After take-off, the plane climbed steeply before stalling, despite both pilots pushing the control column forward. The aircraft's most recent service involved adjusting the elevator control cable, and was performed two nights before the crash at a repair facility located at Tri-State Airport in Huntington, West Virginia. During the investigation, it emerged that the mechanic who worked on the elevator cables had never worked on this type of aircraft. Investigation revealed that turnbuckles controlling tension on the cables to the elevators had been set incorrectly, resulting in insufficient elevator travel, leading to the pilots not having sufficient pitch control. Although a post-adjustment control test would normally be conducted to ensure proper operation, the maintenance supervisor who was instructing the mechanic decided to skip this step. The NTSB noted that the FAA were aware of the "serious deficiencies" in the training procedures at the facility, but had done nothing to correct them.[7]
It's amazing that these multi-million dollar aircraft are entrusted to some of these operators, let alone people flying on them when they've been "overhauled". I was at one in California a few years ago for a couple days. This "MRO" had a ex-UAL 767 they were attempting a heavy C check. These goobers had pulled the nose gear out with a fork lift and tow straps, in the process damaged the nose gear well and door seals. The main gear was removed, and the surrounding structure was banged up also. The scary thing is they had no idea how to get the gear back in. The nose gear requires a sling (tooling) to re-install, the mains are tricky also, and a lot of work.Those places are Aircraft Mechanic purgatories, or worse. I couldnt get out of their quick enough! Thats what EO doesnt get. When I showed my supervisor the problem with soldering in the batteries his response was 'Thats the way we do it here, if you dont like it theres the door" There was no Union, no "Whistleblower protection" and no ASAP back then, so I took the door option. What EO fails to realize is that with a Union you are less likely to be forced to do shoddy work. We put our names on what we do, for most, that means something.
The only thing thats changed is there is more pressure to cut maintenance costs and more stuff is outsourced. The FAA spends all their time nitpicking things at the last carrier that still does it in house while ignoring most of the others. Things are worse since Valuejet. We know, we get the "Bad from stock" parts and have to do the job twice(or more) to get it fixed.What year was that, Bob? Before or after Valujet went down? And how much has changed since then?
More great MRO work
FAA to fine ATS for MTC on WN Planes.
Hey Eo, your silent on the several posts about shoddy mro work.
No such luck. Is the ATS incident shoddy maintenance or a deviation from WN's procedures?
Deviation from the established proceedures is shoddy maintenance.
Thats how the FAA sees it.The proceedure was followed, the FAA cited the spacing, which can be open to interpretation. Is one inch apart center to center or end to end?Then I guess you guys are painted with the shoddy brush as well, since there was documented deviation from established procedure with regard to the wiring bundles....
E, residential building codes are more precise than FAA AD's.
When they say wall studs shall be 16 inches apart, they specify 16 inches ON CENTER.....that's it....ON CENTER.
The FAA AD was never that specific.