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Continental Airlines Crash Update
The latest from the Continental Airlines B-737 accident at Denver is the claim that a sudden gust of wind caused the aircraft... [more]

Continental 737 Crash at Denver
In my opinion, the Boeing 737 still does not have a reliably redundant rudder control system, and even after hundreds of deaths... [more]

Air China Boeing 737 Déjà vu of TWA 800
An Air China Boeing 737 Next Generation airliner recently pulled up to the gate, caught fire, and moments after the... [more]

Boeing 737 Needs A Reliably Redundant Rudder
Statements made by the FAA in response to the Safety Recommendation are frightening. For example, the 737 is the only... [more]

NTSB Investigation of Boeing 737 Too Long
Not only did it take too long, but from statements issued by both the NTSB and the Federal Aviation Administration...
[more]

Boeing Modifies Unsafe 737 Rudder Control
What the NTSB, the FAA and Boeing are conceding now is that the airplane's rudder control is unsafe... [more]

The Boeing 737 - How Safe Are These Planes?
What the public doesn't know is that these have not been isolated incidents. Actually, there have been hundreds of unexpected...
[more]

FAA is Missing the Boat
Wolk says the FAA's recent suggestion for pilots to switch off the yaw damper when uncommanded rudder movement occur... [more]

 
 

Commentaries :: 737 Incidents

FAA Is Missing The Boat

Before anybody else gets killed 2 simple changes may protect public when, as FAA now admits in USAir 427, the rudder was to blame

PHILADELPHIA - (January 25, 1995) - "It's incomprehensible, says nationally-known aviation litigator, pilot and spokesperson for aviation safety, Arthur A. Wolk, "that the FAA today finally admitted the rudder played a likely role in the Pittsburgh USAIR crash, but does not know why. (The FAA previously certified the Boeing 737 and its rudder control system.) Anyone who has studied the Pittsburgh crash, and its striking similarity to the United 585 Colorado Springs crash, can point to the rudder as the most likely cause, and provide two simple interim solutions.

"What happened, on September 8th, was the airplane's power control unit (PCU) design flaw stuck again. When the yaw damper signaled the PCU to move the rudder, the unit activated the rudder to compensate, to a limit of 2 to 4 degrees. But that 2 to 4 degree limit doesn't work, because in both Pittsburgh and Colorado Springs, the unit overreacted and went into full deflection, causing the airplane to roll over."

Wolk says the FAA's recent suggestion for pilots to switch off the yaw damper when uncommanded rudder movement occur, is too late. "The rudder can move into full deflection within seconds and the pilot doesn't have a chance. If the rudder moves 18 degrees, the airplane rolls over and dives."

"Before more innocent passengers are killed, and before the PCU is redesigned, the FAA should mandate two mechanical adjustments. First, the authority of rudder movement must be limited to less than 18 degrees. Second, pilots must be given sufficient means to control the roll by training them to increase power to the "down" wing engine, reduce power to the "up" wing engine, and use the ailerons on the wing opposite to the direction of the roll.


 
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