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- <text id=94TT1489>
- <title>
- Oct. 31, 1994: Air Safety:A Bump in the Sky
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 31, 1994 New Hope for Public Schools
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- AIR SAFETY, Page 37
- A Bump in the Sky
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Did wake vortex contribute to the crash of USAir Flight 427?
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe--Reported by Jerry Hannifin/Boise, John Moody/New York and Edwin
- M. Reingold/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> When USAir Flight 427 plunged from the sky on Sept. 8, none
- of the 127 passengers or five crew members survived to help
- explain what might have triggered the 6,000-ft. nose dive. Nor
- have investigators found evidence of wing, rudder or engine
- failure in the charred rubble of the 737 jet. That leaves little
- to explain the tragedy except a "bump"--a sudden airspeed
- increase detected by the plane's flight-data recorder. Wind
- has been ruled out, since only a 7-m.p.h. breeze was evident
- that evening. And earlier reports of the cry "Traffic!" on the
- cockpit voice recorder have proved false. So what was it? Some
- aviation experts speculate that the bump in the sky may have
- been caused by the air turbulence created by the jet that preceded
- Flight 427 into Pittsburgh International Airport.
- </p>
- <p> While still unproved, the hypothesis is stirring a debate about
- an aeronautical phenomenon called wake vortex. That dry bit
- of technical jargon refers to the rotating, high-energy tornadoes
- that spiral behind and downward from the wing tips of an aircraft.
- Such turbulence behaves much like the wake of a ship: the heavier
- the vessel's displacement weight, the more violent and long
- lasting the disturbance. In air, as on water, if a craft trails
- this whirling vortex too closely, it can be buffeted brutally.
- For more than a decade the National Transportation Safety Board,
- which investigates accidents, has exhorted the Federal Aviation
- Administration to be more aggressive in studying, monitoring
- and regulating the way following aircraft navigate wake vortex.
- Now, even if such turbulence fails to account for Flight 427's
- crash, the Safety Board has trained sufficient attention on
- wake vortex to prod the FAA into action.
- </p>
- <p> Wake vortex began to emerge as the prime suspect early this
- month, after a Safety Board member told reporters that the NTSB
- was trying to determine the effect the bump had on Flight 427's
- controls and crew. Last week the board was more cautious. "This
- is an ongoing investigation," said spokesman Mike Benson. "No
- probable cause has emerged yet."
- </p>
- <p> The Safety Board is under considerable pressure to offer a plausible
- explanation for Flight 427's demise. Aviation experts--not
- to mention airline passengers--hate a mystery. Since 1967,
- the board has succeeded in finding a probable cause for all
- but three air disasters. On average, such investigations take
- a year. The rush in this instance owes much to the magnitude
- of the human toll, the largest in the U.S. since 1987, when
- a Northwest Airlines crash claimed 156 lives. The tragedy also
- involved a Boeing 737, the most common of all passenger jetliners.
- Moreover, there is an eerie resemblance between the September
- catastrophe and the March 1991 crash of United Airlines Flight
- 585 near Colorado Springs, Colorado. In both instances the 737s
- banked abruptly, rolled belly-up, then plummeted vertically.
- The cause of Flight 585's crash has never been established.
- </p>
- <p> For now, the evidence supporting the wake-vortex theory is thin.
- As Flight 427 approached the airport, it was following a Delta
- Airlines 727, a heavier Boeing plane that generates a slightly
- stronger wake. Flight 427 trailed the other jet by 4.1 nautical
- miles, well within the FAA regulation that requires two planes
- of such weights to maintain a separation of 3 nautical miles.
- If the 727 wake did jostle the 737 sufficiently to contribute
- to the latter's plunge, it would be a first. While 727s were
- the lead craft in seven of the 52 wake-vortex encounters documented
- by the NTSB from 1983 through 1993, all of those incidents--some merely unsettling, some disastrous--involved much lighter
- trailing aircraft.
- </p>
- <p> The Safety Board's most recent warning about wake vortex, issued
- in February, concentrates on the turbulence stirred by the heavier
- 757, whose wake has upset or downed seven planes--among them
- a 737. The NTSB called upon the FAA to reclassify the 757 so
- that other craft must follow at greater distances during takeoffs
- and landings. The FAA has yet to act. Canada, however, upped
- the classification of the 757 from "large" to "heavy" earlier
- this year; Britain made a similar change last year by carving
- out a new category to accommodate the 757.
- </p>
- <p> Air-safety watchdogs have been frustrated by the FAA's slow
- response to their repeated calls over the years for rules requiring
- pilots to report wake-vortex incidents more thoroughly. "The
- FAA has got to develop a sense of urgency where wake-vortex
- phenomena are concerned," says Jerome Lederer, founder of the
- Flight Safety Foundation in Arlington, Virginia. At the same
- time, however, the FAA has been urged by cash-strapped airlines
- to reduce the separation distances between landing airplanes
- so that carriers can turn the planes around faster to make more
- flights.
- </p>
- <p> Long paralyzed by these competing demands, the FAA is at last
- responding to safety concerns. Last month the agency established
- a special office that will devise a system to catalog and analyze
- turbulence data. Prodded by other organizations in the flying
- community, pilots have begun reporting about five wake-vortex
- incidents a month. Participants predict that a more complete
- network, which is expected to be operating by next February,
- will catalog quite a few more.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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-