Plane that Crashed in Brazil Was Flying with Broken Equipment For Days

Wing of Airbus that exploded As revealed by Jornal Nacional, Brazil's main prime-time TV news program, and confirmed by TAM Airlines, the Airbus that exploded in São Paulo after a failed landing, killing all 186 aboard plus  an unknown number of people on the ground, was flying with a fault in the equipment which was meant to slow the jet down.

The A320 plane had its right-side reverse thruster broken at least since Friday, July 13. On July 16, a Monday, the day before the tragedy, the aircraft had had trouble stopping and almost went off the runway at the same Congonhas airport. The trouble with the A320 had been detected by the plane's electronic checking system.

TAM's president, Marco Antonio Bologna, and the airline's vice president Ruy Amparo confirmed that the reverse thruster wasn't working and had been turned off. According to them, however, this didn't represent any danger to the plane, since the jet's manual in these cases only recommend that the failed equipment be checked in ten days, but doesn't tell to stop flying the aircraft.

Bologna and Amparo, however, didn't confirm the information given by Jornal Nacional that the Airbus had trouble landing the day before the crash. According to the news show, the A320 commander had told airport authorities that the tarmac was slippery and that he had a hard time trying to stop the plane upon landing on July 16.

It was about 6:45 pm on Tuesday when the Airbus that had taken off at 5:16 pm from Porto Alegre in the South of Brazil, tried to land in Congonhas and instead skidded off the runway crossing the busy Washington Luí­s avenue and slamming into a TAM building where some employees were working at the time. The plane burst into flames which spread to neighboring structures. 188 deaths have been confirmed until now, but the work of rescuing bodies continues.

In 1996, a reverse thruster failure was pointed as the reason for another crash in the same airport. At that time, a Fokker-100 also belonging to TAM crashed over a residential area, a few seconds after takeoff. killing 99 people.

The failure of a reverse thruster is always a security risk, according to Roberto da Mota Girardi, a professor of aerodynamics at the renowned Aeronautics Technological Institute (ITA). "This is dangerous," Girardi told reporters, "especially in a short tarmac as the one in Congonhas.".

A plane without a reverse thruster would need a bigger runway to stop, informed the ITA professor. "I'm not familiar with the Airbus's operation manual or the details of TAM's maintenance system, but it seems odd that they would allow a period of ten days to evaluate the problem."

The reverse thruster is the aircraft's main brake during landing. When it's turned on the plane's turbines flow is inverted, causing the aircraft to quickly lower its speed.  Only then the landing gear's mechanical brake system is activated.

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil’s Indians and Farmers Find a Common Cause

For the first time, Brazilian indians and farmers are getting mobilized to save the ...

While Bottles Rained Brazilian Antonio Adolfo Helped Grow Bossa Nova

Cool, swaying, seductive and sophisticated, a new sound emerged fifty years ago at the ...

Number of Brazilians Dead in Haiti Earthquake Rises to 20

In Brazil, spokespersons for the Brazilian Air Force (FAB) have denied any problems with ...

Opposition in Brazil Wants Head of Finance Minister

Brazilian opposition party PSDB (Party of the Brazilian Social Democracy) filed a motion in ...

The Pataxó Front

"It is not an easy task to deal with gunmen and recover what we ...

LETTERS

An old-time resident of Diadema tell his side of the story. By Brazzil Magazine ...

Brazil Gathers Its Food to Show in Paris

The International Business Center (CIN) at the Federation of Industries of the State of ...

Market Goes Up While Brazil Follows Probe on Vote-Buying Scheme

Brazilian and Latin American markets powered higher, while investors ignored mixed market movement in ...

Rio’s Killing Floods a Once-in-5-Centuries Event, Say Brazilian Experts

Brazil’s rains of January 12, followed by flooding and mudslides that killed over 900 ...

Ethanol: With an American Friend Like This Brazil Needs No Enemies

In a recent letter to President Obama, the Republican Senator from Iowa, Charles Grassley, ...