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Hop-A-Jet: NTSB Final Report on CL604 Naples Crash Is ‘Accurate Assessment’
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Company wants lessons learned to be shared in bizav community
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Aircraft Reference
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One element of the NTSB final report surprised Hop-A-Jet president Barry Ellis: that there were no recommendations issued by the agency.
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The NTSB yesterday released the final report on the crash of a Hop-A-Jet Bombardier Challenger 604 on Feb. 9, 2024, due to corrosion in the jet’s GE CF34-3B engines’ variable geometry (VG) system. Hop-A-Jet president Barry Ellis told AIN, “We’re very happy, the NTSB did an accurate assessment, and the way that it was written is understandable to a layman. So we felt like they did a really good job.”

Both pilots died in the accident after the Challenger’s engines lost power on approach to Naples Municipal Airport (KAPF), and they landed on the southbound lane of I-75. The flight attendant and two passengers were able to escape through the baggage door.

One element of the NTSB final report surprised Ellis: that there were no recommendations issued by the agency. While Ellis appreciates that GE Aerospace has revised service bulletin and maintenance manual procedures to emphasize corrosion-detection procedures, he also believes that the service bulletin should be made mandatory. This could be done by an FAA airworthiness directive that references a service bulletin, and he expects some action on this by the FAA.

“We believe that in the interest of safety, there needs to be an FAA mandate to adhere to these service bulletin procedures, and even go further,” he said. That could mean requiring a baseline borescope inspection and possibly more frequent borescope inspections than the current 3,200-hour interval, especially for airplanes that don’t fly as much. Another helpful maintenance procedure would be a mandatory pressure test of the VG system at certain intervals, which can detect VG system corrosion.

The Maintenance Practice 68 (MP 68) pressure test is part of the troubleshooting procedure for a hung start problem, which the accident airplane experienced 25 days before the accident. With GE’s assistance, Hop-A-Jet’s maintenance team spent three days troubleshooting the Challenger. During the GE troubleshooting procedure, according to the NTSB, the MP 68 test “was not performed because the engines were started and no further anomalies were noted, allowing discontinuing of troubleshooting in accordance with the flowchart. With the concurrence of the engine manufacturer, the airplane was returned to service and flew 33 uneventful flights (excluding the accident flight) over the next 25 days, accruing 57 hours of flight time until the accident.

“According to the engine manufacturer, a hung start may be an indicator of corrosion buildup in the engine and will result in poor engine starting and operating performance. (In addition to the hung starts twenty-five days before the accident, the operator experienced 7 additional hung start events in the previous 10 years.) One way corrosion could have been identified in the engine, and specifically of the VG system components, was through the MP 68 pressure check. However, because this step was so late in the fault isolation hung start guidance, and it was not a required maintenance check, the airplane was returned to service after successful engine start and no other subsequent engine start issues. Thus, the corrosion of the VG system components continued to go undetected and eventually led to the sub-idle compressor stall during the accident flight.”

After the accident, Hop-A-Jet grounded its Challenger fleet—all the jets powered by the CF34-3B engines—and GE technicians traveled to Hop-A-Jet’s Fort Lauderdale Executive Airport (KFXE) headquarters to examine those engines. Since then, Ellis said, “We’ve maintained strict adherence to the service bulletins that they have issued. We are super cognizant of anything that would indicate that there could be a guide vane issue.” Hop-A-Jet’s maintenance crew also built its own MP 68 pressure test tool so it didn’t have to rely on borrowing the two sets that GE owns. “We have preemptively used [that tool] in testing routinely,” he said.

Ellis wants to make sure other operators understand VG corrosion issues and thinks the NTSB report will help with that. “We’ve tried to be very transparent about this from the beginning,” he said. “We haven’t tried to hide behind anything, but we’ve definitely learned a lot that has made us a safer company, just through things that we’ve learned, and we’d like for everybody to have that knowledge.”

While Ellis also thinks that there is more to the story that will eventually be revealed, he concluded, “We believe the NTSB did a good job…of making this [final report] understandable to everybody. It’s a very complex issue with internal components of engines, but the way that they finally wrote the final report, [people] should be able to understand exactly what happened.”

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Hop-A-Jet: NTSB Final Report Is ‘Accurate Assessment’
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The NTSB's just-released final report on the crash of a Hop-A-Jet Bombardier Challenger 604 on Feb. 9, 2024, pointing to corrosion in the jet’s GE CF34-3B engines’ variable geometry (VG) system, is an “accurate assessment,” Hop-A-Jet president Barry Ellis told AIN. “We’re very happy…and the way that it was written is understandable to a layman. So we felt like [the NTSB] did a really good job.”

One element of the NTSB final report surprised Ellis: there were no recommendations issued by the agency. While he appreciates that GE Aerospace has revised the service bulletin and maintenance manual procedures to emphasize corrosion-detection procedures on the CF34-3B, he also believes that the service bulletin should be made mandatory. This could be done by an FAA airworthiness directive that references a service bulletin, and he expects some action on this by the FAA.

Ellis wants to make sure other operators understand VG corrosion issues and thinks the NTSB report will help with that. “We’ve tried to be very transparent about this from the beginning,” he said. “We haven’t tried to hide behind anything, but we’ve definitely learned a lot that has made us a safer company, just through things that we’ve learned, and we’d like for everybody to have that knowledge.”

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The NTSB released the final report on the crash of a Hop-A-Jet Bombardier Challenger 604 on Feb. 9, 2024, due to corrosion in the jet’s GE CF34-3B engines’ variable geometry (VG) system.
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