Ba777 engine fire Las Vegas

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Discussion

Mave

8,208 posts

215 months

Friday 11th September 2015
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J4CKO said:
In the life of an engine like that does it ever get "a rebuild", i.e. stripped to bits and parts replaced or is it like a car engine that in its normal life the idea is it never gets opened up ?
If (as I suspect) this was a disc letting go rather than blades, then you wouldn't usually inspect it in service- it's far too difficult to confidently borescope in situ, and typically you life the disc to first crack - if you find a crack in service then you've left it far too long. Typically (but not always) the disc is hard lifed, ie once it has reached its declared life, it is scrapped and replaced. The declared (ie released to service) life is substantially less than the life demonstrated during testing.

anonymous-user

54 months

Friday 11th September 2015
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I suppose the vibration measurement and analysis system isn't quite good enough to be able to detect the start of crack propagation in a disc? It's not like a small crack will unbalance the disc, and you'd have to actually look at the natural frequency components of disc vibration to spot any change?

Mojocvh

16,837 posts

262 months

Friday 11th September 2015
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J4CKO said:
Mojocvh said:
J4CKO said:
Amazing how rare this actually is, thousands of airliners flying all round the world every minute of every day and this seems a really rare occurrence.

You just know the folk at Rolls Royce saw that pop up on the news and all breathed a sigh of relief when they firstly realised there we no fatalities, but mainly when they realised that plane billowing black smoke was fitted with the GE's biggrin


In the life of an engine like that does it ever get "a rebuild", i.e. stripped to bits and parts replaced or is it like a car engine that in its normal life the idea is it never gets opened up ?

I think the folk at RR would know almost about the same time frame as the crew if it was one of theirs wink
Yeah, I know each one has telemetry, I wonder what message the engine relays in that situation ?

"BOOM !"

"Extinguisher, fresh pants, dust pan and brush required at coordinates...."


I monitor computer databases around the globe so its fairly familiar-ish territory, have had one on a rig in the North Sea shut down due to massive waves swamping the rig and screwing the equipment and get something innocuous like "Break received on communication channel", never "Guess what J4CKO a fking massive wave just washed the server away "!"

I would imagine it records some massive out of threshold vibrations, excessive heat, rpm abruptly dropping etc, wonder if that has a signature that alerts them straight away ? is the telemetry in real time, surely communications cant be that reliable worldwide, must be a really interesting job keeping track of that.
Hmm despite latency in the "network" I'm pretty sure the data will be captured, up to a complete severance [as your ^example^] from the operational end.. but observe and record.

Mojocvh

16,837 posts

262 months

Friday 11th September 2015
quotequote all
J4CKO said:
Mojocvh said:
J4CKO said:
Amazing how rare this actually is, thousands of airliners flying all round the world every minute of every day and this seems a really rare occurrence.

You just know the folk at Rolls Royce saw that pop up on the news and all breathed a sigh of relief when they firstly realised there we no fatalities, but mainly when they realised that plane billowing black smoke was fitted with the GE's biggrin


In the life of an engine like that does it ever get "a rebuild", i.e. stripped to bits and parts replaced or is it like a car engine that in its normal life the idea is it never gets opened up ?

I think the folk at RR would know almost about the same time frame as the crew if it was one of theirs wink
Yeah, I know each one has telemetry, I wonder what message the engine relays in that situation ?

"BOOM !"

"Extinguisher, fresh pants, dust pan and brush required at coordinates...."


I monitor computer databases around the globe so its fairly familiar-ish territory, have had one on a rig in the North Sea shut down due to massive waves swamping the rig and screwing the equipment and get something innocuous like "Break received on communication channel", never "Guess what J4CKO a fking massive wave just washed the server away "!"

I would imagine it records some massive out of threshold vibrations, excessive heat, rpm abruptly dropping etc, wonder if that has a signature that alerts them straight away ? is the telemetry in real time, surely communications cant be that reliable worldwide, must be a really interesting job keeping track of that.
Hmm despite latency in the "network" I'm pretty sure the data will be captured, up to a complete severance [as your ^example^] from the operational end.. but observe and record.

Talksteer

4,857 posts

233 months

Saturday 12th September 2015
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Zad said:
That's part of a TV documentary, more footage of it here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j973645y5AA

When the engine is spooling up to full power it always raises the hairs on the back of my neck!
They do like to over hype things in documentaries....

I was closer than those in the building and protected only by my t-shirt.

hidetheelephants

24,224 posts

193 months

Saturday 12th September 2015
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Max_Torque said:
I suppose the vibration measurement and analysis system isn't quite good enough to be able to detect the start of crack propagation in a disc? It's not like a small crack will unbalance the disc, and you'd have to actually look at the natural frequency components of disc vibration to spot any change?
You've said it; the software should spot the change in harmonics as the engine spools up and down at the beginning and end of a flight, although the error band may mask it to begin with. Even with this level of monitoring you can still get an outlier failing too fast for the monitoring to catch it, just like here. A perfect storm if you will.

V8 Fettler

7,019 posts

132 months

Saturday 12th September 2015
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Long term remote monitoring of vibration levels of rotating equipment in non-aviation sectors can certainly detect deterioration prior to catastrophic failure, but no beggar willingly reviews the data. Alarm trigger points are useful, this must surely be routine in the aviation sector.

chuntington101

5,733 posts

236 months

Saturday 12th September 2015
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J4CKO said:
Yeah, I know each one has telemetry, I wonder what message the engine relays in that situation ?

"BOOM !"

"Extinguisher, fresh pants, dust pan and brush required at coordinates...."


I monitor computer databases around the globe so its fairly familiar-ish territory, have had one on a rig in the North Sea shut down due to massive waves swamping the rig and screwing the equipment and get something innocuous like "Break received on communication channel", never "Guess what J4CKO a fking massive wave just washed the server away "!"

I would imagine it records some massive out of threshold vibrations, excessive heat, rpm abruptly dropping etc, wonder if that has a signature that alerts them straight away ? is the telemetry in real time, surely communications cant be that reliable worldwide, must be a really interesting job keeping track of that.
Was it an oracle DB by any chance? I do love some if the error message sent from servers / DBs. I heard of one instance were every night around 7:00pm a server was having a power error and then approx 10 min later rebooted itself. Had the server guys really scratching their heads. Turns out it was a cleaner unplugging he box and hoovering up then plugging it back in! lol

Anyway back to topic. Great work by the crew for getting everyone out.

tim0409

4,398 posts

159 months

Sunday 27th September 2015
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From what I've read on other sites, the 777 is going to be repaired which I find really surprising given what appeared to be significant damage.

J4CKO

41,499 posts

200 months

Monday 28th September 2015
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tim0409 said:
From what I've read on other sites, the 777 is going to be repaired which I find really surprising given what appeared to be significant damage.
Wow, all I heard was it was a definite write off.

5150

687 posts

255 months

Tuesday 29th September 2015
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Hull losses, regardless of the circumstances, never look good on an airline's record. BA have had two in the last 8 years (777 at LHR and 747 at JNB). I'd imagine they'd be keen to chuck a load of money at not having a third.

Trevatanus

Original Poster:

11,120 posts

150 months

Tuesday 29th September 2015
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5150 said:
Hull losses, regardless of the circumstances, never look good on an airline's record. BA have had two in the last 8 years (777 at LHR and 747 at JNB). I'd imagine they'd be keen to chuck a load of money at not having a third.
I am pretty sure the JNB one would not have been a hull loss on a newer airframe though?

surveyor

17,811 posts

184 months

Monday 30th November 2015
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anonymous-user

54 months

Monday 30th November 2015
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What a surprise rolleyes
I'm assuming no action wastaken against the bag carrying/toting idiots ? A shame they didn't meet a fiery death mad

Chrisgr31

13,468 posts

255 months

Monday 30th November 2015
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surveyor said:
Is the law firm German? Boeing rep was in Germany apparently

surveyor

17,811 posts

184 months

Monday 30th November 2015
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Chrisgr31 said:
surveyor said:
Is the law firm German? Boeing rep was in Germany apparently
Apparently it's UK based specialist in Aviation Law.

Sheepshanks

32,725 posts

119 months

Monday 30th November 2015
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Chrisgr31 said:
Is the law firm German? Boeing rep was in Germany apparently
Sorry if I'm missing something, but that seems an odd comment - I imagine Boeing reps are in all major markets all the time.

Starfighter

4,925 posts

178 months

Saturday 5th December 2015
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Trevatanus said:
5150 said:
Hull losses, regardless of the circumstances, never look good on an airline's record. BA have had two in the last 8 years (777 at LHR and 747 at JNB). I'd imagine they'd be keen to chuck a load of money at not having a third.
I am pretty sure the JNB one would not have been a hull loss on a newer airframe though?
The Las Vegas 777 hull is one of the oldest in the BA fleet which is why it has the GE engines, Rolls did not have the Trent engine option for the early aircraft.

Chrisgr31

13,468 posts

255 months

Saturday 5th December 2015
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Sheepshanks said:
Sorry if I'm missing something, but that seems an odd comment - I imagine Boeing reps are in all major markets all the time.
I was wondering why they would be referring to a Germany based rep when Boeing is a US based company, and BA is UK based. Would assume (wrongly) the Boeing rep would be from the UK or US thats all.

GCH

3,991 posts

202 months

Saturday 19th December 2015
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