A critical sensor linked to the 2 fatal Boeing 737 Max crashes had been flagged to the FAA more than 200 times, report claims
- A widely-used sensor that malfunctioned in two fatal Boeing 737 Max crashes has been flagged to the FAA more than 200 times since 2004, a CNN analysis found.
- 216 incident reports outlined cases where the angle of attack sensor - which measures a plane's orientation in the sky - failed or had to be replaced or fixed.
- About one fifth of those incidents involved Boeing aircraft, CNN reported.
- Boeing received instructions about the sensor from the FAA and may have been aware of the issue but did not run a test flight with a malfunctioning sensor, according to CNN.
- Experts also criticized the design of the 737 Max for relying on just one sensor, though Boeing said it was "considered acceptable in such cases by our industry."
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A sensor linked to two fatal Boeing 737 Max crashes was flagged with the Federal Aviation Administration more than 200 times between 2004 and the crashes, according to an analysis by CNN.
The angle of attack (AOA) sensor, which measures a plane's angle in the sky, was flagged in 216 incident reports to the FAA. These reports outlined cases where the sensor failed or had to be replaced or fixed, and in some cases the planes had to make emergency landings.
The more than 200 reports included incidents where the sensors were "frozen, improperly installed, struck by lightning or even hit by flying birds," CNN said.
Around one fifth of these cases involved Boeing planes, the report said, adding that Boeing did not do a test flight to trial a case where the sensor was acting in error.
Boeing also may have been aware of the "potential for the sensors to cause problems in its planes" after the FAA sent instructions about some of its planes that had the sensor before the 737 Max was released, according to CNN.
The preliminary reports into two fatal crashes involving the Boeing planes - a Lion Air crash in October 2018 and an Ethiopian Airlines crash in March 2019 - found that the angle of attack sensor gave erroneous data.
Boeing confirmed in April that an erroneous AOA sensor reading triggered the plane's automated Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System (MCAS) anti-stall software.
The system is designed to prevent the aircraft from stalling by automatically pointing the nose down if it detects the plane is climbing too sharply, but the pilots in both crashes were unable to stop the nose from pointing down, and the planes ultimately crashed.
While it has defend its design, Boeing is currently working on an update for the 737 Max that will make the MCAS software less intrusive, and will take a reading from more than one sensor. The planes will not be allowed to return to the skies until this update is approved by the FAA and other regulators around the world.
The 737 Max relied on a single sensor
Peter Goelz, a former managing director of the US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), told CNN that the sensor is "a fairly simple external device that can get damaged on a regular basis."
"That's important because Boeing made the decision to rely on them as single sources for streams of data," he said.
Peter Lemme, a former Boeing flight-controls engineer, told CNN that the plane should have had "a fail-safe design" that "relied on two inputs to make sure that you weren't sensitive to one failure."
Lemme previously told Bloomberg that relying on a single sensor can cause a number of problems because it ends up informing multiple systems on a plane.
But a Boeing spokesperson defended the decision to use a single sensor to CNN: "Single sources of data are considered acceptable in such cases by our industry."
Peter DeFazio, the chair of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, told CNN that his committee's investigation into the 737 Max will look at how its software relied on a single sensor.
Boeing's spokesperson also repeated the company's assertion that the 737 Max and its software were certified with all of the FAA's requirements and that Boeing had concluded from its work on the plane that pilots would be able to control the plane if the sensor malfunctioned and they followed Boeing's emergency procedures.
Boeing and Ethiopian investigations, which had help from the US, have presented contrasting views of the pilots' actions.
Ethiopia's transport minister said that the preliminary report showed the crew "repeatedly" followed Boeing's procedures and still couldn't control the plane. Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg, however, said pilots did not "completely" follow emergency procedures.
Muilenburg defended the plane's design on Monday at Boeing's annual meeting, where he said that there was not a "technical slip or gap" in the plane. He pledged to make the plane safer, and said it would be one of the world's safest aircraft when it returns to the skies.
You can read CNN's full story about the AOA sensors here.