Oxygen Fed Electrical Fires |
Art A reasonable indication that the Smoke and Fumes of Unknown Origin was started was the flame-out of the #2 (tail) engine. This occurs at one of the final stages of that checklist and is an expected (not abnormal) occurrence due to the power coming off the fuel pumps (and #2 engine, being high set, not being able to gravity feed its fuel). Of course the main wire-bundle that goes over the top of the cockpit/cabin bulkhead would also contain many of the engine systems controller's related wiring harnesses. If its integrity was compromised by the electrical fire (known to have been in that vicinity) then power to that fuel pump could have been cut (causing a Number two engine flame-out). This latter theory is supported by the investigator's finding that the ADG was still stowed and never deployed.
"Gerden said there is no evidence so far
of frayed, chafed, or "Some material from the ceiling area
just aft of the cockpit "A fire onboard doomed Swissair Flight 111 was
so intense it "Tiny pieces of metal - some the size
of a quarter - were taken
|
PAPCECST@aol.com wrote: John et al, Stephen Thorne of Canadian press has been asking the Canadian TSB for a toxicology report concerning the cockpit crew and they haven't released their findings yet. You might e-mail him at: bushky@hotmail.com and see what the latest info that he has been able to find. You might want to e-mail him your latest evaluations on what you believe might happened. Isn't buss #2 the essential buss that the IFES was hooked up to and isn't this buss connected to #2 engine? I'm going to e-mail a cc of this msg to Res also. I think he will be most interested and with his contacts, he might be able to get some more information of this possibility. Patrick REPLY: Patrick Yes I will contact Stephen Thorne and see what he's heard about the toxicology. I was
fascinated by the disconnected link on the Halifax News page that mentioned the
possibility of the pilots' oxygen system being possibly involved. I brought this up some
many months ago now. I was thinking that the Halifax News report link at |
Friday, February 5, 1999 Oxygen may have fed fire Emergency supply to Swissair pilots likely made blaze worse - report By RICHARD DOOLEY -- The Daily News Investigators probing the crash of Swissair Flight 111 are looking at the possibility oxygen from the pilot's and co-pilot's emergency air supply might have fed the cockpit fire suspected of bringing the jetliner down. Canadian Transportation Safety Board investigators have found heat-damaged wiring from two overhead cockpit circuit breakers. Some of the wires display tell-tale markings of electrical arcing, lightening-like flashes of electricity released along the wire. Found in the same overhead area, was stainless steel tubes carrying the flight crew's emergency oxygen supply which was in use at the time of the crash. The Sept. 2 crash killed all 229 passengers and crew aboard. Wreckage is still being recovered from the ocean floor about 10 kilometres southwest of Peggy's Cove. Investigators have said localized areas of the cockpit were subject to intense heat, sometimes hot enough to melt the aircraft's aluminum. Aviation Week, the top aviation industry magazine in the U.S., speculates in a recent edition leaks from the emergency oxygen supply, caused by electrical arcing, could have intensified the fire. Investigators are reconstructing the forward section of the jet to trace the source and spread of the fire. Investigators are also experimenting with sections of the aircraft to determine what kind of temperatures were found in the cockpit's overhead section. Test panels from undamaged areas of the plane are being subjected to varying degrees of heat for comparison with the heat-damaged cockpit sections. Transportation Safety Board spokesman Jim Harris said the oxygen-supply theory is just one scenario investigators are considering. "We just don't know, at this point, if there were problems with the oxygen supply," he said. Part of the problem is differentiating between damage to the oxygen carrying tubes done by the impact or exposure to electrical arcing. "We don't have all the information yet," said Harris. He said tests have begun to determine how the oxygen-supply tubing was damaged. Investigators have found several wiring problems in the Swissair jet and other MD-11s still in service around the world. Two Federal Aviation Administration air-worthiness directives concerning wiring have been issued since December as a result of the Canadian investigation. Investigators reported finding loose terminal connections, chafed wiring, wires bent at too small a radius, improperly sealed wire conduits, and incorrectly routed wiring bundles in some of the dozen MD-11s they inspected. |