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Fri, Nov 15, 2013

NTSB Says Scope Of NPRM On ECi Cylinders Too Broad

Hersman: Proposed Rule Goes Beyond The Board's Recommendations Following Investigations

NTSB Chair Deborah A.P. Hersman has written a letter to the U.S. Department of Transportation saying its NPRM for an AD covering thousands of ECi cylinder assemblies goes well beyond the Board's recommendations for inspecting and replacing the cylinders.

In the letter, Hersman said that the Board has worked with ECi and the FAA for many years concerning failures of cylinder assemblies installed on reciprocating aircraft engines. After much research into the failure modes and root causes for certain cylinder head separations on ECi-manufactured cylinder assemblies installed on CMI 520 and 550 series engines, the NTSB issued Safety Recommendation A-12-7 to the FAA on February 24, 2012.

In that recommendation, the Board said that the FAA should:

"Require repetitive inspection of Engine Components, Inc., cylinder assemblies produced between May 2003 and October 2009 (serial numbers 7709 through 52884) installed on Teledyne Continental Motors model 520 and 550 engines and removal of these cylinder assemblies once they reach the engine manufacturer’s recommended normal time (hours) in service between overhauls. (A-12-7)."

"This recommendation was issued to address findings from our investigations and data supplied by ECi in which fatigue cracking of an ECi aluminum cylinder head had initiated in the root of a thread and propagated outward to the point where a majority of the cylinder head separated from a minor portion that remained attached to the cylinder barrel," Hersman wrote. "This head separation causes a significant drop in engine power and possibly engine failure. Repetitive inspection of the cylinder assemblies to detect fatigue cracks before they become critical in size ensures an adequate level of safety for the operator. The proposed rule outlines a failure mode where fatigue cracking initiates between cooling fins and propagates inward to the internal dome radius of the cylinder head resulting in head separation. The NTSB has investigated one case involving internal cylinder head dome cracks in four of six cylinders from an engine1 but has not documented any head separations from such cracking. The NTSB has not investigated any cases involving engines with cylinder serial numbers ranging from S/N 1 through S/N 1043, nor did concerns about this group of cylinders arise during meetings between the NTSB, the FAA, and ECi to discuss findings related to cylinders within the Group A population."

Hersman said that the proposed AD "would affect many more cylinder assemblies than the NTSB included in our recommendation letter. Because we are not aware of information to support the expanded scope and decrease in compliance time contained in the FAA’s proposed AD, we support FAA action more consistent with NTSB Safety Recommendation A-12-7. If there is additional data to warrant expanding the scope, we encourage the FAA to provide that data and information supporting an expanded scope and compliance time changes in this proposed action.

FMI: FAA Docket

 


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