Loganair Flight 6780 was a scheduled domestic flight from Aberdeen Airport to Sumburgh Airport in the Shetland Islands, Scotland. On 15 December 2014, the Saab 2000 operating the flight was struck by lightning during the approach, and then plunged faster than the aircraft's maximum operating speed. The aircraft came within 1,100 feet (340 m) of the North Sea before the pilots recovered and returned to Aberdeen. All 33 passengers and crew were unharmed.[1]
Incident | |
---|---|
Date | 15 December 2014 |
Summary | Lightning strike, subsequent pilot error leading to near dive into ocean |
Site | Sumburgh, Shetland Islands 59°52′56″N 001°05′07″W / 59.88222°N 1.08528°W |
Aircraft | |
Aircraft type | Saab 2000 |
Aircraft name | Spirit of Aberdeen |
Operator | Loganair |
Registration | G-LGNO |
Flight origin | Aberdeen Airport |
Destination | Sumburgh Airport |
Occupants | 33 |
Passengers | 30 |
Crew | 3 |
Fatalities | 0 |
Injuries | 0 |
Survivors | 33 |
Recorded data showed that the autopilot remained engaged after the lightning strike, contrary to what the pilots had believed, and the nose-up pitch inputs to the flight controls made by the pilots were countered by the autopilot's pitch trim function, which made nose-down inputs to regain the selected altitude of 2,000 feet (610 m).
In response to the accident, the Air Accidents Investigation Branch (AAIB) issued five safety recommendations regarding changes to the autopilot system.
Background
editAircraft
editThe aircraft involved, manufactured in 1995, was a Saab 2000 registered as G-LGNO with serial number 2000-013. It was equipped with two Allison AE 2100A turboprop engines. The aircraft had accumulated a total of 26,672 flight hours and 25,357 flight cycles at the time of the accident.[2]: 9 The Saab 2000 is a twin-engine turboprop that can carry up to 53 passengers according to the Type-certificate Data Sheet issued by EASA.[3] It was certified in 1994 and manufactured until 1999 with 63 planes built. The aircraft has a maximum operating speed (VMO) of 270 knots (500 km/h) above 11,000 feet (3,400 m), and 250 knots (460 km/h) below 9,000 feet (2,700 m). The maximum speed reached during flight testing was 318 knots (589 km/h).[2]: 9
Loganair had a franchise agreement with another British regional airline, Flybe until August 2017.[4] Therefore, at the time of the accident the aircraft was operating under a Flybe livery.[2]: 9
Crew
editThe captain was a 42-year-old who had been employed by Loganair since 2005. He had a total of 5,780 flight hours, including 4,640 hours on the Saab 340 and 143 hours on the Saab 2000. The captain originally flew the Saab 340, but had transitioned to the Saab 2000 in August 2014. When the captain flew the Saab 340, he received a training exercise in which a lightning strike caused a generator failure and resulted in the autopilot becoming disengaged.[2]: 7–9
The co-pilot was a 35-year-old who had been employed by Loganair since early 2014. She had a total of 1,054 flight hours, including 260 hours on the Saab 2000. She was qualified to fly Saab 2000 in May 2014.[2]: 7–9
Flight
editPreparation
editNo abnormalities were reported on the aircraft before takeoff. The weather in Aberdeen was good, but the forecast for Sumburgh called for thunderstorms with rain, snow, hail, and winds of up to 60 knots (110 km/h).[2]: 3
The two pilots completed an uneventful rotation from Aberdeen to Sumburgh and back, then prepared for the second rotation with the captain as the pilot in command.
Although the hour-long flight to Sumburgh required 1,826 kilograms of fuel, the pilots opted to fill the tanks in Aberdeen in order to take advantage of lower prices. This resulted in a fuel load of 3,000 kilograms.[2]: 3
Approach
editFlight 6780 was vectored for an instrument landing system (ILS) approach to Runway 27 at Sumburgh Airport. The aircraft descended to 2,000 feet (610 m) and captured the localizer 9 nautical miles east of the airport. During the approach, the captain decided to go-around because of a heavy thunderstorm displayed on the weather radar.[5] As the aircraft turned south, it was struck by lightning, which entered the airframe at the radome directly in front of the cockpit, and exited at the auxiliary power unit (APU) exhaust in the tail. Ball lightning appeared briefly in the cabin just before the strike.[6] The captain, in the middle of a radio exchange, ceased his transmission and immediately took control of the aircraft, where he began to make pitch-up inputs on the flight controls. During this time, the co-pilot declared a mayday, and the air traffic controller offered all options to the crew for an approach or diversion.[2]: 3–4 [7]
The autopilot, sensing that the aircraft was above the selected altitude of 2,000 ft amsl, began applying nose-down pitch to reach the selected altitude. Because the autopilot was still engaged, the control forces the commander experienced (opposing his inputs) were higher than usual for a given column displacement, and he identified that the aircraft did not feel normal. The co-pilot also applied nose-up inputs, but also perceived that the aircraft was not responding as expected. The primary flight display (PFD) displayed pitch and roll mistrim warnings, which were not acted upon. These were accompanied with audible chimes as well as captions on the EICAS, neither of which the commander recalled noticing. The captain instructed the co-pilot to activate the elevator emergency trim switch, but since the elevator control system had not malfunctioned, the emergency trim function did not activate when the switch was turned on.[2]: 4
Flight 6780 had climbed to around 4,000 feet (1,200 m) when the attitude turned nose-down and the aircraft began to descend. The aircraft began to plunge at a peak descent rate of 9,500 feet (2,900 m) per minute, during which time invalid data from one of the air data computers (ADCs) caused the autopilot to disengage while the pitch trim was almost fully nose-down. The pitch angle reached 19° nose-down and the speed reached 330 knots (610 km/h), 80 knots (150 km/h) above the VMO. During this time, the controller continued to occasionally inform the pilots about their altitude.[2]: 4–5
The pilots maintained the nose-up pitch inputs and the aircraft began pitching up. The ground proximity warning system (EGPWS) generated "SINK RATE" and "PULL UP" alarms near the minimum height reached of 1,100 feet (340 m).[8] The captain applied full power and the aircraft began to climb.[9] Flight 6780 then continued to climb to 24,000 feet (7,300 m) and diverted to Aberdeen Airport, where it landed safely.[2]: 5 [10][11]
Investigation
editThe Air Accidents Investigation Branch (AAIB) opened an investigation into the incident.
Preliminary data
editA detailed inspection of the aircraft was carried out. Some small soot marks and damage was seen on the surface of the radome, and although there was heat damage inside, there were no holes. The APU exhaust was damaged with sections of molten metal, but no further damage to the aircraft was revealed. Tests and inspections of the elevator and autopilot control systems did not reveal any abnormalities.[2]: 20
Examination of meteorological information revealed that the aircraft had been struck by triggered lightning, a phenomenon in which an aircraft accumulating a negative charge during flight triggers a strike when approaching a positively charged region in a thunderstorm cell.[12] The Met Office’s lightning detection system observed a lightning strike at the aircraft’s recorded position at 19:10:20.[2]: 21–22
Pilot behaviour
editImmediately after the lightning strike, the pilots performed nose-up inputs on the flight controls in order to continue the go-around, which along with small increases in engine power caused the aircraft to climb. On the other hand, the autopilot began moving the pitch trim to the nose-down position to maintain the selected altitude of 2,000 feet (610 m), requiring the pilots to pull the control column with a force of 24 pounds (11 kg). For two and a half minutes after the lightning strike, the pilots and autopilot continued to make conflicting inputs. The aircraft continued to climb in stages up to 4,000 feet (1,200 m).[2]: 23
To maintain altitude, the pilots were pulling the control column fully aft with a force of 80 pounds (36 kg). Flight 6780 maintained 4,000 feet (1,200 m) for about 10 seconds, but the nose gradually lowered as the autopilot continued to move the pitch trim to the nose-down position (pitch trim having more elevator authority than the control column at high speeds).[2]: 24
Uncontrolled descent
editEventually the pitch trim stopped close to 9° (out of a maximum of 10°) and Flight 6780 began to descend at a rate of 1,500 feet per minute. The aircraft continued to descend and accelerate as the engine output was gradually reduced and moved to flight idle. Six seconds later, the autopilot disengaged as Flight 6780 was passing 3,600 feet (1,100 m) at a descent rate of 4,250 feet (1,300 m) per minute and increasing.[2]: 24 When the autopilot disengaged, it left the aircraft with pitch trim that was almost fully nose-down and that made the control column ineffective. Thus the aircraft continued its descent.[2] The pilots maintained nose-up pitch inputs and applied full power, and the aircraft began to pitch up just as the EGPWS issued a “SINK RATE” alarm. This was followed by a “PULL UP” alarm as the aircraft reached its peak descent rate of 9,500 feet (2,900 m) per minute at 1,600 feet (490 m).[2]: 27 The pilots succeeded in recovering the aircraft 7 seconds before hitting the ground.[13]
Autopilot behaviour
editThe autopilot sensed that the aircraft was climbing above the selected altitude of 2,000 feet (610 m) and began applying nose-down trim to regain that altitude. Even if the captain pulled the control column with excessive forces and operated the pitch trim switch, the autopilot was designed not to disengage. The captain felt that the force required on the control column was higher than usual, due to the autopilot opposing his inputs. He may have mistakenly attributed this to a flight control malfunction caused by the lightning strike.[2]: 43 After that, the autopilot disengaged while the aircraft was at a nose-down attitude of 10°, due to a malfunction of the ADC. If this had not happened, the autopilot would have disengaged when the aircraft reached its nose-down pitch limit of 17°.[2]: 41
Flight data recorder (FDR) analysis revealed that one of the flight control computers (FCCs) did not receive data or received invalid data from the ADC for at least 99 milliseconds. This disengaged the autopilot at 19:13. The ADC was not removed for further investigation because no ADC malfunction was seen after the accident.[2]: 41
Conclusions
editIn September 2016, the AAIB issued its final report, stating:[2]: 51
The commander’s actions following the lightning strike were to make manual inputs on the flying controls, which appear to have been instinctive and may have been based on his assumption that the autopilot would disconnect when lightning struck. However, the autopilot did not disconnect and was attempting to maintain a target altitude of 2,000 ft AMSL by trimming nose-down while the commander was making nose-up pitch inputs. The control forces felt by the commander were higher than normal because the autopilot was opposing his inputs and he may have attributed this to a flight control malfunction caused by the lightning strike. He did not recall having seen or heard any of the aural or visual mistrim cautions which were a cue that the autopilot was still engaged. This was probably the result of cognitive tunnelling.
In addition, the report stated:[2]: 51
The commander applied and maintained full aft control column (nose-up elevator) input; however, the autopilot’s nose-down elevator trim authority exceeded the commander’s elevator nose-up authority and the aircraft pitched nose-down and descended, reaching a peak descent rate of 9,500 ft/min. The autopilot then disengaged due to an ADC fault and this allowed the commander’s nose-up pitch trim inputs to become effective. The aircraft started to pitch up just before reaching a minimum height of 1,100 ft above sea level.
Out of 22 aircraft types surveyed, only the Saab 2000 had an autopilot with the following three attributes:[2]: 51–52
- Applying an override force to the column will move the elevator but will not cause the autopilot to disengage
- The autopilot can trim in the opposite direction to the pilot applied control column input
- Pressing the main pitch trim switches has no effect and will not cause the autopilot to disengage
Previously, the Airbus A300, Fokker 70, and Fokker 100 autopilots had similar characteristics, but, in the wake of multiple accidents and serious incidents, the autopilot was redesigned.[2]: 52 In addition, the Saab 340 had the same characteristics as the Saab 2000 in that the autopilot was not disengaged even if the pilot operated the control column, but it was designed to disengage when the pilot operated the pitch trim.[2]: 33
The AAIB also concluded that the greater authority of the pitch trim than the control column during high-speed flight contributed to the accident. Even when the control column was pulled to the limit, the pilots could not prevent the nose from dropping. The autopilot was designed to automatically disengage when the pitch or bank exceeds a certain angle, but it is not designed to prevent overspeeding, even if the speed exceeds VMO (during the incident, the autopilot continued to trim nose down even though the VMO had been exceeded).[2]: 46
Startle effect
editThe European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) said in a 2018 report on the startle effect that "this is an interesting case in which the severity of the accident was not defined by the cause of the startle (in this case the lightning strike) but in the sequence of events after this." The EASA further described the accident as follows:[14]
In effect, after the lightning strike, the aircraft was fully functional and a simple autopilot-disengage would have been sufficient for the pilots to manoeuvre the aircraft in any way they would like. However, the effects of the startle, likely coupled with the pre-startle stress, reduced the PIC’s cognitive frame of mind to make immediate manual inputs, ignoring other control modes. Of course the alternative hypothesis is that the PIC (thinking that the autopilot had disengaged due to the lightning strike) may have assumed that his manual control system was impaired, and instigated his tunnelling in that direction. Unfortunately, if the pilots had refrained from an instant manual reaction, it may have been possible that the secondary problem of fighting the autopilot would be prevented altogether, and led to a much safer flight.
Recommendations
editThe AAIB issued five safety recommendations to the EASA and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to prevent a loss of control due to the autopilot.[1] The safety advisory recommends reviewing the autopilot design of aircraft certified by the rules of Part 25 and equivalent regulations, including the Saab 2000, and require modification if necessary to ensure that pilots do not pose potential danger when applying forces that conflict with the autopilot.[2]: 52–53 [15][16]
Other safety actions to be taken, as mentioned in AAIB’s report, include publishing Operations Newsletter No.6 by the aircraft manufacturer, which informs Saab 2000 operators of the circumstances of this serious incident, and clarifies the operation of the autopilot;[2]: 54 putting "Notice to Aircrew (NOTAC 123/14)" in place;[2]: 55 and revising the Autopilot Standard Operating Procedures.[2]: 56
Dramatization
editThe accident is featured in the first episode of Season 21 of Mayday, also known as Air Crash Investigation. The episode is titled "North Sea Nightmare".[17]
See also
edit- China Airlines Flight 140, an accident involving an Airbus A300 where the crew also attempted to override the autopilot
- Qantas Flight 72, a similar incident where an autopilot error causes an uncontrolled series of dives
References
edit- ^ a b Ranter, Harro. "Serious incident Saab 2000 G-LGNO, 15 Dec 2014". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 25 May 2021.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae "Report on the serious incident to Saab 2000, G-LGNO, Approximately 7 nm east of Sumburgh Airport, Shetland,15 December 2014" (PDF). Air Accidents Investigation Branch. 6 September 2016. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
- ^ "TYPE-CERTIFICATE DATA SHEET no. EASA.A.069 for SAAB 2000". Retrieved 14 March 2024.
- ^ "Flybe terminates contract with Loganair". BBC News. 21 November 2016. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
- ^ "Thunderstruck". Flight Safety Australia. 15 March 2018. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
- ^ "Sumburgh plane 'dived after lightning strike' says AAIB report". BBC News. 2 March 2015. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
- ^ Taylor, Ryan (16 December 2014). "Mayday after plane is struck by lightning". The Shetland Times. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
- ^ Ward, Victoria (10 April 2015). "Pilot averted disaster with seconds to spare after plane hit by lightning". The Telegraph. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
- ^ Armstrong, Jeremy (10 April 2015). "Hero pilot prevents disaster after lightning bolt causes plane to nosedive over Scotland". Daily Mirror. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
- ^ Hradecky, Simon (3 February 2015). "Accident: Loganair SB20 near Shetland Islands on Dec 15th 2014, loss of elevator control following lightning strike". The Aviation Herald. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
- ^ "Flybe plane plunges 1,000ft after being struck by lightning". The Scotsman. 6 September 2016. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
- ^ "Helicopter-triggered Lightning Strikes". SKYbrary. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
- ^ "Lightning Strike Plane Just Seconds From Crash". Sky News. 11 April 2015. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
- ^ "Final Report EASA_REP_RESEA_2015_3 Research Project: Startle Effect Management" (PDF). European Aviation Safety Agency. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
- ^ Riddell, Neil (6 September 2016). "Lightning strike on plane prompts changes". Shetland News. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
- ^ Taylor, Ryan (6 September 2016). "Autopilot recommendations after lightning strike on Sumburgh-bound flight". The Shetland Times. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
- ^ "North Sea Nightmare". Mayday. Season 21. Episode 1. National Geographic Channel.