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Air India Express flight 812: An investigation gone hauntingly wrong
| Sun, May 22 2011 11:12pm IST 1 | ||
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Harsh Singh 184 Posts |
When Air
India’s Jumbo Jet Emperor Kanishka exploded mid-flight and got
scattered in Atlantic near Ireland cost on June 23, 1985, the
investigators had a gigantic task at hand. The Royal Canadian
Mounted Police of Canada organised dives in excess of 7,000 feet in
1985, 1989 and 1991 to collect wreckage from the ocean floor, to
pick up the aircraft debris scattered across the ocean floor.The
numerous parts recovered from the thousands of squire meters
beneath the sea by where all cleaned, numbered and shipped to a
facility in Ireland where they were all kept for more than two
decades. The recovered parts were latter arranged to re-create the
shape of the aircraft, to find out what exactly caused the
explosion.
In case of Pan American World Airways’ Pan Am Flight 103 that was disintegrated in an explosion many thousands of feet above southern Scotland, on 21 December 1988 too, the same procedure repeated. Only that, the recovery of parts of size ranging from a few cm to many meters from the acres of barren land of Lockerbie village was comparatively easy. More than 10,000 pieces of debris were retrieved, tagged and entered into a computer tracking system. The fuselage of the aircraft was reconstructed by air accident investigators, revealing a 20-inch (510 mm) hole consistent with an explosion in the forward cargo hold. Here in India too, the air crash investigators are obliged to conduct the same exercise. As per the Procedure Manualof Accident/ incident investigation, published by DGCA (Issue I rev 2 dated 5.10.2006), the reconstruction of the aircraft with all the debris collected carefully from the crash is mandatory. Rule 9.7.2:
The care with which the parts are to handled is much too clear from the following rules 9.17.2.1
9.17.2.2:
The many visits I could make to the crash site of Air India
Express Flight 812 and the nearby Mangalore airport during the
months of May, June and July 2010 had made one thing much too
clear.
Fiza, a local construction firm was hired to do the job and they
heaped the picked up parts in lorries and then dumped on an open
platform near the new terminal of Mangalore airport. According to
an official of Fiza, the total weight of the debris recovered
from the crash site was just 16 tonnes.It may be remembered that
the total empty weight of a Boeing 737-800 is 41 tonnes. To
assume that 25 tonnes of a flying machine which was mostly metal
and fire resistant composites were consumed by fire, one would
need wildest of imaginations. Now we may read this sacred rule 6.5.2:
The Court of Inquiry that landed again at Mangalore on June 13,
2010, had done a scientific examination of the ‘reconstructed’
aircraft, the media people were told, though none of them were
ever allowed near the ‘reconstruction’. It was while examining these 16 tonnes of the 41 that a member of the CoI team noticed the downward position of the flap locator, a finger sized metallic switch in cockpit used to move the flaps in the wings. The reason for the aircraft to generate not enough lift to take off in the last moment was becoming clear then. The panicked pilots must have forgotten to to push up the switch. If a finger sized metallic part could have spoken so much about the crash, imagine the sheer volume of the precious evidence the scrap metal collectors of Mangalore merrily sold in numerous shops scattered across the city? |
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