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Written by Reuters
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Friday, 24 March 2006 |
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U.S. board urges new checks of some Airbus rudders
March 25, 2006
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. safety investigators issued an urgent
recommendation on Friday for new rudder inspections on certain Airbus
jetliners.
 Airbus A300-600 (Photo: Airbus)
The recommendation to the Federal Aviation Administration covers
A300-600 aircraft, a wide body jet used in passenger and cargo service.
The National Transportation Safety Board estimates 400 A300-600 models
are in service worldwide.
The recommendation for checks of the rudder's composite skin stemmed
from an inspection of a FedEx Corp. A300-600 rudder after it was
damaged during maintenance last November.
"The board noted that this incident might have applicability to a more
serious rudder separation that occurred last year," investigators said.
"The board believes that this urgent recommendation, if acted upon
quickly, will go a long way to prevent a catastrophic failure of the
rudder," said Mark Rosenker, the acting safety board chairman.
Airbus notified airlines three weeks ago of potential problems with the
rudder's inner skin and urged inspections within six months or 500
flights. But the safety board wants the checks immediately and wants
the FAA to make them mandatory.
In addition to FedEx, No. 1 American Airlines also flies the A300
series. An American A300-600 crashed in New York in November 2001,
killing 265 people, after its tail fin snapped off.
Investigators mainly centered on the pilot's aggressive rudder use in
that crash and rudder system design. But a good part of the probe
focused on the durability of composites and other materials used in
construction of the tail fin. No problems were found.
A rudder is a vertical panel on the back edge of the tail fin that
swings from side to side to help maintain lateral control of an
aircraft. |
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Last Updated ( Friday, 24 March 2006 )
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