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By
Dominic Gates
Seattle Times aerospace reporter
The preliminary investigation into the crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 last month revealed Thursday that pilots began fighting the Boeing 737 MAX’s new automatic flight-control system barely a minute after leaving the ground, after a sensor failed shortly after takeoff.
Boeing Chief Executive Dennis Muilenburg reacted with a statement from the Renton 737 factory expressing “the immense gravity of these events across our company,” and acknowledging the role the new Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System, or MCAS, played in the crash.
“As pilots have told us, erroneous activation of the MCAS function can add to what is already a high-workload environment. It’s our responsibility to eliminate this risk,” Muilenburg said. “We own it and we know how to do it.”
The “black box” flight-recorder data shows that after MCAS swiveled the plane’s horizontal tail to push the nose sharply down three times in succession, the pilots hit the cut-off switches stopping the automatic action and tried to adjust the tail manually, according to the report by the Accident Investigation Bureau of Ethiopia’s Transport Ministry.
In doing so, they were following instructions provided by Boeing last November, following the crash of Lion Air Flight 610, on how to deal with such an inadvertent triggering of the new flight-control system.
Ahead of the release of the full report, Ethiopian Transport Minister Dagmawit Moges held a news conference in the capital, Addis Ababa, that was almost entirely focused on vindicating the actions of the pilots. “The crew performed all the procedures repeatedly provided by the manufacturer but was not able to control the aircraft,” she said.
The report says that while trying to follow Boeing’s directions, about three minutes into the flight, the two pilots found that the manual system for moving the horizontal tail — also known as the stabilizer — “was not working.” This meant they couldn’t move the large stabilizer wheel in the cockpit that is connected via cables to the tail.
Flight-control experts told The Seattle Times earlier this week that was probably because the forces on the tail of the plane moving at high speed — at that point, the airspeed was higher than the jet’s maximum operating speed limit — made it next to physically impossible to move the stabilizer wheel as Boeing had recommended.
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In previous models of the 737, the two cutoff switches for the stabilizer had different functions and it was possible to flip one that turned off automatic, noncommanded movement while not flipping the other, which would allow the pilot to continue to move the stabilizer with the thumb switches.
But on the MAX, the two cutoff switches have the same function; one is simply a backup to the other. These switches now cut all power to the motor that moves the stabilizer. So they cut off not only automatic movements not commanded by the pilot, including MCAS, but also the ability of the pilot to move the tail electrically.
More here:
https://www.seattletimes.com/busine...ts-fight-against-the-737-max-flight-controls/