Stewart's plane had previous problems
Associated Press
Friday, September 29
WASHINGTON -- Maintenance logs show that the Learjet that
carried golfer Payne Stewart to his death last October -- probably
after losing cabin pressure -- had previous problems with its cabin
pressure system.
Reports released Wednesday by the National Transportation Safety
Board include a pilot's complaint on Feb. 9, 1998 that the plane
sometimes would not hold cabin pressure at low altitude. In July
1999, mechanics again were asked to check the system, according to
maintenance reports released Wednesday by the National
Transportation Safety Board.
Logs also showed that a valve had to be replaced following
inflight loss of cabin pressure much earlier, on June 28, 1986.
The plane Stewart was on departed Orlando, Fla., on Oct. 25, for
Dallas. Radio contact was lost with the plane as it passed north of
Gainesville, Fla.
The flight continued on autopilot until it ran out of gas and
crashed near Aberdeen, S.D. There has been speculation that the
cabin pressure system failed, causing the crew and passengers to
pass out from loss of oxygen.
The crash destroyed or damaged several parts of the oxygen and
pressure systems; some remain missing.
The NTSB, which continues to investigate the accident, has
released, without comment, a series of reports on the crash
describing the findings of various teams of analysts.
The plane was operated by Sunjet Aviation Inc., which had done a
repurchase inspection on the plane on Feb. 8, 1999. Since then,
company records showed there had been a repair on a cabin door,
some service was done on emergency air lines, an oxygen bottle line
was replaced and a flow valve was cleaned.
On Oct. 12, two weeks before the crash, a bleed air leak was
found in the plane's tail and was repaired by replacing a gasket.
Bleed air is drawn from the plane's engines to increase the
pressure inside the cabin.
The day before the accident, Sunjet maintenance workers fixed an
engine power problem by replacing a fuel flow valve, the report
showed. The morning of the crash the plane was flown to Orlando at
altitudes of 12,000 feet to 13,000 feet with no pressure problems
reported.
Airplanes are pressurized so that the atmosphere inside never
feels higher than about 8,000 feet, even if the aircraft is flying
much higher.
The FAA has reported that Stewart's plane climbed as high as
51,000 feet during its flight across the nation's heartland.
The jet flew four hours and 1,400 miles before it crashed in
South Dakota.
The new report showed no conversation on the plane's cockpit
voice recorder which, though heavily damaged in the crash, saved
the final 30 minutes of sound.
That included an altitude warning alarm, which stopped just
before the crash as the plane descended, and a high speed alarm
which continued until the end of the tape. The cabin altitude
warning alarm sounds when pressure drops below the 10,000 foot
level.