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Learn about Mount Cook Airline's approach to safety, including their investigations, education programs, and recent tail icing events. Discover how they prioritize safety, use proactive methods, and maintain credibility through trust and positive education.
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Mount Cook Airline Safety Investigations & Education in an Airline Nathan McGraw 05 June 2010
Overview • Mount Cook Airline - our approach to safety • Tail icing investigation Mount Cook Operational Safety
Who are we? • Part of the Air NZ Group • Wholly owned subsidiary • Independent AOC • 11 x ATR 72-500 • 2,300 sectors per month • 10 scheduled destinations Mount Cook Operational Safety
Our Approach to Safety • We don’t rank safety: Safety is critical • Use SMS principals (formal SMS in development) • Proactive approach (don’t wait for an incident) • Investigate events that go well • Safety education is essential Mount Cook Operational Safety
Our Approach to Safety • Operational Safety (not Flight Safety or OSH) • Previously an ‘investigation office’ only • Op Safety team • Two pilots (F/Os) • Two cabin crewmembers • All current line crewmembers (minimum 50% line flying) • Safety focus (no fingers in other pies) Mount Cook Operational Safety
Our Approach to Safety • Cabin crew are an essential part of the team • Many investigations have a cabin crew aspect • Separate area of expertise • Non-technical approach • Non-management contact for line cabin crewmembers • Line cabin crewmembers have a voice (better buy-in) Mount Cook Operational Safety
Our Approach to Safety • Safety Advisors, not Investigators • Both pilots have training & examining backgrounds • Both pilots are FOs and have been Captains previously • Qualified military test pilot and instructor • Trained investigators • RABQSA accredited auditor • HF training (USC, ATSB) Mount Cook Operational Safety
Our Approach to Safety • Essential Qualities of a Safety Advisor • Integrity • Objectivity • Moral courage • Respected by crewmembers and management • High personal standards (sets an example) • Infectious attitude towards safety (generative approach) Mount Cook Operational Safety
Our Approach to Safety • Ratio of work 30% monitoring (processing data, reports) 20% investigations 60% safety liaison & education ____ 110% (we work very hard) • Focus on education improves credibility and buy-in • credibility = report quality & quantity Mount Cook Operational Safety
Safety Reports Maintaining Credibility Investigation Trust / Buy-in Positive Education Mount Cook Operational Safety
Our Approach to Safety • Safety Reports – our morning newspaper • All about trust (hard to earn, shattered in an instant) • Absolute avoidance of punitive action • De-identification, even when not requested • Responsible to the regulator for notification; but • Greater responsibility to our fellow crewmembers • Integrity (we do what we say we’ll do) Mount Cook Operational Safety
Our Approach to Safety • Safety Investigations - how can we do this better? • Evidence-based approach • Huge HF emphasis • Lots of tests for ‘reasonableness’ • Substitution tests to identify systemic factors • Absolute avoidance of punitive content Mount Cook Operational Safety
Our Approach to Safety • Safety Education – Give people the tools to be safe! • Op Safety Report: weekly report to management • Safety Snapshot: monthly occurrence bulletin • Aoraki Safety: biannual magazine • Op Safety website: library, links, resources • Classroom: HF module during annual CRM courses • All positive material – no preachy statements Mount Cook Operational Safety
Our Approach to Safety • Traditional Safety Office • Get summonsed when you’ve had an incident • Only produces investigation reports • Punishment for naughty pilots Message: Safety Office is a negative place • Our Op Safety office • Positive place (even during investigations) • Churns out positive safety material (learning emphasis) • Try to make safety interesting, enjoyable, and accessible Mount Cook Operational Safety
Recent Investigations • TCAS TA at Queenstown • GNSS Database Validity • Engine failure after takeoff • DG fumes in-flight • Severe turbulence (yes Peter, it’s coming) • Tail icing events Mount Cook Operational Safety
Tail Icing Events Important • Not suggesting that the ATR is unsafe in icing conditions • ATR has produced comprehensive & detailed information for operators and pilots • ATR icing procedures are robust and appropriate • Investigation is applicable to all aircraft types • Only significant points covered in this presentation Mount Cook Operational Safety
Tail Icing Events • NZ Climate • Polar Maritime (cold, moist flow) • Airframe icing at altitude (especially for turboprops) • NZ pilots generally knowledgeable about airframe icing • Icing all year – both events happened in late summer Mount Cook Operational Safety
Tail Icing Events • First Event • Freezing rain in climb between FL160 and FL170 (Marlborough Sounds) • Significant reduction in rate-of-climb to <200 fpm • Ice detection system alert • Immediate cruise descent to FL150 • Air was 5 °C warmer and all visible ice melted quickly • Flight continued at FL150 with no visible ice accretion Mount Cook Operational Safety
Tail Icing Events • First Event • After 15 minutes at FL150, loud bang and severe vibration from tail area • Vibration lasted for over 30 seconds but then ceased • Pilots disconnected AP and checked for controllability – all normal • Experienced crew – never encountered vibrations so strong • Suspected ice but diverted to Palmerston North due severity of vibration • Thorough maintenance inspection – no defects or abnormalities Mount Cook Operational Safety
Tail Icing Events • Second Event • Ice accretion earlier in flight • “Significant icing remained on the IEP” • Cruised in VMC • IMC on descent but VMC at 7,000 ft • All visible ice melted by 4,000 ft Mount Cook Operational Safety
Tail Icing Events • Second Event • No visible ice and +11 °C on the ground • All ice protection systems turned off (as per SOP) • Pilots planned for and briefed a non-icing landing • ‘Fish tailing’ on final approach • Unstable in pitch and yaw – difficult to stabilise and trim • Landed uneventfully Mount Cook Operational Safety
Tail Icing Events • Second Event • After disembarking, pilots noted significant ice on stabiliser • Ice on pneumatic boots (protected section), • Estimated 150mm forward of leading edge Mount Cook Operational Safety
Tail Icing Events • Analysis • Considered defects with flight controls, trims, autopilot, ice protection • Review of maintenance records – no defects or discrepancies • Functional test of pneumatic boots – no defects • Tail icing most likely contributing factor Mount Cook Operational Safety
Tail Icing Events • NASA Tail Icing Research (early 1990s) • Tail icing historically poorly understood • Icing accidents between 1950 & 1980 often misdiagnosed as wing stalls • Tail surfaces accrete ice earlier and faster than wings (sharper leading edge) • Propeller aircraft are more susceptible (particularly turboprops) • Possible to have ice on stabiliser with no other ice on airframe Mount Cook Operational Safety
Prop wash at higher angles-of-attack (for illustrative purposes only). Tail Icing Events • Stabiliser on turboprop aircraft often sits in prop wash • Higher velocity = lower temperature • Prop wash air can be up to 5 °C cooler than ambient • Tail can be in icing conditions, even if the rest of the aircraft isn’t! Mount Cook Operational Safety
Tail Icing Events • Design features which support tail icing (NASA) • Un-powered and aerodynamically balanced elevators • Pnuematic de-icing boots in lieu of heated leading edges • Horizontal stabilisers with sharp leading edges • Large flap deflections (big change of relative airflow over tail) • These features are applicable to a lot of turboprops • Tail ice can be 3 – 6 times thicker than on the wings Mount Cook Operational Safety
Tail Icing Events • Findings – First Event • No maintenance defects or anomalies • Loud bang was likely tail ice breaking free in warmer air at FL150 • Vibration was likely airflow disruption over elevator due to ice breaking free unevenly • Gave the crew a real fright – a very unusual icing event Mount Cook Operational Safety
Tail Icing Events • Findings – Second Event • No maintenance defects or anomalies • Pilots followed SOPs exactly (passes substitution test) • Residual ice on the tail was very unusual • Aerodynamic instability on approach likely caused by tail icing • Pilots reported symptoms similar to an impending tailplane stall Mount Cook Operational Safety
Tail Icing Events • Symptoms of impending tailplane stalls (NASA) • Lightening of controls (particularly forward motion) • Difficulty trimming • Onset of pilot-induced oscillations due to change of control balance • Control buffeting (but not the airframe) Mount Cook Operational Safety
Tail Icing Events • Severe Icing QRH Checklist • Includes significant protections against tailplane stall (reduced flap landing) • Pilots used it only when in defined severe icing • Once clear of severe icing, pilots would resume normal ops and land with full flap (breaking the checklist) • Tail icing is possible without being in defined severe icing • Recommended that checklist be used whenever tail icing is suspected (regardless of whether icing was severe or not) Mount Cook Operational Safety
Tail Icing Events • Recommendations • Training module for tail icing • Icing exercise in simulator that results in a reduced flap landing • Use severe icing checklist (including reduced flap landing) if tail icing is suspected, even if airframe is visibly clear of all ice Mount Cook Operational Safety
Tail Icing Events • Results • Good support from ATR during investigation • Great company support, particularly Flight Ops and Training • Enthusiastic uptake from training team • Pilots now routinely report landing with reduced flaps after significant ice encounters • Investigation resulted in positive training and tangible results Mount Cook Operational Safety