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Lear 45 Grounded?!

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T-Gates

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 18, 2002
Posts
1,468
Someone just sent me this news clip:

Sept. 12, 2003 -- (Wichita, Kan., Business Journal/Jerry Seibenmark) -- A Learjet 45 operated by FedEx is among the first Bombardier Aerospace Learjet 45s to re-enter service nearly a month after the Federal Aviation Administration grounded the fleet of Wichita-built business jets for a faulty assembly in the tail. Bombardier expects to have retrofitted approximately 230 Learjet 45s -- the entire fleet -- with a new horizontal pitch trim actuator in the next two weeks, the company said in a statement. An airworthiness directive issued by the FAA in mid-August said an acme screw and nut within the assembly of the Learjet 45's horizontal stabilizer actuator could develop a "brittle fracture," causing a rapid change in the pitch of the airplane's nose, which happened to one Learjet 45 flight earlier this year. Following that incident, an airworthiness directive was issued by the FAA in late March calling for replacement of the acme screw and nut with an improved version of the assembly, a Bombardier Aerospace spokesman said last month. That replacement was accomplished, the spokesman said. The August grounding, however, was the result of the FAA requiring "formal evidence" that the replacement assembly meets all the certification requirements, the spokesman said.
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When did this happen? Were there any accidents/incidents that led to this move by the FAA?

--03M
 
I believe there was an accident in Italy that brought about the grounding of the Lear 45 fleet. Don't know the details about the accident - the FAA is currently investigating the accident.
 
Go to www.ainonline.com for the complete story..

However, long story short there was a Lear 45 that nose dived in flight back around March. The pilots recovered somehow and landed. However, the FAA issued an emergency AD for the part in April. Part -005. Unfortunately, the FAA discovered in
August that the mfr. (note: NOT Bombardier) of the part did not adhere to the submitted design specs. Also, the FAA had concerns about the quaility control of the manufacturing process. So, the FAA immediately grounded all of the aircraft. Don't P@@@ off the FAA.
 

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