SilkAir Flight 185
SilkAir Flight 185 was a scheduled international passenger flight operated by a Boeing 737-300 from Soekarno–Hatta International Airport in Jakarta, Indonesia to Changi Airport in Singapore that crashed into the Musi River near Palembang, Sumatra, on 19 December 1997, killing all 97 passengers and 7 crew members on board. The investigation into the cause of the crash was led by investigators from the National Transportation Safety Committee (NTSC), who were joined by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). The NTSB, which participated in the investigation due to Boeing's manufacture of the aircraft in the US, investigated the crash under lead investigator Greg Feith. In its final report, the NTSC found "no concrete evidence" to support the pilot suicide allegation, with the previously suspected Parker-Hannifin hydraulic power control unit (PCU) having already been determined by the manufacturer to be defect-free. The final statement from the NTSC was that they were unable to determine the cause of the crash and was thus inconclusive. On the other hand, in a letter sent to the NTSC, the NTSB found that the crash was most likely the result of deliberate flight-control inputs that were "most likely by the captain". Although the NTSB and PCU manufacturer Parker-Hannifin had already determined that the PCU was properly working, and thus not the cause of the crash, a private and independent investigation into the crash for a civil lawsuit tried by jury in Los Angeles County Superior Court, which was not allowed to hear or consider the NTSB's and Parker-Hannifin's conclusions, concluded that the crash was caused by a defective servo valve inside the PCU based on forensic findings from an electron microscope, which determined that minute defects within the PCU had caused the rudder hard-over and a subsequent uncontrollable flight and crash. The manufacturer of the aircraft's rudder controls and the families later reached an out-of-court settlement. IncidentCarrying 97 passengers and a crew of seven, the Boeing 737 departed Jakarta's Soekarno–Hatta International Airport's runway 25R at 15:37 local time (08:37 UTC) for an 80-minute flight to Singapore's Changi Airport. At the controls were Captain Tsu Way Ming (Chinese: 朱卫民; pinyin: Zhū Wèimín), 41, of Singapore, a former A-4 Skyhawk pilot, and First Officer Duncan Ward, 23, of New Zealand.[note 1][1][2][3] Generally fair weather was expected for the route, except for some thunderstorms near Singkep Island, 120 km (75 mi; 65 nmi) south of Singapore.[4] The aircraft was cleared to climb to flight level 350, about 35,000 ft (11,000 m), and to head directly to Palembang.[4] At 15:47:06, while climbing through 24,500 feet (7,500 m), the crew requested clearance to proceed directly to waypoint PARDI (0°34′S 104°13′E / 0.567°S 104.217°E).[note 2][5] At 15:53, the crew reported reaching the cruise altitude of FL350 and was cleared to proceed directly to PARDI, and to report abeam Palembang. The cockpit voice recorder (CVR) ceased recording at 16:05. At 16:10, air traffic controllers informed the flight that it was abeam Palembang and instructed the aircraft to maintain FL350 and to contact Singapore Control upon reaching PARDI. First Officer Ward acknowledged this call. At 16:11, nearly 6 minutes after the CVR ceased recording, the flight data recorder (FDR) also stopped recording. Flight 185 remained level at FL350 until it started a rapid and nearly vertical dive around 16:12. While descending through 12,000 ft (3,700 m), parts of the aircraft, including a great extent of the tail section, started to separate from the aircraft's fuselage due to high forces arising from the nearly supersonic dive.[2] Seconds later, the aircraft hit the Musi River, near Palembang, Sumatra, killing all 104 people on board. The time it took the aircraft to dive from cruise altitude into the river was less than one minute. The plane was travelling faster than the speed of sound for a few seconds before impact.[2] Parts of the wreckage were embedded 5 m (15 ft) into the riverbed.[6] The aircraft broke into pieces before impact, with the debris spread over a wide area, though most of the wreckage was concentrated in a single 60-by-80-metre (200 by 260 ft) area at the river bottom.[4] No complete body, body part, or limb was found, as the entire aircraft and occupants disintegrated upon impact. Only six positive identifications were later obtained from the few recovered human remains.[1][4] AircraftThe aircraft involved was a Boeing 737-36N with serial number 28556, registered as 9V-TRF, and powered by two CFM56-3B2 engines.[7] Having completed its maiden flight on 27 January 1997, the aircraft was delivered to SilkAir on 14 February, 10 months before the crash.[citation needed] At the time of the accident, it was the newest aircraft in SilkAir's fleet and had accumulated more than 2,200 flight hours in 1,300 cycles.[4][8] This is the first and only fatal hull loss for SilkAir in the airline's history.[1] Passengers and crewSilkAir issued a press release on 19 December 1997 with a passenger count by nationality,[8] and another the following day with crew details and a complete passenger manifest.[9]
Among those killed in the crash was Singaporean model and author Bonny Hicks.[10] Investigation and final reportThe accident was investigated by the Indonesian NTSC, which was assisted by expert groups from the US, Singapore, and Australia. Around 73% of the wreckage (by weight) was recovered, partially reconstructed, and examined. Both of the aircraft recorders, the CVR and the FDR, were retrieved from the river and their data were extracted and analyzed. The investigators tested 20 different simulations for various equipment-failure scenarios, and found that the only scenario that matched the actual radar trajectory of the descent and crash of the flight was a high-speed steep dive commanded by one of the pilots.[11][12] Furthermore, the investigators had found the trim jackscrew for the horizontal stabilizer, which revealed that flight inputs from one of the pilots had moved the stabilizer from level flight to a full nose-down descent.[11][12] First Officer Duncan Ward was initially speculated to have deliberately crashed the aircraft, as he was the only person in the cockpit when the CVR stopped recording, but this was quickly ruled out, as Ward's friends, family, and co-workers said that he had not displayed any signs of depression nor suicidality during his career at SilkAir, and was in a good mood on the morning of the accident flight.[11][4] At 16:05, the CVR recorded Captain Tsu stating he was leaving the cockpit to get water, followed by a series of metallic snaps (presumed to be the sounds of the captain's seatbelt being removed and chair moving); 13.6 seconds later, the CVR stopped recording. Tests indicated that a click would be heard on the CVR recording if the CVR circuit breaker had tripped normally, but not if it had been pulled out manually. As there was no click, Captain Tsu likely pulled out the CVR circuit breaker while leaving the cockpit. At 16:11, the FDR stopped recording. The NTSC and NTSB investigators thought that if Captain Tsu was responsible for the crash, he must have made up some excuse to get the first officer to leave the flight deck before disabling the FDR (which would have immediately triggered a Master Caution on both pilots' control panels), so that his actions would not be noticed.[11] At 16:12, as recorded by Indonesian ground radar, the aircraft entered a rapid descent, disintegrated, and crashed into the Musi River. On 14 December 2000, after three years of investigation, the Indonesian NTSC issued its final report. The NTSC chairman Oetarjo Diran overrode the findings of his investigators—that the crash was caused deliberately by pilot input—so that the report stated that the evidence was inconclusive and that the cause of the accident could not be determined.[4][note 3] The American NTSB, which also participated in the investigation, concluded that the evidence was consistent with a deliberate manipulation of the flight controls, most likely by the captain. In a letter to the NTSC dated 11 December 2000, the NTSB wrote:
Geoffrey Thomas of The Sydney Morning Herald said, "a secret report confirmed that the Indonesian authorities would not issue a public verdict because they feared it would make their own people too frightened to fly."[13] Santoso Sayogo, an NTSC investigator who worked on the SilkAir 185 case, said that the Indonesian investigators submitted a report which was similar to that of the NTSB's conclusion but were overruled by their boss.[11] Potential motivesIn the aftermath of the crash, several potential motives for the captain's alleged suicide and homicide were suggested, including recent financial losses of $1.2 million[6] (his share-trading showed trading of more than one million shares and his securities-trading privileges had been suspended 10 days before the accident due to nonpayment),[2] his obtaining a $600,000 life insurance policy the previous week, which was to have gone into effect on the day of the accident[6] (though it later emerged that this was a routine policy taken out as part of a mortgage requirement),[2][11] his receipt of several recent disciplinary actions on the part of the airline (including one that related to improper manipulation of the CVR circuit breaker),[2] and the loss of four squadron mates during his military flight training, 18 years earlier on the exact date of the crash.[4] He had also had several conflicts with Ward and other co-pilots who had questioned his command suitability.[14] Investigations later revealed that his total assets were greater than his liabilities, although his liquid assets could not cover his immediate debts; his monthly income was less than his family's monthly expenditure; and he had some outstanding credit card debts.[2] An official investigation by the Singapore Police Force into evidence of criminal offence leading to the crash found "no evidence that the pilot, copilot, or any crew member had suicidal tendencies or a motive to deliberately cause the crash of [the aircraft]".[15] Tsu was formerly a Republic of Singapore Air Force pilot, and had over 20 years of flying experience in the older T/A-4S Skyhawks, as well as the newer T/A-4SU Super Skyhawks. His last appointment was instructor pilot of a Skyhawk squadron. CVR and FDR deactivationThe CVR and FDR stopped recording minutes before the abrupt descent, but not at the same time.[4] The CVR stopped functioning about 6 minutes before the dive as the captain was leaving the cockpit for a short break. The FDR was deactivated 5 minutes later around 1 minute before the dive. Overload and short-circuit tests show that a distinctive 400-Hz tone is recorded by the CVR when the CVR circuit breaker trips. The investigators could not find this sound on Flight 185's CVR, which made them conclude that the CVR circuit breaker was manually pulled out. The radio continued to work after the failure of the CVR, which indicates that power failure was not the cause.[1][2] Testing of the unit by the NTSC found no evidence that a malfunction or failure caused either recorder to stop recording data.[11][4] Servo valve issueStarting in 1991, several accidents and incidents involving the Boeing 737 were the result of uncommanded movement of their rudders. On 3 March 1991, United Airlines Flight 585, a 737-200, crashed in Colorado Springs, Colorado, killing 25 people.[16] On 8 September 1994, USAir Flight 427, a 737-300, crashed near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, killing 132 people. Four more incidents occurred where a 737 rudder PCU malfunction was suspected. The Seattle Times devoted a series of 37 articles to Boeing 737 loss-of-control malfunctions.[17] The accident occurred in the middle of a controversy over the NTSB's role in accidents caused by the rudder control unit.[18] During the investigation of Flight 427, the NTSB had discovered that the PCU's dual servo valve could jam, as well, and deflect the rudder in the opposite direction of the pilots' input, due to thermal shock, caused when cold PCUs are injected with hot hydraulic fluid. As a result of this finding, the FAA ordered the servo valves to be replaced and new training protocol for pilots to handle unexpected movement of flight controls to be developed.[19] The FAA ordered an upgrade of all Boeing 737 rudder control systems by 12 November 2002.[20] AftermathLawsuitsSilkAir paid USD$10,000 compensation to each victim's family, the maximum under the Warsaw Convention. Boeing also paid an undisclosed amount of compensation.[21] In July 2001 six families began court proceedings against SilkAir for damages, based on the allegation that the crash was caused by the pilot, after each had rejected a compensation offer of $200,000 (£143,000).[22] In October 2001 the claims were turned down by a Singapore High Court judge who ruled that "the onus of proving that flight MI185 was intentionally crashed has not been discharged."[2] Although the NTSB and Parker-Hannifin had already ruled out the possibility of mechanical failure as a cause to the crash of Flight 185 due to a defective PCU servo valve-unit (manufactured by Parker-Hannifin), an independent and private investigation refocused on and further examined the recovered PCU device whose malfunctioning has been pointed out in other sudden Boeing 737 crashes. The manufacturer's records relating to this particular unit revealed that it had failed some routine tests, but they claimed to have corrected these problems. A metals expert, with the use of images from a scanning electron microscope, concluded that the servo valve had 'chip-outs' and numerous burrs "that could easily have interfered with the smooth operation of the valve".[23] After this investigation was complete, in 2004, a Los Angeles Superior Court jury in the United States, which was not allowed to hear or consider the NTSB's conclusions about the accident, found that the crash was caused by a defective servo valve in the plane's rudder.[23] The hydraulic PCU device manufacturer, Parker-Hannifin, was ordered to pay the three families of victims involved in that case US$43.6 million.[21] After threatening to appeal the verdict, Parker-Hannifin later compensated all families involved (although it did not accept liability).[2][24] Parker-Hannifin spokesperson Lorrie Paul Crum stated that a federal law disallowed them from using the NTSB final report as evidence in the company's favor during the lawsuit. The lawyer representing the plaintiffs, Walter Lack, stated that the law only disallowed using the NTSB report's conclusion and suggestions, while statements of fact are admissible.[25] USC §1154 (Discovery and use of cockpit and surface vehicle recordings and transcripts) states: "No part of a report of the Board, related to an accident or an investigation of an accident, may be admitted into evidence or used in a civil action for damages resulting from a matter mentioned in the report."[26] MemorialsA memorial for the victims was erected at the burial site, which is located within the Botanical Gardens near Palembang. Another memorial is located at Choa Chu Kang Cemetery in Singapore.[27] DramatisationThe Discovery Channel Canada / National Geographic TV series Mayday (also called Air Crash Investigation or Air Disasters) dramatised the accident in a 2012 episode titled Pushed to the Limit (broadcast in some countries as Pilot Under Pressure).[11] The episode argues Captain Tsu may have taken the opportunity of leaving the cockpit for tripping the CVR circuit breaker to turn off the CVR.[11] The episode also shows that Tsu is thought to have come up with an excuse to get Ward out of the cockpit. Having done so, he then proceeded to lock his Ward out of the flight deck before disabling the FDR; Tsu is presumed to have done this to ensure that no record would be made of what he was going to do next.[11] The episode further states that the rudder issue had been corrected before construction started on the accident aircraft. Nevertheless, the theory of a rudder malfunction was investigated with the possibility of corrosion, or debris getting stuck in the PCU, and was disproved.[11] The accident was also featured in a 2006 National Geographic documentary titled SilkAir 185: Pilot Suicide?.[28][29] The documentary claimed that the accident aircraft's FDR had previously failed for periods lasting between 10 seconds and 10 minutes in the 25 hours preceding the crash.[29] In popular cultureSingaporean singer JJ Lin's 2013 song "Practice Love" (Chinese: 修煉愛情) from the album Stories Untold (因你而在) is based on this incident,[30] as a close friend of the artist, Xu Chue Fern, was killed on the flight.[31] See also
Notes
References
Further reading
External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to SilkAir Flight 185. |