CABIN ATTENDANT RPT; FOKKER 100; ORD-DCA. ON CLBOUT; CRUISE; BLUE HAZE AND ELECTRICAL SMELL IN CABIN; COCKPIT. RETURN TO ORD.
Synopsis
CABIN ATTENDANT RPT; FOKKER 100; ORD-DCA. ON CLBOUT; CRUISE; BLUE HAZE AND ELECTRICAL SMELL IN CABIN; COCKPIT. RETURN TO ORD.
Narrative
I WAS IN THE MAIN CABIN NEAR THE WINDOW EXITS AND NOTICED 2 THINGS: 1) A GRAYISH BLUE HAZE IN THE CABIN FORWARD OF THE WINDOW EXITS; AND 2) A SMELL LIKE PLASTIC; OIL OR ELECTRICAL TYPE; BUT NOT NOXIOUS; JUST SLIGHT. I IMMEDIATELY WENT TO THE COCKPIT. THEY WERE BUSY AND HAD THEIR OXYGEN MASKS ON. THE SAME BLUE HAZE WAS PRESENT THERE AND CAME POURING OUT OF THE COCKPIT. IN MINS; THE AIR WAS CLR AND THE ODOR GONE. THE CABIN PRESSURIZATION WAS A LITTLE MESSED UP. I WAS GETTING A SLIGHT UNBALANCED FEELING; BUT NOT TERRIBLY; SO WE RETURNED TO ORD WITHOUT INCIDENT AT XB20. AFTER ARR; THE MECH ASKED US ABOUT THE COLOR OF THE SMOKE/HAZE. ONE NOTE: THE AIR CONDITIONING SYS ON THIS ACFT HAD BEEN FIXED THAT MORNING JUST PRIOR TO DEP. THE CABIN PRESSURIZATION WAS AN ADDITIONAL MECHANICAL PROB INCURRED DURING THIS FLT SEGMENT. THERE WAS NO CRITICAL EMER SIT; JUST A STRANGE OCCURRENCE. ALSO; THE F100 HAS MANY APU; PAC SYS FAILURES. LOTS OF ELECTRICAL GLITCHES THAT SEEM TO RESULT IN MECHANICAL PROBS OFTEN.
Source: NASA Aviation Safety Reporting System (public domain). Reports are voluntary submissions and are not verified by NASA.