...the Indonesian 737 pilots appear to have gotten a big one. Yikes.
"Boeing Co. BA -2.11% withheld information about potential hazards associated with a new flight-control feature suspected of playing a role in last month’s fatal Lion Air jet crash, according to safety experts involved in the investigation, as well as midlevel FAA officials and airline pilots.
The automated stall-prevention system on Boeing 737 MAX 8 and MAX 9 models—intended to help cockpit crews avoid mistakenly raising a plane’s nose dangerously high—under unusual conditions can push it down unexpectedly and so strongly that flight crews can’t pull it back up. Such a scenario, Boeing told airlines in a world-wide safety bulletin roughly a week after the accident, can result in a steep dive or crash—even if pilots are manually flying the jetliner and don’t expect flight-control computers to kick in.
The Boeing 737 Max 8 features a new stall-prevention system that may have contributed to crash of Lion Air flight 610.
Erroneous information sent from data probes to the plane's flight control system may have triggered a sharp descent.
If the sensor reading shows the nose of the plane is rising too far, the automatic stall-prevention kicks in, pushing the nose down.
But on the Lion Air flight, the faulty data may have activated the system even though the nose wasn't rising. Pilots would have had to quickly switch off the system to recover.
That warning came as a surprise to many pilots who fly the latest models for U.S carriers. Safety experts involved in and tracking the investigation said that at U.S. carriers, neither airline managers nor pilots had been told such a system had been added to the latest 737 variant—and therefore aviators typically weren’t prepared to cope with the possible risks.
“It’s pretty asinine for them to put a system on an airplane and not tell the pilots who are operating the airplane, especially when it deals with flight controls,” said Capt. Mike Michaelis, chairman of the safety committee for the Allied Pilots Association, which represents about 15,000 American Airlines pilots. “Why weren’t they trained on it?”
https://www.wsj.com/articles/boeing-withheld-information-on-737-model-according-to-safety-experts-and-others-1542082575?mod=hp_lista_pos1- oldman