Jakarta - Mechanical and design issues
contributed to the crash of a Lion Air 737 MAX jet last October,
Indonesian investigators told victims' families in a briefing on
Wednesday ahead of the release of a final report.
Contributing factors to the crash of the new Boeing
jet, which killed all 189 people on board, included incorrect
assumptions on how an anti-stall device called the Maneuvering
Characteristics Augmentation System (MCAS) functioned and how
pilots would react, slides in the presentation showed.
Reliance on a single angle-of-attack sensor made the MCAS
system more vulnerable to failure, while the sensor on the plane
that crashed had been miscalibrated during an earlier repair,
according to the slides.
A Boeing spokeswoman declined to comment on the briefing,
saying, "as the report hasn't been officially released by the
authorities, it is premature for us to comment on its contents."
A Lion Air representative declined to comment.
Officials inspect an engine recovered the crashed Lion Air jet in Jakarta, Indonesia, in November 2018. File picture: Achmad Ibrahim/AP
The briefing slides said a lack of documentation about how
systems would behave in the crash scenario, including the
activation of a "stick shaker" that warned pilots of a dangerous
loss of lift, also contributed.
The flight crew also faced multiple distractions and
"deficiencies" in manual control of the aircraft and
communication, the slides added.
The 737 MAX was grounded worldwide after a second deadly
crash in Ethiopia in March 2019.
US planemaker Boeing is under growing pressure to explain
what it knew about 737 MAX problems before the aircraft entered
service, especially after a Reuters report on messages from a
former test pilot describing erratic software behaviour on the
737 MAX jet two years before recent crashes.
Boeing has already said it would redesign the anti-stall
system to rely on more than a single sensor and to help reduce
pilot workload.
The planemaker is due to release its third-quarter financial
results later Wednesday.