Washington, Jan 31 : US safety investigators ruled out
excess voltage as the cause of a battery fire this month on a Boeing Co
Dreamliner jet operated by Japan Airlines Co (JAL) and said they were expanding
the probe to look at the battery's charger and the jet's auxiliary power
unit.
Last week, governments across the world grounded the Dreamliner
while Boeing halted deliveries after a problem with a lithium-ion battery on a
second 787 plane, flown by All Nippon Airways Co (ANA), forced the aircraft to
make an emergency landing in western Japan.
A growing number of
investigators and Boeing executives are working around the clock to determine
what caused the two incidents which the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration
says released flammable chemicals and could have sparked a fire in the plane's
electrical compartment.
There are still no clear answers about the root
cause of the battery failures, but the U.S. National Transportation Safety
Board's statement eliminated one possible answer that had been raised by
Japanese investigators.
It also underscored the complexity of
investigating a battery system that includes manufacturers across the world, and
may point to a design problem with the battery that could take longer to fix
than swapping out a faulty batch of batteries.
"Examination of the flight
recorder data from the JAL B-787 airplane indicates that the APU (auxiliary
power unit) battery did not exceed its designed voltage of 32 volts," the NTSB
said in a statement issued.
A Japanese safety official had told reporters
that excessive electricity may have overheated the battery in the ANA-owned
Dreamliner that was forced to make the emergency landing at Japan's Takamatsu
airport last week.
"The NTSB wanted to set the record straight," said one
source familiar with the investigation who was not authorized to speak
publicly.
U.S. investigators have already examined the lithium-ion
battery that powered the APU, where the battery fire started in the JAL plane,
as well as several other components removed from the airplane, including wire
bundles and battery management circuit boards, the NTSB statement
said.
Investigators will convene in Tucson, Arizona to test and examine
the charger for the battery, and download non-volatile memory from the APU
controller, with similar tests planned at the Phoenix facility where the APUs
are built. Other components have been sent for download or examination to
Boeing's Seattle facility and manufacturer facilities in
Japan.
Securaplane Technologies Inc, a unit of Britain's Meggitt Plc that
makes the charger, said it will fully support the U.S.
investigation.
Officials with United Technologies Corp (UTX), which
builds the plane's auxiliary power unit and is the main supplier of electrical
systems on the 787, said they would also cooperate with the
investigation.
The NTSB's decision to travel to Securaplane's facility
sparked fresh questions about the safety of the lithium-ion batteries that
remain at the heart of the investigation.
While the 787 is the most
aggressive user of lithium-ion battery technology in commercial aviation, the
industry at large is testing it, and the FAA has approved its use in several
different planes, each governed by "special conditions."
"Lithium-ion
batteries are significantly more susceptible to internal failures that can
result in self-sustaining increases in temperature and pressure," the FAA said
in 2006, when it allowed Airbus to use lithium batteries for the emerging
lighting system on its A380.
Securaplane, which first began working on
the charger in 2004, suffered millions of dollars of damages in November 2006
after a lithium-ion battery used in testing exploded and sparked a fire that
burned an administrative building to the ground.
Boeing spokesman Marc
Birtel said an investigation into the 2006 fire was later determined to have
been caused by an improper test set-up, not the battery design. He declined
comment on the current 787 investigations.
After the fire, a former
Securaplane employee named Michael Leon sued the company, alleging that he was
fired for raising security concerns about charger and discrepancies between
their assembly documents and the finished chargers.
Leon's suit was later
dismissed.
The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said it had
investigated Leon's safety complaints in 2008 and 2009 but concluded his
allegations focused on prototypes that were not ultimately used in the new
lightweight airliner.
FAA spokeswoman Laura Brown said the reviews also
found that Securaplane's production of a particular printed circuit board
complied with FAA requirements.
Japan's GS Yuasa Corp makes lithium-ion
batteries for the Dreamliner, while France's Thales (HO.PA) produces the control systems for the battery.
Thales has declined comment.
In its statement, the NTSB said French
authorities were also participating in the investigation. No comment was
immediately available from the French safety agency.
Japan Transport
Safety Board said it was aware of the NTSB report and would consider the U.S.
statement in its probe.
The NTSB said the Japanese agency was
participating in its investigation of the Boston incident, while NTSB officials
were helping the agency with its investigation of the emergency landing in
Japan. Both investigations were ongoing.
"There's nothing more I can add
at this point as we still haven't started our investigation into the battery
here," JTSB inspector Hideyo Kosugi said. "The NTSB's investigation started
earlier. We still haven't taken X-rays or CT-scans of the
battery."
Kosugi said both the battery and the surrounding systems were
being stored in Tokyo's Haneda Airport until authorities decided where to
conduct the Japanese investigation.
Boeing said it would continue
building the carbon-composite 787, but put deliveries on hold until the U.S.
Federal Aviation Administration approves and implements a plan to ensure the
safety of potentially flammable lithium-ion batteries.
In Washington,
U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said the 787, which has a list price of
$207 million, would not fly until regulators were "1,000 percent sure" it was
safe.
Japan is the biggest market so far for the 787, with ANA and JAL
operating 24 of the 290-seat wide-bodied planes. Boeing has orders for almost
850 of the planes, which have the most complex electrical systems of any planes
on the market.
It remains unclear if the investigations will cause other
airlines -- and military aircraft builder -- to rethink their plans to use
lithium-ion batteries, which are lighter and more powerful than conventional
batteries.
Airbus plans to use similar batteries on its rival to the 787,
the A350, which is due to make its maiden test flight in the middle of this
year.
European executives said last week they would study the findings of
the U.S. investigation but said their decision to move more slowly than Boeing
towards electric systems, and spread the load over twice as many batteries,
would reduce the risk.
Aviation Week quoted Airbus programs chief Tom
Williams as saying "failure management" was key and that any escaping gases from
the A350 batteries would be protected by titanium as they are expelled from the
aircraft. The company has not said if it would attempt to suppress a lithium
fire or focus on containing a lithium blaze, as Boeing has done.
Williams
told Aviation Week that switching from lithium back to nickel cadmium would
require significant engineering work with both space and weight penalties.
Airbus was not immediately available to comment on the article.
Brazilian
plane maker Embraer SA (EMBR3.SA) declined comment
when asked if it planned to rethink its use of lithium-ion batteries on its
military transport plane and new business jets.
The Embraer programs use
a battery made in the United States, unlike the Japanese one on the
787.
Lockheed Martin Corp (LMT), maker of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter,
has said it does not see a problem since the lithium-ion batteries on the
military plane are made by France's Saft Groupe (SAFT.PA), not
Yuasa.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Dreamliner probe widens after excess battery voltage ruled out
Dreamliner probe widens after excess battery voltage ruled out
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