Explosion! Fire! Danger! The press was in its element as BA
flight 762 from Heathrow to Oslo had to turn back soon
after take-off and make an emergency landing. And there could only be one
explanation of the “technical fault”
that caused the problem – given by those who are not technically minded,
naturally – which was that it was most likely a bird strike.
Quiet day at Heathrow, then
Now, Heathrow does have occasional issues with flocks of
birds, but then, so do many other airports: it is a problem that is carefully
managed, and had the hacks done a little investigating, they would have found
that there had been no other similar reports before the BA flight took off. The
idea that a flock would assemble between departures and hit both engines of the
next plane out is not credible.
Because both engines were affected by something: part of the cowling was clearly missing from both left
and right power plants. And the same part of the cowling coming adrift is not
the usual consequence of a bird strike. Nor is an engine fire the inevitable
result of one. But instead of thoughtful analysis, we were treated to wild
speculation laced with some jaw-dropping ineptitude.
And the prize for the latter has to go to the Standard, with “The
stricken aircraft had taken off on the southern runway but performed an
emergency U-turn on to the northern runway”. The wonders of turning
proper newspapers into free sheets, eh? Elsewhere, it was all bird strikes. The
Mail, after
a promising start where it noted that the left engine’s cowling worked
loose before take-off, joined in.
The Sun did
not even bother to think about such things: “There was speculation that the aircraft had flown into a flock of birds”
it told readers. The Express
concurred: “It
was believed the engine could have caught fire after a possible ‘bird strike’”.
The Daily Star agreed: “Speculation
about what caused the fire hinted at the plane flying in to a flock of birds,
though there is no evidence to confirm that”.
Evidence? A Desmond title talks about evidence? Whatever. Such was the herd instinct that the Mail, of all titles, which had included “The most likely theory at the centre of the
investigation is that maintenance crews simply failed to properly lock the
metal cowls which protect the engines before take-off” in its report, had
gone on to devote so much space to a non-existent bird strike.
The
AAIB has confirmed that, on take-off, “the
fan cowl doors from both engines detached, puncturing a fuel pipe on the right
engine” (hence the fire), and that this was because “the fan cowl doors on both engines were left unlatched during
maintenance and this was not identified prior to aircraft departure”, which
was probably to sort the problem from the previous flight that the Mail reported.
But such is the pressure to say something – anything – that anything gets printed.
2 comments:
Note to Ryanair : pilot brought the plane to a stand on the runway ASAP and began evacuation, no messing about looking for taxiway to avoid delay penalties as per your Stansted fiasco.
Natural problem :D Not a technical one this time....
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