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-   -   Icelandair B757 returns to KEF.. (https://www.pprune.org/rumours-news/336802-icelandair-b757-returns-kef.html)

ashland 27th Jul 2008 19:34

Icelandair B757 returns to KEF..
 
Today at 17:15 a New York bound Icelandair 757 returned to KEF after crew
reported engine trouble. Seems like similar event during AMS-KEF flight
short while ago. Anyone know what happened. Is it perhaps normal given
the high average age of their fleet ( 12+ yrs ). Me thinks RB211 from RR in UK
not a very dependable engine.......

TartinTon 27th Jul 2008 20:33

Depends which variant of the engine you are talking about but generally a reliable engine. Perhaps you guys up there aren't very good at maintenance?
Or maybe that's as stupid a comment as you just made.....:ugh::ugh::ugh:

Skipness One Echo 27th Jul 2008 20:39


Me thinks RB211 from RR in UK
not a very dependable engine.......
The RB211-535E4 engine is remarkably reliable. It seems that Icelandair had serious bother and multiple engine changes with the two aircraft thay were flying for flyglobespan last summer. This suggest the problem, and there DOES appear to be one, is with maintenance in Iceland or wherever they are maintained.

PantLoad 27th Jul 2008 21:47

Its' been my experience...
 
Never flew the RR RB211, so I can't speak from experience. However, the engine has an excellent reputation.

But, I have a lot of experience with the CFM 56, and I can tell you, of the few problems I've had with that engine, ALL were due to poor maintenance. (Nope, can't blame even one of them on pilots, either!)

Fly Safe,

PantLoad

AMM616 27th Jul 2008 21:56

Depends which variant of the engine you are talking about but generally a reliable engine. Perhaps you guys up there aren't very good at maintenance?
Or maybe that's as stupid a comment as you just made....

Excellent respone if I may say so TartinTon.

Ashland is obviously one of our more genned up members (technically speaking), so he is obviously aware that the RB211 is a little used and problematic engine worldwide.

:rolleyes:

oceancrosser 27th Jul 2008 23:23


Depends which variant of the engine you are talking about but generally a reliable engine. Perhaps you guys up there aren't very good at maintenance?
Or maybe that's as stupid a comment as you just made....

Excellent respone if I may say so TartinTon.

Ashland is obviously one of our more genned up members (technically speaking), so he is obviously aware that the RB211 is a little used and problematic engine worldwide.
Well AMM616 you are obviously in the know. The RB211-535E4 on the 757 is actually one installation where the RB211 has had an excellent record. I´ve flown it 7000+ hrs and the engine has never failed me. Some accessories have but not the engine.
And ashland... this is one for the spotters corner, where you belong according to your member profile. Please stay there.

karimi 28th Jul 2008 00:06

Guys common, why being so agressive?

Joetom 28th Jul 2008 01:17

Think the RB211 535 E4 set and maintains one of the lowest IFSD in town.

ashland 28th Jul 2008 14:05

Icelandair B757/RB211 in continueos problems...
 
This is from the website of visir.is:

Vísir - Fréttir - Innlent

and it confirms that FI has had 3 engine related emergencies during this month, that the Icelandic Aircraft Accident Investigation Board is examining these incidents.

My guess is that the age related strain on the aircraft plus the financial difficulties
of the company
are having a significant effect on the safety and reliability of this carrier...
not to mention staff moral....

But again, this is something you clever guys have seen and heard dozens of times
before.........

Rainboe 28th Jul 2008 15:26

Ah! So you think now it may not be the unreliability of RR engines then? Perhaps you would make your mind up before posting next time! Funny that hundreds are flying around quite satisfactorily.

oceancrosser 28th Jul 2008 15:48


and it confirms that FI has had 3 engine related emergencies during this month, that the Icelandic Aircraft Accident Investigation Board is examining these incidents.
Bull****! Vísir - Forsíða is about as good a source as The News of the World...
Your understanding of aviation "emergencies" appears to be on a par with that of a journo...

dubh12000 28th Jul 2008 16:32

Don't Rolls use the Icelandair E4s in one of their posters? 30k hours on wing as I remember.

oceancrosser 28th Jul 2008 16:50


Don't Rolls use the Icelandair E4s in one of their posters? 30k hours on wing as I remember
.

It actually lasted 43k on wing. The replacement coming crisp from RR was replaced within 400 hrs. Go figure.

ashland 28th Jul 2008 23:24

Icelandair B757/RB211 continued...
 
My dears, this is also reported on Icelandic State Broadcasting:

www.ruv.is - RNF skoðar 3 flugatvik

so it is no gossip from News of the world,
must say I feel a little sorry for all the problems that our national carrier is entering
in to these days. At the same time they have resources to order 20 Sukhoi 100´s,
and want to be serious players in the aircraft leasing market,
and cannot manage and maintain their in-house fleet. They do have 18 years of
experience with B757´s and ca 16 of them in their fleet so there should be some
build up of know-how and expreience.

I am aware of my weak points, but somehow this just does not add up....

Fresca 29th Jul 2008 00:14

Now it seems that this was a FOD, the engine showing some damage both to inlet and the outlet. Not a shutdown. Can't see how maintainace is to blame for that.

ICEMAN757200 30th Jul 2008 09:36

The last Engine that flamed out twice before this KEF-JFK incident was a brand new engine that had just came from RR, no fatigue related stuff, severe damage or faulty componets.
Although the fleet is 12 years old it´s still much younger than some fleets in the USA ans even if the aircrafts are old the engines are not.:ugh:
The aircrafts that had engines running on iddle or flamed out on the globespan projet were 6-7 years old ex Iberia ACFT:confused: at the time and all engines had been overhauled by Iberia mantainance, shame on us to trust them and not checking what kind of mantainance procedures they were using, according to RR their overhauling procedures weren´t 100% approuved by them.:=

smudgethecat 30th Jul 2008 16:35

I think you will find ashland the RB211 has the lowest incidents of in flight shutdowns of any large fan engine, fantastic bit of kit, however like any other piece of complex engineering they require looking after correctly

JJflyer 30th Jul 2008 19:01

I would think that 14.7% inflation, interest rates rising out of control and Icelandic Krona dropping against all major currencies ( only about 40% against EUR in the last 6 months) has something to do with the problems Iceland Air has. No money = savings and lay offs. Perhaps the savings have been in the wrong place as Iceland Air maintenance department has been know for very good quality 3rd party maintenance that mostly stays in the allocated budget and timeframe.

tommy777 30th Jul 2008 23:02

I just talked to my buddy who is a Senior Manager at CO's Engineering, he's been with CO since 1986. CO has 41 752s with RB211s. He claims that it's one of the most reliable engines he has ever worked with.

maris757 31st Jul 2008 22:37


I would think that 14.7% inflation, interest rates rising out of control and Icelandic Krona dropping against all major currencies ( only about 40% against EUR in the last 6 months) has something to do with the problems Iceland Air has. No money = savings and lay offs. Perhaps the savings have been in the wrong place as Iceland Air maintenance department has been know for very good quality 3rd party maintenance that mostly stays in the allocated budget and timeframe.
This really doesn't affect Icelandair so much since most of their income is in foreign currencies like EUR and USD. Only 20-30% of the passengers are locals. Main income is therefore in foreign currencies.
The layoffs are directly connected to the oilprice, they are decreasing the winterschedule by 14% from previous winter, that is the main reason.

Regarding the inflight shutdowns which is the origin of this thread I'd like to tell what I know from first hand about them. All of those shutdowns are on engines that were on ex-Iberia a/c which used a workshop not approved by RR. Those engines have always been removed from the wing much earlier than non-Iberia engines. All original Icelandair engines have according to my knowledge always been overhauled by RR.
One of the inflight shutdown this recent month was due to failiure in a fuel governor not the engine it self. And by the way, that engine was a on a loan from RR since they messed up things with some Icelandair engine that was stuck in an overhaul at RR. The other engine was ex-Iberia :ugh:
The incident which is the origin of this thread is most likely due to FOD from the runway but not from a failiure of the engine it self. It must be Icelandair's lucky month!

Hope this will clear some errors out of someones head.


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