Dream liner down in India on air port (1 Viewer)

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Not until the contaminations clogged the screens preventing fuel from getting through.

Its happened before on two Boeing 777s, and an Airbus A330. All three of them with Rolls Royce Trent engines. All three were contaminated with ice in the screens. There is an airworthiness directive out for Trent Engines regarding this.

A contamination can be anything, does not have to be ice.

Apparently this plane was powered by two GEnx-1B67 engines. Do these engines have similar issues?
 
What is somewhat interesting is that for the 787, Western airlines tend to be using aircraft with GE engines while Asian and some Middle Eastern airlines are using Rolls Royce engines. There was an article a while back breaking down which airline used which type of engine. As for the Rolls Royce engines, some are locally produced. The RR engines are claimed to have a very slight power advantage over the GE equivalent. A quality control problem may take out one engine but not both at once but it is noteworthy that some production is local and may account for replacement engines in a 12 year old airliner..
Would an electrical system failure cause a fuel delivery problem severe enough for both engines to flame out? Possibly a fuel flow or pressure problem?
 
Here is a news article from Friday. Apparently India has seen a few engine failures with the 787 recently. Some have made the news.
I wonder what has changed recently to cause the engine failures.


- Ivan.
 
The engines were NOT GE. They were Rolls Royce Trent 1000s.

No, it was powered by General Electric GEnx-1B64 engines

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