Air France Overhauls Air Speed Sensors
Airline Replaces Instruments On Entire Fleet Long-Haul Aircraft In Wake Of Flight 447 Crash
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Workers unload debris, belonging to crashed Air France flight 447, from the Brazilian Navy's Constitution Frigate in the port of Recife, northeast of Brazil, June 14, 2009. (AP Photo/Eraldo Peres)
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Timeline Air France Flight 447 A look into the events surrounding the jet's disappearance

- Air France Overhauls Air Speed Sensors
- Air France Crash Search Yields More Bodies
- IDs Of Victims Could Prove Jet Broke Up
- Sub Hunts For Flt. 447 Black Boxes
- Probers: Flight 447's Autopilot Was Off
- Crash Prompts Call For Black Box Reforms
- Beyond Radar's Edge, Planes On Their Own
- Families Pay Tribute To Air France Victims
- Victims' Nationalities
- Timeline
Investigators looking into the crash of Air France Flight 447 last month have so far focused on the possibility that external speed monitors - called Pitot tubes - iced over and gave false readings to the plane's computers.
Air France pledged to replace older models of the Pitots on its A330 and A340 planes by the end of this month, after pilots complained that the change, which began in May, was not proceeding quickly enough.
Eric Derivry, a spokesman for the SNPL pilot's union, said Monday the entire fleet is now equipped with the newer sensors.
Flight 447 was carrying 228 people from Rio de Janeiro to Paris on May 31 when it ran into fierce thunderstorms. Brazilian authorities say they have retrieved 44 bodies. Another six have been pulled from the Atlantic by French ships.
Over the weekend, it was revealed that a burst of last-minute automatic messages sent by the plane includes one about a problem with a rudder safety device. But that does not explain what sent the jet plunging into the Atlantic Ocean, an aviation expert says.
The industry official, who has knowledge of the Air France investigation, told The Associated Press that a transcript of the messages posted on the Web site EuroCockpit is authentic but inconclusive.
One of the 24 automatic messages sent from the plane minutes before it disappeared points to a problem in the "rudder limiter," a mechanism that limits how far the plane's rudder can move. The nearly intact vertical stabilizer - which includes the rudder - was fished out of the water by Brazilian searchers.
"There is a lot of information, but not many clues," the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to discuss the matter.
The official said jets like the Airbus A330 automatically send such maintenance messages about once a minute during a plane's flight. They are used by the ground crew to make repairs once a plane lands.
If the rudder were to move too far while traveling fast, it could shear off and take the vertical stabilizer with it, which some experts theorize may have happened based on the relatively limited damage to the stabilizer.
The industry official, however, said the error message pertaining to the rudder limiter did not indicate it malfunctioned, but rather that it had locked itself in place because of conflicting speed readings.
"The message tells us that the rudder limiter was inoperative," said Jack Casey, an aviation safety consultant in Washington, D.C. "It does not give you any reason why it is not working or what caused it, or what came afterward."
Unless the plane's flight data and cockpit voice recorders - the black boxes - are found, the exact cause of the accident may never be known.
A French nuclear submarine is scouring the search area in the hopes of hearing audio pings from the black boxes' emergency beacons and the first of two U.S. locator listening devices is scheduled to arrive Sunday.
But the search area includes a wide grid and some of the deepest waters of the Atlantic - and searchers have only two more weeks before the signals from the black boxes begin to fade.
So far, there is no evidence of an explosion or terrorist act, just clues that point to systemic failures on the plane. Experts have said the evidence uncovered so far points to at least a partial midair breakup of the Airbus A330.
Military ships and planes had to suspend the search for bodies and debris Saturday afternoon because of bad weather. No more bodies were recovered, but a "medium-size" piece of plane debris was discovered Saturday, according to Brazilian air force Gen. Ramon Cardoso.
Coroners also said dental records of the victims and DNA samples from relatives will be necessary to confirm the identities the 16 bodies examined thus far.
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- Kandah - I thought Bronx 587 was because the FO had TOO MCUH rudder control - and thus the A330 was programmed to LIMIT rudder movement to not more than 4 degrees at cruise altitude. But we know the rudder limited warning came on, so now I have questions about the ability of pilots, in Alternate Law, to move the rudder too much.
And all I read was that GPS is earth ground speed - can't work with tail or head wing speeds.
I think we will learn much as the seat assignments of the found-bodies are released. It does look like the tail ripped, perhaps due to too much yaw. The distance between debris fields almost suggests ballistics involved with the forward cabin and crew departments. Your thoughts? - Reply to this comment
- Why not charge every Air-Bus employee with murder? The same as a getaway car driver can be charged along with the gun man.
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- Has anyone considered that this crash occurred very close to the South Atlantic anomaly, the area where the earth's magneitc field has been shown to be at its weakest?
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- Only when 250 people are killed will they make overdue changes.
Posted by count_slapula
That's the type of criteria used to determine where traffic lights go in many areas. - Reply to this comment
- The replacement of the pitot tube was a factory recommendation. Both the FAA and its European counterpart did not see this issue as critical to flight safety and therefore it was not a mandatory modification. Such mods do not have a time window in which the mod must be completed.
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- This airliner has a GPS navigation system. GPS is able to provide altitude and airspeed information. This airliner never lost the ability to tell how fast it was going. Air Bus and France both want to blame a faulty pitot tube for the crash when in fact it was caused by a design flaw in the Airbus's vertical stabilizer in both the A330 and A340 models.
Admitting this would create liability issues for 2 airliner crashes and force every modern Airbus to be grounded until an adequate solution could be developed and approved. This process could take at least a year, which would force the bankruptcy of all the airlines using the affected aircraft; and this would be the death blow to the European Union's Airbus company. - Reply to this comment
- Bet those pitot tubes were stuffed with freedom fries.
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- Where did Airbus come up with the thousands of pitot tubes for this repair? Can't believe they were just laying around waiting for damaged pitot tubes to be replaced?
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- AS I SEE IT ---- Mike "Mainer Mike" Brown.
500 years from now, you'll still hear about new safety precautions taking place in the airline industry. The problem: it'll after the fact. AFTER another jet crashes because certain precautions weren't made beforehand, even though they knew about it.
When will these airline companies and governments of the world ever get it? - Reply to this comment
- France obviously has adopted the FAA's ideas. As former FAA head Mary Schiavo used to say, it's s a body bag agency. Only when 250 people are killed will they make overdue changes.
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Ex-NBA ref Tim Donaghy 



