05-11-2010, 08:06 PM
(This post was last modified: 05-11-2010, 08:31 PM by Peter Lemkin.)
I, as many other thought the Rolls-Royce engine on the first plane simply had a problem of design or maintenance - or a chance event. But today, two days after the first Quantas Rolly-Royce engine failure there was another.....having sat (unpleasantly) through three graduate courses in statistics I know this is a freak event by chance...and something here is by 'design'.....all that remains to know is by whom....the motive...and the means.....
Details when I get them, I'll post. [below the MSM babble...I take not any stock in it for the truth.... GE is as likely as anyone, including chance, to have made this occur!]
Rolls-Royce was today warned it could face a BP-style backlash in the US after an engine design flaw was cited as a potential cause of the explosion that forced the emergency landing of a Qantas-owned A380 in Singapore on Thursday.
The warning came as a second Qantas jet – a Boeing 747-400 also powered by Rolls-Royce technology – returned to Singapore's Changi airport after reporting an engine problem shortly after take-off today .
Qantas said the second incident was not serious – but it was enough to trigger a further sell-off in Rolls-Royce shares, which closed down 5% for the second day running, a 48-hour period that has wiped £1.2bn off the group's value.
Joe Lampel, a professor at Cass Business School in London, said Rolls-Royce was a serious competitor to the US engine makers GE and Pratt & Whitney, forming a rivalry that mirrored the tensions between the US giant Boeing and Europe's Airbus.
"The news [of Thursday's emergency landing] is attracting a lot of attention in North America, where the parallels between BP and Rolls-Royce are not too far from the mind of some observers," said Lampel, speaking before the second incident.
"Both companies are some of the best-known global British brands, and both challenge American competitors.
"In the case of BP, the company took the brunt for general distrust of deep sea oil drilling, arguably in a way that would not have been the case had the same incident happened to a large American oil company.
"In the case of Rolls-Royce, the incident must be seen in the context of long-standing competitive rivalry between Boeing and Airbus, and between Pratt & Whitney/GE and Rolls-Royce."
The comments came as one analyst warned that the US federal aviation administration (FAA) could announce restrictions on A380s by the end of this week unless the manufacturer could allay fears about the engines.
Rolls-Royce is one of the last surviving British titans of industry and prides itself on its global reputation for engineering excellence.
But the latest – and most serious – fault with one of its aircraft engines has rattled the industry and the company's shareholders.
Shares in its biggest rival, General Electric, rose in the wake of the A380 incident as investors bet that the US company would take more lucrative engine orders for the A380.
The Qantas chief executive, Alan Joyce, increased the pressure on the engineering group when he said the explosion of one of the Airbus superjumbo's four engines above Indonesia was "an engine issue" and was not linked to the airworthiness of the aviation industry's most modern passenger plane.
"We believe this is most likely some kind of material failure or a design issue," he added.
The A380, fitted with Trent 900 engines, was carrying 466 passengers and crew when the incident occurred over western Indonesia. The plane made an emergency landing at Changi airport. No one was injured.
According to reports, the Boeing jet involved in the second incident was equipped with Rolls-Royce engines, but they were not from the Trent family.
Joyce made his comments as one City analyst said Rolls-Royce "must be praying" that the fault is limited to an individual engine and not the whole Trent 900 class.
Julian Tolley, the head of research at HB Markets, said any link to the failure in August of a Trent 1000 engine that was being tested as part of the Boeing Dreamliner programme could heighten doubts about the technology behind the engines.
"Rolls-Royce must be praying that it's a fault linked to that engine ... if they cannot, then an in-depth investigation will be costly for future sales," he said.
"Should it be linked to the Trent 100 problems as well, then people may start worrying regarding the advanced technology and design used for these technically advanced engines."
Tolley added that the FAA might announce restrictions on A380s by the end of this week unless Rolls-Royce could ease fears about its engines. The Trent and RB211 engines account for nearly two-thirds of the £4.5bn in annual revenues generated by Rolls-Royce's aerospace division.
In a statement today , Airbus said it had asked all owners of the aircraft with Rolls-Royce turbines, including Singapore Airlines and Germany's Lufthansa, to conduct engine checks "to ensure continuous safe operations of the fleet".
The Qantas incident also reignited an industrial dispute between the airline and the Australian aircraft engineering union, which has been campaigning against the outsourcing of maintenance work.
Joyce said the A380 involved in the engine blowout recently underwent a maintenance check by Lufthansa Technik in Germany, while the Rolls-Royce engines had been scrutinised at Rolls-Royce facilities.
"To suggest that Lufthansa and Rolls-Royce do not have the expertise and experience to undertake the highest quality checks is ludicrous," he added.
Rolls-Royce said it would be "inappropriate" at such a "very early stage" to draw any conclusions from the incident.
Details when I get them, I'll post. [below the MSM babble...I take not any stock in it for the truth.... GE is as likely as anyone, including chance, to have made this occur!]
Rolls-Royce was today warned it could face a BP-style backlash in the US after an engine design flaw was cited as a potential cause of the explosion that forced the emergency landing of a Qantas-owned A380 in Singapore on Thursday.
The warning came as a second Qantas jet – a Boeing 747-400 also powered by Rolls-Royce technology – returned to Singapore's Changi airport after reporting an engine problem shortly after take-off today .
Qantas said the second incident was not serious – but it was enough to trigger a further sell-off in Rolls-Royce shares, which closed down 5% for the second day running, a 48-hour period that has wiped £1.2bn off the group's value.
Joe Lampel, a professor at Cass Business School in London, said Rolls-Royce was a serious competitor to the US engine makers GE and Pratt & Whitney, forming a rivalry that mirrored the tensions between the US giant Boeing and Europe's Airbus.
"The news [of Thursday's emergency landing] is attracting a lot of attention in North America, where the parallels between BP and Rolls-Royce are not too far from the mind of some observers," said Lampel, speaking before the second incident.
"Both companies are some of the best-known global British brands, and both challenge American competitors.
"In the case of BP, the company took the brunt for general distrust of deep sea oil drilling, arguably in a way that would not have been the case had the same incident happened to a large American oil company.
"In the case of Rolls-Royce, the incident must be seen in the context of long-standing competitive rivalry between Boeing and Airbus, and between Pratt & Whitney/GE and Rolls-Royce."
The comments came as one analyst warned that the US federal aviation administration (FAA) could announce restrictions on A380s by the end of this week unless the manufacturer could allay fears about the engines.
Rolls-Royce is one of the last surviving British titans of industry and prides itself on its global reputation for engineering excellence.
But the latest – and most serious – fault with one of its aircraft engines has rattled the industry and the company's shareholders.
Shares in its biggest rival, General Electric, rose in the wake of the A380 incident as investors bet that the US company would take more lucrative engine orders for the A380.
The Qantas chief executive, Alan Joyce, increased the pressure on the engineering group when he said the explosion of one of the Airbus superjumbo's four engines above Indonesia was "an engine issue" and was not linked to the airworthiness of the aviation industry's most modern passenger plane.
"We believe this is most likely some kind of material failure or a design issue," he added.
The A380, fitted with Trent 900 engines, was carrying 466 passengers and crew when the incident occurred over western Indonesia. The plane made an emergency landing at Changi airport. No one was injured.
According to reports, the Boeing jet involved in the second incident was equipped with Rolls-Royce engines, but they were not from the Trent family.
Joyce made his comments as one City analyst said Rolls-Royce "must be praying" that the fault is limited to an individual engine and not the whole Trent 900 class.
Julian Tolley, the head of research at HB Markets, said any link to the failure in August of a Trent 1000 engine that was being tested as part of the Boeing Dreamliner programme could heighten doubts about the technology behind the engines.
"Rolls-Royce must be praying that it's a fault linked to that engine ... if they cannot, then an in-depth investigation will be costly for future sales," he said.
"Should it be linked to the Trent 100 problems as well, then people may start worrying regarding the advanced technology and design used for these technically advanced engines."
Tolley added that the FAA might announce restrictions on A380s by the end of this week unless Rolls-Royce could ease fears about its engines. The Trent and RB211 engines account for nearly two-thirds of the £4.5bn in annual revenues generated by Rolls-Royce's aerospace division.
In a statement today , Airbus said it had asked all owners of the aircraft with Rolls-Royce turbines, including Singapore Airlines and Germany's Lufthansa, to conduct engine checks "to ensure continuous safe operations of the fleet".
The Qantas incident also reignited an industrial dispute between the airline and the Australian aircraft engineering union, which has been campaigning against the outsourcing of maintenance work.
Joyce said the A380 involved in the engine blowout recently underwent a maintenance check by Lufthansa Technik in Germany, while the Rolls-Royce engines had been scrutinised at Rolls-Royce facilities.
"To suggest that Lufthansa and Rolls-Royce do not have the expertise and experience to undertake the highest quality checks is ludicrous," he added.
Rolls-Royce said it would be "inappropriate" at such a "very early stage" to draw any conclusions from the incident.
"Let me issue and control a nation's money and I care not who writes the laws. - Mayer Rothschild
"Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience! People are obedient in the face of poverty, starvation, stupidity, war, and cruelty. Our problem is that grand thieves are running the country. That's our problem!" - Howard Zinn
"If there is no struggle there is no progress. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will" - Frederick Douglass
"Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience! People are obedient in the face of poverty, starvation, stupidity, war, and cruelty. Our problem is that grand thieves are running the country. That's our problem!" - Howard Zinn
"If there is no struggle there is no progress. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will" - Frederick Douglass