Table of Contents

4.3 Reconstruction

Flight Accident Reconstruction

The goal of reconstructing flight accidents is to determine the (damage) causes through the accident process. In doing so, it is important to be conscious that such complex occurrences usually have several factors that work together to make the accident occur. If observations and facts (e.g. flight recorder data, see Chapter 4.2), damage symptoms, and/or statements from witnesses indicate the accident was caused by an engine failure, the investigation will concentrate on these. This type of damage symptoms include, for example, holes in the engine cowling made by uncontained engine fragments, or external signs of an engine fire.
A satisfactory reconstruction must completely describe the accident process without any contradictions. A reconstruction must be seen as being wrong if the details are not plausible. Reconstructions are made through a combination of different methods. This chapter describes characteristic damage symptoms and the meaning they have for reconstruction of the accident process, especially the accident causes. This information must then be verified by analyzing findings (Chapter 4.1) and operating data (Chapter 4.2), as well as through engine part testing (Chapter 4.4) and analysis of the damage processes (Chapter 4.5).

Fragments and puncturing:

It is not necessarily the case, that sufficiently informative fragments will remain in the engine. With blade failures, especially, the fragments may have so much energy, that they punch through all engine and nacelle walls in their path. The only thing remaining for analysis in this case is the holes in the walls that were punched through and the contact areas between the walls and the fragments.
Naturally, the entire remaining aircraft will be searched for fragments, even in areas where the first signs of a component failure were registered. This is made more difficult by the fact that high-energy fragments, such as those from burst rotors, can fly several kilometers off to the side of the aircraft (Fig. "Fragment location"). Upon impact, they can bury themselves several meters into the earth, depending on the type of ground, which makes finding them extremely improbable. If the fragments escape over water, the probability of finding them is even lower. If all fragments have been lost through the holes and none of the engine part remains, a reconstruction is the only answer.
If fragments of an engine component are created during flight, then clearing up the following points is of primary importance:

Important insight can be gained by assembling the engine region and connecting the puncture holes with the plane of the broken components in tangential direction (Fig. "Fragments").

Causally affected components:

This refers to the components from which the fragments originated. In most cases, the identity of these components can be accurately determined. However, if they consist of single parts such as disks and blades, which have separated from one another, differentiating them may be difficult. If the material composition of the components is different, it may be helpful to microanalyze the walls of the holes where the fragments punched through.
If the component that was the cause of the fragments has been determined, actions such as the following present themselves:

The number of fragments and the order in which they were thrown clear:

The number of fragments can indicate the location of the primary fracture. For example, two symmetrical punched holes are a sign that a disk fracture originated in the hub (Figs. "Housing deformations" and "Damage symptoms of the housing").
The presence of a large number of holes may point to a haircut of the disk blading. With integral disks in small engines (e.g. APUs and helicopter engines), brittle behavior of the disk (e.g. in steels, caused by hydrogen-induced crack initiation or corrosion susceptibility by stress cracking, see Chapter 5.4) can result in many fragments being created.
The order of the blade fractures around the circumference against the direction of rotation is important if it is assumed that the components disintegrated during one rotation. With a little luck, the order in which the blades were flung off can indicate the location of the primary cracks.

Size and shape of the fragments:

The size and shape of fragments can also indicate the probable locations of the cracks. If this realization is combined with the movement of the fragments, it increases the probability that the location of the primary crack initiation will be found.

Location of the fragments in the burst components:

As mentioned above, knowing the order in which the fragments were thrown free, as well as their size, may make a reconstruction of the damage possible.

Energy of the fragments:

The diversion of the fragments from the plane of rotation can indicate the energy of the fragments when they were thrown free. The farther the holes are from the plane of rotation, the less the kinetic energy of the fragments that created them.
A further possible indicator of fragment energy is the thickness of the walls that the fragment penetrated.

Figure "Fragments": Engine damage after a fan disk failure with catastrophic results (see Example "Failure of the tail-mounted engine" and Example "Location and size of holes"). Reconstruction of the fragment trajectories was done with bands that were threaded through the punched holes from the appropriate locations on the disk circumference.

Example "Failure of the tail-mounted engine" (Ref. 4.3-1):
Excerpt:
“A burst of shrapnel that followed failure of the tail-mounted….engine … caused 50 hits on the empennage”. NTSB investigators reconstructed the tail and rear fuselage section of the crashed aircraft…….as part of the effort to understand what happened…
The first fan disk of the…engine, the second stage fan disk, connections between the disk, or the shaft to which the disks are attached.
The first-stage fan disk of the No.2 engine is the prime suspect in the investigation. The 300-lb. disk was still missing last week. Part of the second-stage disk and much of the remaining engine have been recovered.“

Example "Location and size of holes" (Ref. 4.3-2):
Excerpt:
“Safety board investigators reported they found projectile penetration from the top of the horizontal stabilizer through the bottom surface of the stabilizer, as well as holes on the stabilizer including one that measured 10×12 in.”

“When the No.2 engine was found on the ground, the entire fan section was missing, including the fan, disc and part of the rotor. They said this was the first time they had seen all those sections missing.”

Comments: The location and size of the projectile holes permit certain conclusions regarding the size, shape, and location of the fragments in the affected rotor part (Figs. "Housing deformations" and "Damage symptoms of the housing"), and also the damage process.

Figure "Fragment location" (Ref. 4.3-2): The damage to the fan disk occurred at the point marked with an arrow. Radar echoes of the fragments were recorded.
The pilot attempted to land at a nearby airport after changing his course and several complicated maneuvers due to the damaged controls. A large disk fragment, roughly two thirds of the 150 Kg. disk with complete blades and blade parts, was found in a corn field. The other third was not found. The one-third size fragment evidently broke out of the disk like a piece of cake.

Conclusions from unusual observations:

In some cases, in the course of an investigation, effects are observed that cannot easily be made to fit a working hypothesis that seemed plausible until that point. Such cases are depicted schematically in Figs. "Fragment location" and "Injection pipe".
Critical attention should be given especially to damage symptoms that seem astounding. It is important that these symptoms are not ignored, but that an attempt is made to technically and physically understand them and to incorporate them into the damage hypothesis without contradictions. If this cannot be satisfactorily accomplished, then the hypothesis must be regarded as suspect and treated with appropriate care.
This type of anomaly is usually not found until detailed work is being done, such as, for example, scanning electron microscope inspections. In order to interpret damage structures, profound knowledge of materials science, physical effects, and mechanical processes is necessary. An experienced SEM operator with broad knowledge of his subject and the ability to evaluate damaged structures should be on hand for a discussion with the investigator in presence of the SEM. This technical, creative discussion is a requirement for the analysis of the damage process and a proper understanding of the findings.

Examples of physical relationships to be aware of:

Figs. "Injection pipe" and "Suction funnel": In a fighter aircraft, a fire occurred in the rear section of the engine during flight. This fire could not be extinguished and the aircraft was lost. Both engines were recovered heavily damaged and were closely inspected to find the cause of the fire. During this inspection, a feed line to an afterburner fuel pipe had an undeformed fracture which could not be analyzed due to the overheating and splashed metal melt. This type of “brittle” crack could not have occurred due to the force of impact, since the pipe material was very ductile. An undeformed crack can indicate may be a dynamic crack that has taken a long time to form. This hypothesis was reinforced by an observation under the microscope: melted metal from the firewall between the two engines had dripped onto the broken area. This frozen melt was in a typical funnel shape with free frozen surfaces. This phenomenon indicates that there must have been underpressure in the pipe that sucked the melt into the pipe in a funnel shape. According to Bernoulli`s Law, this underpressure can be explained by the flow around the injection pipe in the afterburner. This can only have occurred during flight.

Figure "Damage process": Engines are probably the most demanding technical machines, especially if one considers the many operating influences combined with demands for

  • long run times
  • low weight
  • high performance output
  • best possible efficiency
  • highest safety
  • lowest costs

The operating influences begin at very low operating intake temperatures in the front compressor section and range up to extreme gas temperatures in the hot parts. Additional influences include atmospheric conditions (e.g. corrosion and erosion), dynamic and static loads, wear stress, impact stress (from foreign objects such as birds, hail, or ice).
These complicated load combinations together with the above demands means that the engine can react to unusual changes (e.g. damage or constructive changes) in unexpected ways. Problems can suddenly appear in parts and components in different areas of the engine where one cannot recognize a connection at first (Fig. "Sensitivity to change").

Understanding the entire damage process is especially important for several reasons.

Usually, one of the first questions asked concerns the probability of the damage recurring in comparable aircraft and engines. This can only be satisfactorily answered if the relationships and processes are clearly understood.

If the damage is still relatively limited, then the risk of greater damage should be determined as accurately as possible.

The final damage symptoms are often the result of complex processes which are not easy to reconstruct. Sufficiently accurate reconstruction of a complex damage process requires a high degree of expertise (if possible, with the affected engine type) and a good understanding of the physical and mechanical relationships.

This diagram describes a hypothetical scenario:

It is assumed that the primary cause of the damage is a fan blade fracture.
This causes serious unbalance of the low-pressure system.
The high dynamic radial forces overload the front fixed bearing, and it fails due to fatigue. This increases the dynamic loads on the bearing chamber and causes a dynamic fracture of the oil nozzles. The bearing subsequently overheats.
The extremely high bearing temperatures overheat the low-pressure shaft until it is no longer strong enough to transfer the torsion moment from the turbine to the fan. The shaft then fails.
The low-pressure turbine is now no longer braked by the fan and reaches high overspeed in a matter of seconds, causing the low-pressure turbine to burst.

Figure "Install damage": An important detail problem is the direction in which a force acts. The answer to this question can explain, for example, if a damage-causing problem occurred during installation of a new part, maintenance, or during disassembly.
The direction of the damaging motion can be understood from burr formation (bottom center detail), localized changes to the material structure (bottom left detail), and from surface shift (bottom right detail). If damage (e.g. to a toothed gear or a roller bearing) can clearly be traced back to the motion during installation, then the chronology of the consequential damages it caused can be understood and specific measures can be taken to fix the problem.
In cases of foreign object damage, it must be determined if the foreign object was sucked in during flight or when the aircraft crashed. If, for example, the engine was no longer running during the crash, then all foreign object damage to the blade intake edge with burr formation on the suction side indicates that it occurred while the engine was still running.

4.3.1 Recommendations for Reconstructing the Damage Process

The reconstruction of an accident uses the results acquired with the aid of the recommendations in Chapters 4.1 and 4.2. Always remember that an incorrect damage reconstruction is highly likely to result in improper corrective measures, which will be expected to result in repeated damage until the truth is found. Wishful thinking and downplaying do not lead to the answer. On the contrary, a third-party expert (e.g. from a regulation authority or the operator) will be able to recognize the actual damage process from the measures taken, even if the investigation results are not very transparently presented.

References

4.3-1 J. Ott, “Investigators Find Reconstructed Tail of DC-10 Riddled With Damage”, periodical “Aviation Week & Space Technology”, August 7, 1989, page 22.

4.3-2 D. Huges, M.A. Dornheim, “United DC-10 Crashes In Sioux City, Iowa”, periodical “Aviation Week & Space Technology”, July 24, 1989, pages 96, 97.