Compliments of U.S.
Air Force "Flying Safety" Magazine
The jet was undergoing the
final stages of its major periodic inspection. It was on the trim
pad for some engine- running op checks and three Maintainers - an engine
run person, a ground person, and a specialist-type person - were responsible
for seeing to it they were done.
With
engines running, op checks proceeded until a problem developed and the
specialist-type Maintainer entered one of the aircraft's engine intake
"Danger Areas." He didn't get sucked in, but his comm cord
did, Into and engine that was running at "only" 75
percent. Result? another set of "onlys." Only
several additional days of aircraft down time. Only one more
preventable engine FOD mishap. Only $20,000 taxpayer (that's you and
me) money worth of engine damage. Only several days of mishap
investigation and report writing. And only a few bucks for a pair of
new jockey shorts.
You can never be too careful
around running aircraft engines, particularly if you're an old head.
Comfort can lead to complacency. your only defense against FOD or serous
injury - even death - are a thorough pre-run briefing in accordance with
the aircraft checklist and local directives; clear, unambiguous
communications; and maintaining total awareness of where you are and what
you and your buds are doing.