
Air India crash findings raise more questions than answers
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( Originally published on Jul 12, 2025 )
The preliminary report into the Air India flight 171 crash confirmed that both engine fuel control switches were moved to the cut-off position shortly after takeoff, but it left the key question as to why this happened unanswered, said experts."I'm very surprised and disheartened to learn about the movement of the fuel control switches," said Capt. John Cox, veteran pilot and safety analyst. "There is more investigative work to do, a lot more, but I think that we know what happened. Now the focus becomes why."As per standard protocol, the Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau 's (AAIB) preliminary report did not offer any analysis or conclusions, which will figure in the final report. According to the cockpit voice recorder , one pilot asked why did the other shut off the fuel control switches. The other replied that he didn't. The report did not clarify which pilot said what.Cox said that the switches are designed to prevent accidental activation. "You have to deliberately lift them and move them. It wouldn't be something that could vibrate out of position. That is by design," he said. "There's a lot of evidence pointing to these switches being moved by a person." "In all my 55 years in aviation, I can think of only one other case I'm aware of where something like that happened," he added, referring to a 1987 Delta Air Lines 767 incident. The crew accidentally moved both switches but managed to restart the engines and land safely.David Soucie, former Federal Aviation Administration safety inspector and author of 'Why Planes Crash', called the Air India crash "highly irregular and without precedent". He said that pilots are trained to identify the failed engine and shut down only that one using a checklist."In this case, both cutoffs were pulled in rapid succession, with no verbal coordination or checklist discipline, which raises serious concerns," he said. "From a procedural standpoint, the only justification for such action would be if both engines had already failed or were on fire. That was clearly not the case."Soucie said he was initially inclined to believe the action wasn't intentional. "But the timing and manner of the shutdown are not consistent with standard pilot training . Either the pilot didn't understand what the switches do, or the action was made without deliberate cognitive intent. Both are deeply troubling," he said.Capt. Amit Singh, founder of the Safety Matters Foundation, pointed to a potential discrepancy in the timeline.
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