B717 ON DESCENT EXPERIENCES APPARENT PITOT/STATIC SYSTEM ERRORS ON THE FO SIDE INSTRUMENTS. DISTRACTION WHICH RESULTS CONTRIBUTES TO AN ALT DEVIATION. INCIDENT LASTS ABOUT TWO MINUTES AND THEN ABATES COMPLETELY.
Synopsis
B717 ON DESCENT EXPERIENCES APPARENT PITOT/STATIC SYSTEM ERRORS ON THE FO SIDE INSTRUMENTS. DISTRACTION WHICH RESULTS CONTRIBUTES TO AN ALT DEVIATION. INCIDENT LASTS ABOUT TWO MINUTES AND THEN ABATES COMPLETELY.
Narrative
ON INITIAL DSCNT WE HAD A CLRNC TO CROSS A FIX SOMEWHERE IN THE VICINITY OF ABC AT FL270. AS THE AUTOPLT DSNDED IN 'PROF' WE GOT INST COMPARISON ERRORS FOLLOWED IMMEDIATELY BY THE AUTOPLT KICKING OFF AND NUMEROUS ANNUNCIATIONS ON THE 'EAD.' I BEGAN HAND FLYING AND TRYING TO DETERMINE WHAT WAS HAPPENING. THE AIRSPD ON THE CAPT'S INSTS WAS IN THE RANGE OF 260 KTS; FO'S WAS 310 TO 320 APPROACHING REDLINE. INITIALLY I TRIED TO SLOW TO KEEP THE FO'S SIDE FROM OVERSPEEDING AS I EVALUATED. IN DOING SO THE CAPT SIDE AIRSPD APCHED THE LOW SIDE FOOTER. BASED ON OTHER CUES -- GND SPD; PITCH ATTITUDE; PWR SETTING; AND FEEL OF THE ACFT; I DETERMINED THAT THE CAPT SIDE INSTS WERE MOST LIKELY CORRECT; AND INSTRUCTED THE FO TO PUT HIS AIR DATA INSTS ON MY SIDE TO GET RID OF WHAT I THOUGHT WERE ERRONEOUS AND HIGHLY DISTRACTING OVERSPEED AND CLACKER WARNINGS. ABOUT THIS TIME WE ADVISED ATC THAT WE WERE HAVING AIRSPD PROBS AND NOTICED WE HAD OVERSHOT OUR DSCNT BY APPROX 800 FT. ATC DIDN'T SEEM TOO CONCERNED AND ISSUED US A NEW CLRNC TO A LOWER ALT. AS WE WERE RPTING OUR ISSUE; THE WHOLE PROB CORRECTED ITSELF AND THE INSTS WORKED PERFECTLY FOR THE UNEVENTFUL REMAINDER OF THE FLT. THE FO RETURNED HIS AIR DATA SOURCE TO NORMAL OPS. THE WHOLE INCIDENT TOOK PLACE IN APPROX 2 MINS. THIS IS MY GUESS: WINDS WERE STRONG OUT OF THE WEST GIVING US A HEADWIND WITH A STRONG XWIND COMPONENT FROM THE R. IT SEEMED THE AIR WAS EXTRA MOIST AND A LITTLE COLDER THAN USUAL AT ALT FL340. I THINK SOME ICE MAY HAVE GOTTEN INTO THE R STATIC SYS; AND AS WE DSNDED IT LODGED IN A WAY TO CAUSE A MALFUNCTION. ONLY A THEORY.
Source: NASA Aviation Safety Reporting System (public domain). Reports are voluntary submissions and are not verified by NASA.