A B767-300ER ACFT INSPECTOR NOTES THE CONFUSING JOB CARD REQUIREMENTS FOR AN ENG COMPRESSOR BLEED VALVE VENTURI SENSOR BODY CRACK INSPECTION.

2007-08 · NASA ASRS report 749773

Date: 2007-08 · Aircraft: B767-300 and 300 ER

Anomalies: aircraft-equipment-problem-critical|deviation-discrepancy-procedural-far|deviation-discrepancy-procedural-maintenance|deviation-discrepancy-procedural-published-material-policy

Synopsis

A B767-300ER ACFT INSPECTOR NOTES THE CONFUSING JOB CARD REQUIREMENTS FOR AN ENG COMPRESSOR BLEED VALVE VENTURI SENSOR BODY CRACK INSPECTION.

Narrative

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

Source: NASA Aviation Safety Reporting System (public domain). Reports are voluntary submissions and are not verified by NASA.

Loading the flight search…

Frequently asked questions

How do I search flights by aircraft type on FlightFinder?

Pick an aircraft model — Boeing 737, Airbus A320, A380, Boeing 787 Dreamliner and more — enter your origin airport, and FlightFinder shows every route that plane flies from there with live fares.

Which aircraft types can I filter by?

We support Boeing 737/747/757/767/777/787, the full Airbus A220/A319/A320/A321/A330/A340/A350/A380 family, Embraer E170/E175/E190/E195, Bombardier CRJ and Dash 8, and the ATR 42/72 turboprops.

Is FlightFinder free to use?

Search and schedules are free. Pro ($4.99/month, $39/year, or $99 one-time lifetime) unlocks the enriched flight card — on-time stats, CO₂ per passenger, amenities, live gate & weather — plus My Trips with push alerts.

Where does the route data come from?

Live schedules come from Amadeus, AeroDataBox and Travelpayouts. Observed routes (which aircraft actually flew a given city pair) are crowdsourced from adsb.lol ADS-B data under the Open Database License.