Helicopter Crash Was Technical Fault and Not Human Error Black Box Reveals
A helicopter crash that killed 13 people in Norway was caused by a technical fault and not by human error, air accident investigators say.
Accident Investigation Board Norway (AIBN) spokesman Kåre Halvorsen said the contents of the Super Puma’s flight recorder gave no indication the crash was caused by human error.
He said the whole incident appeared to have taken place in less than a second after the helicopter’s rotor blades detached.
Mr Halvorsen said: “As most people probably know, the rotor disk left the helicopter before the helicopter itself ended up in the ocean. Based on the facts we have … we know that this is a technical accident.
“It’s not an accident caused by human error on board the helicopter. We know that the accident developed very, very fast from a normal situation to the accident being a fact.”
Most of the wreckage has been taken to Haakonsvern naval base but some parts remain missing.
Oil and Gas People revealed on Sunday how helicopter operator CHC had replaced parts on the Super Puma after a warning light a few days before the accident.
Norwegian Civil Aviation Authority legal adviser Hege Aalstad said the helicopter had both its gearbox and rotor head replaced in the months before the crash.
The AIBN is working with the UK’s Air Accident Investigation Branch (AAIB) to decipher data from the helicopter’s black box, which has been sent to Britain. The AIBN described the data as “of good quality”.
Danny Lonie, managing director of offshore training firm Allied Training, was due to fly back to Scotland on the helicopter the day it crashed.
He said: “We were aboard the Safe Caledonia and were due to be picked up by the helicopter on Friday at 1pm. We heard about the crash at 12.30pm but we didn’t realise it was our chopper at the time.
“Another helicopter flew us back to Amsterdam and then on to Aberdeen on Saturday. It’s horrible what’s happened but at the end of the day it’s just machine.
“I know for a fact that every helicopter agency in Aberdeen is doing everything they can to keep people as safe as possible.
“I’ll be going back out again next week, I’m not worried.”