The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) is providing
the following information to urge The Boeing Company and the Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA) to take immediate action on the safety recommendations in
this report concerning the potential for a jammed or restricted rudder control
system on certain Boeing 737 airplanes. We identified these issues during our
ongoing investigation of the rudder pedal anomaly involving a Boeing 737-8,
N47280, while landing at Newark Liberty International Airport (EWR), Newark,
New Jersey, on February 6, 2024.
If you determine the Collins Aerospace SVO-730 rudder rollout guidance actuators with incorrectly assembled bearings should be removed, notify international regulators that oversee operators of Boeing 737 airplanes about the safety issues involving the SVO-730 rudder rollout guidance actuator and encourage them to require the removal of actuators with incorrectly assembled bearings from 737NG and 737MAX airplanes until an acceptable replacement actuator becomes available for installation. (A-24-30) (Urgent)
Aviation
Investigation Report AIR-24-06
On February 6, 2024, about 1555 eastern standard time, the flight crew of United Airlines flight 1539, a Boeing 737-8, N47280, experienced a rudder pedal.
According to
data derived from the flight data recorder, the flight crew applied
approximately 32 pounds of force to the rudder pedals before touchdown which
yielded no discernible effect on the rudder position or heading.4 The flight crew attempted to clear the jammed rudder
controls immediately after touchdown, applying approximately 75 pounds of force
to the rudder pedals when the airspeed was about 120 knots, again with no
effect on the rudder position or heading.
With the
airplane’s airspeed continuing to decrease during rollout, the flight crew
applied approximately 42 pounds of force to the pedals, but the jam persisted.
The captain elected instead to use the nosewheel steering tiller as the
airplane slowed to a safe taxi speed. The captain stated that, after the
airplane entered the assigned taxiway, he asked the first officer to check the
rudder pedals on his side of the flight deck, and the first officer indicated
that the same anomaly was occurring.
Data derived from the flight data
recorder indicate that shortly after, with the airplane traveling at a
groundspeed of less than 20 knots, the flight crew applied approximately 59
pounds of force on the rudder pedals, and the rudder pedals and rudder surface
began to operate normally. The airplane taxied to the gate without further
incident, and all airplane occupants (2 flight crewmembers, 4 cabin crewmembers, and 155 passengers) deplaned without any
injuries or damage to the airplane.
United Airlines received the incident airplane from Boeing on February 20, 2023. The airplane was equipped with a Collins Aerospace SVO-730 rudder rollout guidance actuator, which was electrically disabled based on the operator’s delivery requirements for the autoflight system.5 Although the actuator was disabled, it remained mechanically connected to the upper portion of the airplane’s aft rudder input torque tube by the actuator’s output crank arm and a pushrod, as shown in figure 1.
6 Pilot control of the
Boeing 737-8 rudder is transmitted in a closed-loop system from the pilots’
rudder pedals in the cockpit, through a single cable system, an aft rudder
quadrant, and a pedal force transducer, to the aft rudder input torque tube in
the vertical stabilizer. Rotation of the torque tube provides the command
inputs to the main and standby rudder power control units to move the rudder
surface.
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