home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1995
/
TIME Almanac 1995.iso
/
time
/
103194
/
10319916.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1995-01-31
|
6KB
|
119 lines
<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>