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News on the Accident to AA965 near Cali, Colombia

on 20 December 1995

Peter Ladkin

2 October 1996, minor revision 4 October


The Final Report on the accident to Flight AA965 on Dec 20 1995 has been prepared by the Colombian Oficina de Control y Seguridad Aerea, and was released through the US National Transportation Safety Board on Friday September 27, 1996. I have not yet obtained my copy of the final report. Pertinent information from the report will appear here within the next few weeks.

An Associated Press article by Randolph E. Schmid on 27 September reported the probable cause as being

Schmid's article contains some discussion of the controller's role. Confusing Conversation at Cali points out that ATC/pilot communication at a critical point, when the pilots were somewhat confused about the clearance, did not proceed according to standard. The report contains more information, according to Schmid. The controller told investigators that the pilots' query at this point made no sense, because the DME reading indicated that the aircraft had already passed the beacon. So he repeated the clearance to land. 'Asked what he would have said to a Spanish-speaking pilot in the same location who asked whether he should head for Tulua, [the controller] said "he would have told them that their request made no sense, that their request was illogical and incongruent, but he did not know how to convey these thoughts ..... in English."'

Aviation Week and Space Technology (1) says that the report states that the crew

An intact FMC was recovered from the scene of the accident, and was examined by the NTSB Systems Group at Honeywell in Phoenix AZ on April 29 and 30. The report was placed in the public docket in August. An Aviation Week and Space Technology report (2) recounts that the memory was installed in a functioning FMC in a laboratory and read out. The FMC was programmed to fly direct Cali VOR (identifier 'CLO'), then reprogrammed to fly to 'R', which is the identifier for the ROZO NDB, but also the identifier for the ROMEO VOR, near Bogota, some 150nm away from ROZO. Finally, the FMC was reprogrammed to fly direct the Tulua VOR (identifier 'ULQ'), which was behind the aircraft at the time. However, the aircraft did not head towards ULQ, although this was the active leg at the time of the accident, because lateral navigation mode was disengaged before the crash. At the time of impact, the FMC interface was in a `scratchpad' mode, in which 'R' had again been entered, but was not yet part of the active flight plan.

The identifier 'R' for ROZO appears on the paper arrival and approach plates. However, in the FMC database, it is listed as 'ROZO', and 'R' designates the ROMEO VOR near Bogota. This is the result of an ARINC 424 specification, created to resolve the problem of multiple navaids in an area having the same identifier. (Remember that AA965 had to fly from the US to Colombia, therefore navaids in multiple countries had to be in the database. Clearly such a conflict-resolution specification is necessary.)

According to the Boeing submission to the docket, the cockpit area microphone picked up a sound as of rustling pages as the aircraft approached Tulua VOR from the north (between 49 and 44 DME from CLO, at between 2136:43 and 2137:25 on DFDR time). At about 41 DME, Execute Direct to 'R' was set in the FMC (time 2137:40) and the aircraft began the left turn towards ROMEO, which ended at about 2139.07 (for a total of 87 seconds unremarked by the crew). The crew then engaged Heading Select and the fatal right turn began. American Airlines, the Allied Pilots Association and Boeing all made submissions to the docket, which give "similar descriptions of key crew actions during the last 7 min. of the flight. The descriptions are a synthesis of the information from the digital flight data recorder (DFDR), the cockpit voice recorder (CVR) and the FMC readout. None of these devices gives a complete story, and judgement is required to piece together the scenario." (2).

American Airlines proposed the following probable causes:

American also proposed contributing causes, including:

Also mentioned were "the manufacturer's/vendor's overconfidence in FMC technology [...] Manufacturer and the FAA training guidance emphasizes use of the FMC in virtually all facets of flight; as a result, airline training programs have transferred this philosophy to their line pilots." AA suggested an evaluation of current training methods.

AA's submission seems to me to broadly agree with that of the final report, except that the controller's performance is not (reported to be) cited amongst the probably causes in the final report.

One should keep in mind that many parties to the final report have interests, namely the manufacturers, pilots' associations, the airline, and the Colombian government. The NTSB is disinterested. This situation pertains more or less with all accident investigations. One may obtain some human insight into how this may affect an investigation from (3).

References

(1): NEWS breaks, Aviation Week and Space Technology, September 30, 1996, p21. Back

(2): Michael A. Dornheimer, Recovered FMC Memory Puts New Spin on Cali Accident, Aviation Week and Space Technology, September 9, 1996, pp58-61. Back

(3): Jonathan Harr The Crash Detectives, The New Yorker, August 5, 1996, pp34-55. Back


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Copyright © 1999 Peter B. Ladkin, 1999-02-08
Last modification on 1999-06-15
by Michael Blume