Cups running over creates hazard

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Airbus A350 cockpit
image: Airbus cockpit. Photo by JV Reymondos, Airbus.

Tea and coffee have joined the list of aviation hazards—after official warnings and even an officially approved countermeasure.

Airbus has developed a cover for switches on the central pedestal in the A350 flight deck to protect engine controls from liquid damage. The measure comes after two engine shutdowns in the past year on A350s, and the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) instructing all A350 operators to install the new covers within 28 days. The cover protects engine master switches, thumbwheels and rotary knobs and needs to be removed during take-off, approach and landing.

FlightGlobal reported the shutdowns were on an A350 operated by an Asian carrier in November 2019, in which tea was spilled, and a Delta Airlines aircraft in January 2020. Both aircraft had to divert and the Delta aircraft had to shut down its right engine. Flight data recorder analysis revealed the engine’s control unit had closed a high-pressure shut-off valve after inconsistent output from the cockpit control panel.

Airbus and EASA confirmed that both incidents had involved spilled liquid.

‘This condition, if not corrected, could lead to a dual engine IFSD, possibly resulting in a forced landing with consequent damage to the aeroplane and injury to occupants,’ an EASA emergency airworthiness directive said. Airbus responded by first declaring the flight deck a liquid-free zone in the aircraft flight manual and then by developing the pedestal cover.

Spilled coffee also brought about the diversion of a Thomas Cook Airlines Airbus A330 in February 2019 after radio communication cut out.

No Australian airlines fly the A350 but the type is a frequent sight at Australian airports—flying for international carriers—or was, before COVID-19.

3 COMMENTS

  1. This spillage on the pedestal has been a problem at least since the seventies as I remember cleaning 747pedestals back then

  2. For those interested and old aviation movie buffs, this was the plot of a 1964 Hollywood movie called “Fate Is The Hunter” based very, very ‘loosely’ (!) on Ernie Gann’s flying autobiography of the same name. The movie starred Glenn Ford and the Australian actor, Rod Taylor.
    Interestingly, Ernie Gann disassociated himself with the production, saying, among other things, that it was a ludicrous plot. I think I can imagine him now with a wry smile on his face…
    Anyway, if you accept the movie for what it is, it’s worth a look.

  3. Wasn’t there a DC9 emergency landing avoided years ago when a sharp crew member worked out that the multiple alarms they were reacting to, including engine fires as I recall, were actually from spilled coffee on the pedestal?

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