Nolan Law Group: Q400 Turboprops Operated by Colgan Air Need to Be Grounded
Posted on: Friday, 20 February 2009, 12:06 CST
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) cannot assure the public that the airplane has been thoroughly tested before approval for airline service, that Colgan Air has the training procedures in place to assure that crews can safely fly in icing conditions, or that a crew of average ability (the FAA standard) can handle meteorological conditions of less-than-severe icing.
Until answers about the cause of the
"The FAA cannot tell us that this aircraft is safe," said
The concerns about this latest icing crash are many:
-- One factor common to all turboprop icing events is sudden wing drop. The uneven build-up of ice on areas of the wing unprotected by de-ice boots may be a factor. Contributing to the danger may be the differential activation of the de-ice boots. Further, the propwash from two engines rotating in the same direction can cause ice to accrete unevenly.
-- All of which adds up to an airplane vulnerable to stall prior to reaching published stall speeds or the speed at which lift-producing airflow over the wings is disrupted.
-- Further, the control yoke is equipped with a stick shaker to warn the flight crew of approach to stall. This critical safety feature likely did not activate in a timely manner in the Colgan Air crash. If the stick shaker did not activate soon enough to give the crew an opportunity to prevent a stall, the warning was therefore untimely and represents a design defect.
-- The crew's correct reaction to stick pusher activation is critical. Reportedly, stick pusher training was not provided to Colgan Air pilots. If this is so, the crews are not adequately trained to handle imminent stalls in icing conditions. Aircraft and crew deficiencies may combine with fatal effect.
-- Colgan Air is a new operator of the Dash 8-Q400, which means this is the first winter operating this model for most of the Colgan crews. The amount and type of simulator training and periodic updates on operations in icing conditions is unknown. Other global investigative bodies investigating icing- related mishaps have documented shortcomings in crew training and awareness. Until the NTSB investigation is complete, Colgan crews ought not be permitted to operate this aircraft in icing conditions.
-- Most icing-related crashes occur within the conditions prescribed by
the FAA for aircraft certification. This being the case, aircraft are
regularly dispatched to fly in conditions of less-than-severe icing where they
are vulnerable to crashing. For example, the 2005 icing related crash of a
Cessna Citation V business jet on approach to
-- For purposes of insuring the safety of the flying public, and until proven otherwise, we need to assume, as is likely the case, that the conditions on 12 February were not "severe" icing. Since airplanes have crashed in icing less than severe, an immediate precautionary halt to operations by Colgan Air of Dash 8-Q400s airplanes in icing conditions is necessary to forestall further tragedy.
Nolan Law Group has represented dozens of victims of icing-related crashes in recent years and has pre-eminent experience in the hazards associated with inadequate aircraft design and substandard crew training and awareness of ice- contaminated airplanes.
SOURCE Nolan Law Group
Source: PR Newswire
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