- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 410
Rookies blamed for Sea King foulups
By DEAN BEEBY, THE CANADIAN PRESS
http://www.canoe.ca/NewsStand/TorontoSun/News/2005/01/17/900954-sun.html
TECHNICIANS tending to Canada's aging Sea King helicopters are making dozens of maintenance mistakes each year, many of them affecting safety, newly released documents show. The mechanical foulups are blamed on an influx of new apprentices who lack experience on the finicky aircraft. Their harried and overworked instructors, veteran air force technicians, are also becoming distracted and making mistakes.
More than 75 flight safety reports filed over the year ending September 2004 show parts installed backwards, dirty rags left inside equipment, hoses fastened to the wrong hole, oil tanks not filled before flights and improper parts installed.
In one case, on Nov. 13, 2003, technicians connected the fuel line to the engine-oil system and the oil line to the fuel system.
TORPEDO FELL ON DECK
In another, on Sept. 9, 2003, a torpedo dropped onto the deck of HMCS Calgary in the Persian Gulf because a technician had failed to install a safety pin in the Sea King's weapon system.
There were no deaths, injuries or crashes resulting from any of these errors. But censored safety reports, obtained under the Access to Information Act, frequently cite inexperienced apprentices and overworked supervisors as a threat to safety.
The geriatric Sea King fleet's maintenance problems are legendary but the worst headache has been the lack of qualified avionics technicians, many of whom were lured in the late 1990s to the commercial airline industry. The air force has since recruited a full complement of 615 Sea King technicians, but about a third are apprentices who have yet to complete the four-year training program.
By DEAN BEEBY, THE CANADIAN PRESS
http://www.canoe.ca/NewsStand/TorontoSun/News/2005/01/17/900954-sun.html
TECHNICIANS tending to Canada's aging Sea King helicopters are making dozens of maintenance mistakes each year, many of them affecting safety, newly released documents show. The mechanical foulups are blamed on an influx of new apprentices who lack experience on the finicky aircraft. Their harried and overworked instructors, veteran air force technicians, are also becoming distracted and making mistakes.
More than 75 flight safety reports filed over the year ending September 2004 show parts installed backwards, dirty rags left inside equipment, hoses fastened to the wrong hole, oil tanks not filled before flights and improper parts installed.
In one case, on Nov. 13, 2003, technicians connected the fuel line to the engine-oil system and the oil line to the fuel system.
TORPEDO FELL ON DECK
In another, on Sept. 9, 2003, a torpedo dropped onto the deck of HMCS Calgary in the Persian Gulf because a technician had failed to install a safety pin in the Sea King's weapon system.
There were no deaths, injuries or crashes resulting from any of these errors. But censored safety reports, obtained under the Access to Information Act, frequently cite inexperienced apprentices and overworked supervisors as a threat to safety.
The geriatric Sea King fleet's maintenance problems are legendary but the worst headache has been the lack of qualified avionics technicians, many of whom were lured in the late 1990s to the commercial airline industry. The air force has since recruited a full complement of 615 Sea King technicians, but about a third are apprentices who have yet to complete the four-year training program.