has instructed airlines to carry out checks on the locking mechanism of fuel control switches of Boeing aircraft in their fleets.

The move comes in the wake of the preliminary investigation report into last month’s tragic Air India Boeing Dreamliner crash at Ahmedabad, in which 260 people were killed. One of the key findings of the Air Accidents Investigation Bureau’s preliminary report on the crash was that the twin engines of the ill-fated Boeing plane shut down seconds after take-off as the fuel supply was cut off.

The report raised fresh concerns over the aircraft’s engine fuel cutoff switches, as they transitioned from ‘Run’ to ‘Cutoff’ just 3 seconds after take-off. The cockpit voice recording of the crashed plane revealed one pilot asking the other: “Why did you cut off?” to which his colleague replied: “I didn’t.”

The AAIB report also mentions FAA’s 2018 bulletin that had warned of a potential malfunction of the fuel control switches, manufactured by US-based Honeywell, in a few Boeing models such as the 737s which also use the same switches. The bulletin recommended that carriers operating Boeing models, including the Dreamliner, inspect the locking mechanism of the fuel cut-off switches — a step not taken by Air India, according to the AAIB report. Air India informed investigators that it did not carry out suggested inspections as they were “advisory” in nature and not “mandatory”.

However, after the Air India crash, some airlines, such as Emirates, that have Boeing planes in their fleets, are reported to be carrying out checks on the fuel switch locking mechanism on their own after the crash as part of enhanced safety measures.

Meanwhile, the USA’s Federal Aviation Administration has informed civil aviation authorities of other countries that fuel control switch designs, including the locking feature, installed in Boeing planes, including the Dreamliner involved in the Air India crash at Ahmedabad, are safe. The US aviation safety regulator has stated that no airworthiness directive is deemed necessary for Boeing operators at this time.

–IANS

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