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Air India pilots call for grounding of Boeing 787s after unexpected safety incident

Air India pilots call for grounding of Boeing 787s after unexpected safety incident
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CEO Kelly Ortberg | Boeing

A Boeing 787-8 operated by Air India landed at Birmingham Airport in the United Kingdom with its Ram Air Turbine (RAT) unexpectedly deployed, according to reports from this past weekend. The incident occurred on Flight AI117, which departed Sri Guru Ram Dass Jee International Airport and arrived in Birmingham just after 19:00 on October 4. The deployment of the RAT was not known to the flight crew during the flight.

The RAT is a device intended to provide emergency power to critical systems if primary power sources fail. It is not designed to deploy unless there is a loss of hydraulic or electrical power, and such an event should be clearly indicated to pilots via cockpit displays.

Following this occurrence, Air India pilots and other commercial flight crews across India have called for all Boeing 787 Dreamliners to undergo electrical inspections before further flights. Pilot unions are demanding that the entire fleet be grounded until each aircraft is confirmed safe.

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This concern follows a fatal crash involving Air India Flight AI171 in June, where investigators also found that the RAT had been incorrectly deployed prior to the accident. That crash remains under investigation, with possible causes including both mechanical failure and pilot error. Data from recovered black boxes suggested issues with fuel system controls and indicated that flaps may not have been deployed during landing.

Captain Charanvir Singh Randhawa, President of the Federation of Indian Pilots, commented on the recent incident: “I have never heard of the RAT being deployed automatically without any hydraulic loss, power loss or failures.”

Multiple agencies are involved in investigating these incidents. India's Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau leads efforts with support from counterparts in the UK, Portugal, Canada’s AAIB, and America’s National Transportation Safety Board. Technical experts from GE and Boeing are also participating.

Preliminary findings link Saturday's incident with elements observed in June's fatal crash, raising concerns about potential systemic issues within some Boeing 787 aircraft. However, only early-stage investigations have been made public so far; no definitive cause has yet been established.

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