Wednesday, June 19, 2013





Japan probe finds 787 battery not overcharged


Last Modified: February 20. 2013 3:16AM
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(AP) A lithium ion battery on a Boeing 787 that overheated during an All Nippon Airways flight earlier this month, prompting an emergency landing, was not overcharged, Japan's transport safety agency said Wednesday.


Japan Transport Safety Board chairman Norihiro Goto told reporters the flight's data recorder showed the main battery, used to power many electrical systems on the jet, was not overcharged.


That contradicts an earlier finding by the agency as it investigates with the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration.


All 50 of the 787 Dreamliners that Boeing has delivered to airlines were grounded after the emergency landing by the ANA flight on Jan. 16. Boeing has halted deliveries of new planes until it can address the electrical problems.


Goto said the maximum voltage recorded for the battery was 31 volts, which was below its 32 volt limit. But the data also showed a sudden, unexplained drop in the battery's voltage, he said.


Aircraft do not usually use the kind of lithium ion battery chosen for the 787, and investigators are still struggling to figure out what may have gone wrong.


It's not that it is difficult, but that we are not so familiar with it, Goto said.


The Transport Safety Board said it also will study the aircraft's auxiliary battery and compare data from each.


Investigators from both sides are probing the maker of the charred battery, GS Yuasa, and are examining it using CAT scans at a facility of Japan's aerospace agency.


U.S. investigators also said that they found no evidence of overcharging in a battery that ignited on a Japan Airlines Boeing 787 as it sat on the tarmac in Boston's airport.


Associated Press


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