A B737-300 RPTED BINDING IN THE ELEVATOR SYSTEM. FLT TEST CREW ALSO RPTED BINDING CAUSED BY ELEVATOR CABLE MISROUTED.
Synopsis
A B737-300 RPTED BINDING IN THE ELEVATOR SYSTEM. FLT TEST CREW ALSO RPTED BINDING CAUSED BY ELEVATOR CABLE MISROUTED.
Narrative
ON APR-WED-04; ACFT WAS ON A REVENUE FLT. THE PLT RPTED BINDING IN THE ELEVATOR SYS IN THE DOWN DIRECTION. ZZZ1 MAINT COULD NOT ISOLATE THE PROB SO THE ACFT WAS FLOWN TO ZZZ BY A TEST CREW. THE TEST CREW ALSO RPTED BINDING IN ELEVATOR SYS. I WAS ASSIGNED TO WORK THE ACFT ON APR-TUE-04; AFTER TROUBLESHOOTING FOR SEVERAL HOURS I FOUND THE L-H ELEVATOR DOWN CTL CABLE MISROUTED OVER THE TOP OF A FRAME AT STATION 1134 BY THE APU COMPARTMENT. THE CABLE HAD CUT THROUGH THE FRAME PAST THE L-ANGLE MORE THAN 1/8 INCH DEEP AND THE CABLE WAS STARTING TO FRAY; FAILURE OF THE CABLE OR FARTHER BINDING BY CUTTING INTO THE FRAME COULD HAVE CAUSED COMPLETE LOSS OF THE L-H ELEVATOR. THE ACFT HAD JUST COME OUT OF A HEAVY OVERHAUL BY AN OUTSIDE VENDOR ON JAN-WED-04. THIS IS NOT THE FIRST TIME WE HAVE SEEN SUCH POOR QUALITY WORK COME FROM THESE CONTRACTED OPS AND PROVIDES A PERFECT EXAMPLE OF WHY THESE OPS NEED MUCH GREATER OVERSIGHT BY THE FAA & NTSB. THEY ARE PRODUCING POOR QUALITY WORK WITH DISASTROUS POTENTIAL. CALLBACK CONVERSATION WITH RPTR REVEALED THE FOLLOWING INFO: THE RPTR STATED AFTER TROUBLESHOOTING FOR SEVERAL HOURS; THE L ELEVATOR DOWN CABLE WAS FOUND MISROUTED OVER THE TOP OF A FRAME AT STATION 1134 AT THE AUXILIARY POWER UNIT COMPARTMENT. THE RPTR SAID THE CABLE .125 INCH DIAMETER; HAD CUT MORE THAN ONE EIGHTH INCH DEEP INTO THE FRAME AND 'L' ANGLE AND THE CABLE WAS BEGINNING TO FRAY. THE RPTR STATED THE TENSION ON THE CABLE WAS THREE TIMES REQUIRED MAINT MANUAL LIMITS. THE RPTR SAID THE FACT THE TENSION WAS WAY OUT OF LIMITS SHOULD HAVE ALERTED THE PERSONS INSTALLING THE CABLE OF SOMETHING SERIOUSLY WRONG. THE RPTR STATED THIS WAS ONE OF MANY HEAVY MAINT JOBS DONE BY CONTRACT MAINT THAT WAS ACCOMPLISHED WITH POOR QUALITY WORK.
More incidents for this aircraft family →
Source: NASA Aviation Safety Reporting System (public domain). Reports are voluntary submissions and are not verified by NASA.