Or the other pilot did it and said what he said to lay the blame on the other pilot.
There’s a very obvious conclusion. But I’ll wait until the final report. And I suspect most aviation experts will also wait despite their initial suspicions.
There wasn't much left of the plane, and the fact it's crashed into an urban area, makes collecting the bits even more difficult.
Juan Brown's video is interesting in the sequence of actions on a 787 flight deck at takeoff, and which pilot does what. The no 1 officer was flying this takeoff.
Does only one pilot have the ability to flip the switches? If it’s both it could be either of them. The voice recording could be a person genuinely asking or lying.
In short, one pilot switched the fuel off for both engines in quick succession, then denied he'd done it.
The main reason that a final investigation report often takes a year or more is that the probable cause is almost always a combination of contributing factors.The cause is the engine fuel supply was turned off. There was insufficient time for the engines to spool up once fuel supply was re-established. The interim report says that.
The main reason that a final investigation report often takes a year or more is that the probable cause is almost always a combination of contributing factors.
Yes the fuel supply to the engines was interrupted, but if that had happened at 10,000 feet instead of 100 feet it would have been a very different story. Or if the area around the airport had been flat, open country. Or, etc, etc.
Even the first event in the chain, turning off the fuel supply, could have had a number of causes: an intentional act, an accidental actuation, faulty switches, an electrical fault not directly associated with the switches ...
The fuel cutoff switches are common to a number of Boeing types. There have been instances in the past where faulty switches have been fitted that did not require to lifted up in order to move them between Run and Cutoff, so I wouldn't be so quick to rule out inadvertent/accidental operation of the switches, which would be consistent with the reported confusion of the pilots as to why they had been operated.That's why I believe it is safe to say that one (or to our colleague's point perhaps even more than one in the most bizarre possible scenario) of the pilots physically moved the switches, causing the plane to come down.
The fuel cutoff switches are common to a number of Boeing types. There have been instances in the past where faulty switches have been fitted that did not require to lifted up in order to move them between Run and Cutoff, so I wouldn't be so quick to rule out inadvertent/accidental operation of the switches, which would be consistent with the reported confusion of the pilots as to why they had been operated.
I mentioned that in an earlier post. They were installed on some on Type 737s and a bulletin issued in 2018.
Since then the console in this 787 had been replaced in 2019 and 2023 with no missing locks/detents reported.
Seems vanishingly unlikely to me.
Regarding confusion, who knows, I'm frankly reluctant to say much about that now. All we know is a voice asked why and a voice said they didn't*. There are all sort of scenarios that we can both rehearse that are very much more likely than a switch fault remaining unnoticed for several years and two console replacements which would cause the exchange that is reported (indeed, just for clarity lest I be picked up on it, it may not even have been an exchange...)
*Doubtless these will voices will be, or may already have been attributed and will be published in the final report. I have also read that is thought that the fuel switch operations may also be discernible.
That's what I said.
That's what I said.
Yes, that's all anyone can really say at the moment.
Every pilot of a Boeing 737/747/757/767/787 pulls those switches up at the end of every flight and moves them to the Cutoff position to shut down the engines.
The Service Bulletin advising of the existence of defective switches that could simply be flicked between Run and Cutoff without being lifted through the gate was advisory only, and Air India was one of the airlines that chose not to do the checks on its aircraft (nor, presumably, on any of the spare throttle control modules in its stores).
You believe '...that the switches could have turned themselves'
OK thanks.