Author Topic: Lots of failures of front of engine/cowling on airliners these days  (Read 8264 times)


Offline DaveBB

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Re: Lots of failures of front of engine/cowling on airliners these days
« Reply #1 on: April 17, 2018, 03:37:57 PM »
Catastrophic engine failure.  One passenger in critical condition with head trauma.  Hope she makes it.

Hope this isn't a repeat of Sioux City Iowa, where a crack was missed six times during non-destructive testing on the fans.
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Offline Oldman731

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Re: Lots of failures of front of engine/cowling on airliners these days
« Reply #2 on: April 17, 2018, 04:24:32 PM »
Catastrophic engine failure.  One passenger in critical condition with head trauma.  Hope she makes it.


She didn't.

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Offline Vraciu

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Re: Lots of failures of front of engine/cowling on airliners these days
« Reply #3 on: April 17, 2018, 05:03:49 PM »
Catastrophic engine failure.  One passenger in critical condition with head trauma.  Hope she makes it.

Hope this isn't a repeat of Sioux City Iowa, where a crack was missed six times during non-destructive testing on the fans.

I don't see anything missing on the fan, but I can't see the inboard fan blades...

Looks like the cowling came off.   Must have hit the passenger window aft of the wing.
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Offline icepac

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Re: Lots of failures of front of engine/cowling on airliners these days
« Reply #4 on: April 17, 2018, 07:21:02 PM »
It can only be as good as the guy who secured the cowling.

Offline Busher

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Re: Lots of failures of front of engine/cowling on airliners these days
« Reply #5 on: April 17, 2018, 08:40:10 PM »
I don't see anything missing on the fan, but I can't see the inboard fan blades...

Looks like the cowling came off.   Must have hit the passenger window aft of the wing.

I think you should look again. The fan disk is no longer there
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Offline Vraciu

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Re: Lots of failures of front of engine/cowling on airliners these days
« Reply #6 on: April 17, 2018, 09:05:48 PM »
I think you should look again. The fan disk is no longer there

Uh.......  N1 fan...







Looks intact to me (what's visible).  Or am I seeing photos of another incident?

« Last Edit: April 17, 2018, 09:10:33 PM by Vraciu »
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Offline -aper-

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Offline Vraciu

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Re: Lots of failures of front of engine/cowling on airliners these days
« Reply #8 on: April 17, 2018, 10:42:13 PM »
Is the quick fix safe enough to be applied ?

(Image removed from quote.)


Shocked passenger films an engineer using TAPE for a quick fix on an easyJet engine

I bet he is putting 100-mile-an-hour tape over gap seal until it dries.

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Offline saggs

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Re: Lots of failures of front of engine/cowling on airliners these days
« Reply #9 on: April 18, 2018, 01:59:25 AM »
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NrSK7afoMjY

NTSB's first look, one blade gone.

Offline Vraciu

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Re: Lots of failures of front of engine/cowling on airliners these days
« Reply #10 on: April 18, 2018, 02:15:01 AM »
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NrSK7afoMjY

NTSB's first look, one blade gone.

That's what I was wondering.
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Offline Busher

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Re: Lots of failures of front of engine/cowling on airliners these days
« Reply #11 on: April 18, 2018, 07:15:50 AM »
Uh.......  N1 fan...


(Image removed from quote.)

(Image removed from quote.)

Sorry, you right. I had not seen that photo

Looks intact to me (what's visible).  Or am I seeing photos of another incident?
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Offline Ripsnort

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Re: Lots of failures of front of engine/cowling on airliners these days
« Reply #12 on: April 18, 2018, 09:44:02 AM »
Here is an article I found interesting from last year.
As you know, Boeing doesn't make engines. Customers select which brand they want.

Or in the case of Southwest, some bean counter said "Hey! Let's take those old engines off the old airframes, refurbish them, and hang then on our newer fleet!"
Cutting Costs Costs Lives!

http://www.mro-network.com/maintenance-repair-overhaul/southwest-uses-737-retirements-drop-costs

Southwest Airlines is phasing out its Boeing 737 Classic aircraft by about 2017 and is finding ways to use engine inventory from that fleet to decrease its maintenance costs.

Related: AJW And Engineering Of Russia Set Up Stock Base

Mandy Gower, Southwest Airlines’ powerplant supply chain manager, told Aviation Week that the airline employs MTU Canada and BP Aerospace in Irvine, Calif., to tear down its CFMI CFM56-3s that power the Classics. The airline just took the next step and selected Avioserv San Diego to consign the material. Avioserv, a company that specializes in the supply and sale of serviceable engines, will be Southwest’s sole consignment partner to feed used serviceable material back to the airline to decrease CFM56-3 engine overhaul costs. Several parts on the -3, which power Southwest’s 737-300/-400/-500 aircraft, are interchangeable with the CFMI CFM56-7, the engine on the 737-700. Avioserv also will market the excess engine inventory.


My buddy who flies 737 sleds for a competing airlines just sent this as a reply to my email about this incident:

Yep, they've been having an inordinately high number of engine issues. Word on the street is when they have an issue that less catastrophic, rather than report it as per regulations, they simply change out the engine without reporting. 

GE and Boeing recommend a 3 minute warmup and cool down period.  Meaning 3 minutes from start to takeoff thrust and 3 minutes from high power setting of reverse (landing) to shutdown on taxi to gate.  At least in the past, SWA never seemed to follow that guideline.  It's pretty important for the life of the engine. 

Also, ever wonder why SWA doesn't go to Hawaii?  It's because Thank God the FAA mandates very strict and lengthy engine monitoring and proof of reliability programs before permitting it.  SWA has had some serious 'documentation' issues in the not so distant past. 

It's just their business model.  Anyway, it doesn't really surprise me all that much, just a horrific tragedy for the poor fatality and their family as well as the trauma to all the other pax.  Of course, I can't say too much, my company killed everyone on board trying to save money on tail jackscrew grease and inspections.


For the record, SW has submitting FAA paperwork to begin flying to Hawaii. Something tells me they're going to be under scrutiny.

Offline Vraciu

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Re: Lots of failures of front of engine/cowling on airliners these days
« Reply #13 on: April 18, 2018, 11:44:26 AM »

Sorry, you right. I had not seen that photo


 :salute :cheers:
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Offline Vraciu

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Re: Lots of failures of front of engine/cowling on airliners these days
« Reply #14 on: April 18, 2018, 11:48:31 AM »
Ask your friend if that three minute limit is on a cold engine.   My jet is four minute warm-up on a cold engine (off for 90 minutes or more), two minutes warm-up for a hot engine, and one minute to cool down after landing.   
”KILLER V”
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