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Gone in six minutes: an Ethiopian Airlines jet’s final journey

A minute-by-minute narrative of a gripping and confusing scene in the cockpit of doomed flight 302 has been revealed by crashed investigators.

Ethiopian Airlines plane crash: Boeing 787 MAX 8 crashes killing all passengers

From nearly the moment they roared down the runway and took off in their new Boeing jetliner, the pilots of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 encountered problems with the plane.

Almost immediately, a device called a stick shaker began vibrating the captain’s control column, warning him that the plane might be about to stall and fall from the sky.

For six minutes, the pilots were bombarded by alarms as they fought to fly the plane, at times pulling back in unison on their control columns in a desperate attempt to keep the huge jet aloft.

Ethiopian authorities have issued a preliminary report on the March 10 crash that killed 157 people. They found that a malfunctioning sensor sent faulty data to the Boeing 737 MAX 8’s anti-stall system and triggered a chain of events that ended in a crash so violent it reduced the plane to shards and pieces.

The crash site of flight 302. Picture: AP/Mulugeta Ayene
The crash site of flight 302. Picture: AP/Mulugeta Ayene

The pilots’ struggle, and the tragic ending, mirrored an October 29 crash of a Lion Air MAX 8 off the coast of Indonesia, which killed 189 people.

The anti-stall system, called MCAS, automatically lowers the plane’s nose under some circumstances to prevent an aerodynamic stall.

Boeing acknowledged that a sensor in the Ethiopian Airlines jet malfunctioned, triggering MCAS when it was not needed. The company repeated that it is working on a software upgrade to fix the problem in its best-selling plane.

“It’s our responsibility to eliminate this risk,” chief executive Dennis Muilenburg said in a video.

“We own it, and we know how to do it.”

The pilots on Ethiopian Airlines flight 302. Picture: AFP
The pilots on Ethiopian Airlines flight 302. Picture: AFP

Jim Hall, a former chairman of the US National Transportation Safety Board, said the preliminary findings add urgency to re-examine the way the Federal Aviation Administration uses employees of aircraft manufacturers to conduct safety-related tasks, including tests and inspections — a decades-old policy that raises questions about the agency’s independence and is now under review by the US Justice Department, the Transportation Department’s inspector general and congressional committees.

“It is clear now that the process itself failed to produce a safe aircraft,” Mr Hall said.

“The focus now is to see if there were steps that were skipped or tests that were not properly done.”

COCKPIT WARNING: ‘DON’T SINK’

The 33-page preliminary report, which is subject to change in the coming months, is based on information from the plane’s flight data and cockpit voice recorders, the so-called black boxes. It includes a minute-by-minute narrative of a gripping and confusing scene in the cockpit.

Just one minute into Flight 302 from Addis Ababa to Nairobi in neighbouring Kenya, the captain, Yared Getachew, reported that they were having flight-control problems.

The cockpit voice recorder has shed light on the final minutes in the cockpit. Picture: BEA via Getty Images
The cockpit voice recorder has shed light on the final minutes in the cockpit. Picture: BEA via Getty Images

Then the anti-stall system kicked in and pushed the nose of the plane down for nine seconds. Instead of climbing, the plane descended slightly.

Audible warnings — “Don’t Sink” — sounded in the cockpit. The pilots fought to turn the nose of the plane up, and briefly they were able to resume climbing.

But the automatic anti-stall system pushed the nose down again, triggering more squawks of “Don’t Sink” from the plane’s ground-proximity warning system.

Following a procedure that Boeing reiterated after the Lion Air crash, the Ethiopian pilots flipped two switches and disconnected the anti-stall system, then tried to regain control. They asked to return to the Addis Ababa airport, but were continuing to struggle getting the plane to gain altitude.

An Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 MAX 8, similar to the one that crashed. Picture: AP/Mulugeta Ayene, File
An Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 MAX 8, similar to the one that crashed. Picture: AP/Mulugeta Ayene, File

Then they broke with Boeing procedure and returned power to controls including the anti-stall system, perhaps hoping to use power to adjust a tail surface that controls the pitch up or down of a plane, or maybe out of sheer desperation. One final time, the automated system kicked in, pushing the plane into a nose dive, according to the report.

A half-minute later, the cockpit voice recording ended, the plane crashed, and all 157 people on board were killed. The plane’s impact left a crater 10 meters deep.

The MAX is Boeing’s newest version of its workhorse single-aisle jetliner, the 737, which dates to the 1960s. Fewer than 400 MAX jets have been sent to airlines around the world, but Boeing has taken orders for 4600 more.

Boeing delivered this particular plane, tail number ET-AVJ, to Ethiopian Airlines in November. By the day of Flight 302, it had made nearly 400 flights and been in the air for 1,330 hours — still very new by airline standards. The pilots were young, too, and between them they had a scant 159 hours of flying time on the MAX.

A grieving relative who lost his wife in the plane crash is helped by a member of security forces and others near Bishoftu, in Ethiopia, near where the plane crashed. Picture: AP/Mulugeta Ayene
A grieving relative who lost his wife in the plane crash is helped by a member of security forces and others near Bishoftu, in Ethiopia, near where the plane crashed. Picture: AP/Mulugeta Ayene

The captain, Mr Getachew, was just 29 but had accumulated more than 8000 hours of flying since completing work at the airline’s training academy in 2010. He had flown more than 1400 hours on Boeing 737s but just 103 hours on the MAX. That may not be surprising, given that Ethiopian Airlines had just five of the planes, including ET-AVJ.

The co-pilot, Ahmed Nur Mohammod Nur, was only 25 and was granted a license to fly the 737 and the MAX on December 12 of last year. He had logged just 361 flight hours — not enough to be hired as a pilot at a US airline. Of those hours, 207 were on 737s, including 56 hours on MAX jets.

Thursday’s preliminary report found that both pilots performed all the procedures recommended by Boeing on the March 10 flight but still could not control the jet.

Wreckage is piled at the crash scene of the crash. Picture: AP/Mulugeta Ayene
Wreckage is piled at the crash scene of the crash. Picture: AP/Mulugeta Ayene

While Boeing continues to work on its software update, MAX jets remain grounded worldwide.

The CEO said the company is taking “a comprehensive, disciplined approach” to fixing the flight-control software.

But some critics, including Mr Hall, the former NTSB chairman, question why the work has taken so long.

“Don’t you think if Boeing knew what the fix was, we would have the fix by now?” he said. “They said after the Lion Air accident there was going to be a fix, yet there was a second accident with no fix. Now, in response to the worldwide reaction, the plane is grounded and there is still not a fix.”

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Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/travel/travel-updates/incidents/gone-in-six-minutes-an-ethiopian-airlines-jets-final-journey/news-story/24617b607baa8faba5a2967e4de51aa9