Investigators at the National Transportation Safety Board looking into the event on a Japan Airlines 787 in Boston on January 7 say they know what they saw when they looked at cells from the battery; thermal runaway. In an update to reporters on February 7, board chairman Deborah Hersman was clear. "I'm not offering any opinions, I am offering facts and observations of what our investigators have done," she said.
But if last week's press conference in Japan is any indication, Boeing thinks the phenomenon is, like porn, difficult to define. Boeing says it isn't thermal runaway unless it causes a catastrophic event on the plane.
"In our certification work, in our design and development at an airplane level, the fundamental thing that we worry about is making sure that the battery can't harm the airplane," 787 vice president Mike Sinnett said at the briefing.
During certification, Sinnett said engineers were convinced that there was only one cause for thermal runaway, overcharging the battery. As part of the required test regime it had to overcharge a test battery and contain any resulting problems. If there was no catastrophic effect, Boeing salespeople could use this linguistic dodge to tell potential customers the lithium ion batteries were not subject to thermal runaway. That was better than telling them it could contain one.
"We've worked with our customers to make sure they understand what we mean when we say 'thermal runaway' and they understand that we've taken the appropriate steps to ensure that that never happens," Sinnett explained. "You can imagine the concern then when someone else uses the term differently and says there was thermal runaway."
"In our certification work, in our design and development at an airplane level, the fundamental thing that we worry about is making sure that the battery can't harm the airplane," 787 vice president Mike Sinnett said at the briefing.
During certification, Sinnett said engineers were convinced that there was only one cause for thermal runaway, overcharging the battery. As part of the required test regime it had to overcharge a test battery and contain any resulting problems. If there was no catastrophic effect, Boeing salespeople could use this linguistic dodge to tell potential customers the lithium ion batteries were not subject to thermal runaway. That was better than telling them it could contain one.
A United 787 in New Orleans. Photo by Marc A Wessels |
Because Boeing has more eggheads than a chicken farm, I found it quizzical that it would encourage a lack of clarity, so I asked the opinion of others familiar with the details of the investigation.
I learned that during certification, the company modified the common definition of thermal runaway (read the wikipedia entry here) to limit it to a reaction that proceeds to cause damage to the airplane. This is the equivalent of a doctor limiting a diagnosis of high cholesterol only to those patients who have suffered a heart attack.
At NTSB HQ, some staffers are pouring over the tests while others examine the documents that led to the certification of the Dreamliner with those batteries on board. Boeing may try to make thermal runaway hard to define, but the investigators know what they have seen.
Watch the Boeing briefing in Japan here.
I learned that during certification, the company modified the common definition of thermal runaway (read the wikipedia entry here) to limit it to a reaction that proceeds to cause damage to the airplane. This is the equivalent of a doctor limiting a diagnosis of high cholesterol only to those patients who have suffered a heart attack.
At NTSB HQ, some staffers are pouring over the tests while others examine the documents that led to the certification of the Dreamliner with those batteries on board. Boeing may try to make thermal runaway hard to define, but the investigators know what they have seen.
Watch the Boeing briefing in Japan here.
4 comments:
"...a conflict between engineering data and management judgments."
Where have you heard this before? Clue: Rogers commission report
Ah, yes, Alice and the Red Queen all over again. Glory! Great column!
I believe the reference to the Justice Stewart quote is spot on. As in the case of obscenity, the strict definition of thermal runaway rests with the person evaluating it. Also, like Justice Stewart, Mike Sinnett shared that by their definition of thermal runaway, "….this was not that." I don't believe either Justice Stewart or Mike Sinnett ruled out the possibility that others may disagree with them.
That's the problem with subjective definitions. If I stated "This suitcase is not heavy!" people could disagree with me, but that doesn't mean I am wrong in my description.
Interesting post. Lots of great stuff to think about here.
Reminds me of "It depends on what the meaning of the word 'is' is".
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