This AD as written, inaccurately represents the incident in that fact that there was
a very specific set of circumstances in the course of operation that were unique to
this event which establishes it as a very rare occurrence. This unique set of
circumstances supports the FAA determination that this is an AD for a piece part
exposure (Category 5 Service Bulletin) verses driving an action that a Category 1
or 2 Service Bulletin would accomplish. GE recognizes the FAA’s position to
mitigate a future event but the actions to AD a Category 5 Service Bulletin
supports the assessment that this is a very rare occurrence and the actions that
are needed to be taken are not urgent to correct an unsafe condition.
GE finds it necessary to change to the specific words listed below in order to
accurately represent the set of circumstances and mitigation plan:
·In the SUMMARY and Unsafe Condition sections the sentence: ‘Both engines
experienced high-altitude flameouts.’ This event was the result of a high altitude
and high power event and the following wording would be a more accurate
representation: ‘As a result of a high altitude aircraft stall and upset, both engines
experienced high-power flameouts.’
·In the SUMMARY and the Unsafe Condition sections the sentence: ‘We are
proposing this AD to prevent the inability to restart both engines after flameout due
to excessive friction of the 4-step seal, which could result in subsequent forced
landing of the airplane.’ The following wording would more be a more accurate
representation and support the assessment that this is a very rare occurrence and
the recommended actions are not prevalent as proven by the category level of this
service bulletin: ‘We are proposing this AD to enhance the ability to restart an
engine after flameout by reducing the friction in the 4-step seal. The inability to
restart an engine following a dual engine flameout may subsequently result in a
forced landing of the airplane.’
·In the Discussion section the sentence: ‘This will ultimately reduce the possibility
of the HP rotor locking after a high altitude flameout when HP rotor rotation is not
maintained during descent.’ This event was the result of a high altitude and high
power event and the following wording would be a more accurate
representation: ‘This will ultimately reduce the possibility of the HP rotor locking
after a high-altitude, high-power, flameout when HP rotor rotation is not maintained
during descent.’
GE Aviation
This is comment on Rule
Airworthiness Directives; General Electric Company CF34-1A, -3A, -3A1, -3A2, -3B, and -3B1 Turbofan Engines
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Public Submission Posted: 08/11/2008 ID: FAA-2007-0419-0002
Sep 22,2008 11:59 PM ET
Public Submission Posted: 09/23/2008 ID: FAA-2007-0419-0003
Sep 22,2008 11:59 PM ET