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Quoting 71Zulu (Thread starter): The aircraft reportedly was the same one that had a fuel leak in Boston last week. |
Quoting 71Zulu (Thread starter): Narita International Airport outside of Tokyo says JAL reported a 100-liter fuel leak in a 787 during an inspection Sunday. The aircraft reportedly was the same one that had a fuel leak in Boston last week. |
Quoting KarelXWB (Reply 10): "An open valve on the aircraft caused fuel to leak from a nozzle on the left wing used to remove fuel, a company spokeswoman said." "In Boston, a different valve on the plane opened, causing fuel to flow from the centre tank to the left main tank." |
Quoting KC135TopBoom (Reply 16): Does the 787 have jettison capabilities? |
Quoting wjcandee (Reply 18): Accordingly, it seems to me that in the 40-gal Boston spill and the 25-gal recent venting, this could well be pilot error, although the airline seems to think otherwise. |
Quoting wjcandee (Reply 18): It is interesting, however, that these events are happening to JAL, who put the aircraft into long-haul service very quickly, and not to ANA, which really took its time. Suggests the possibility, at least, of training hiccups. |
Quoting Stitch (Reply 12): Is fueling and de-fueling performed with different attachment points to the fuel system? |
Quoting b78710 (Reply 15): Does the 787 have jettison capabilities? |
Quoting wjcandee (Reply 18): Because the fuel system always moves *more* fuel to the engine than it can consume (same thing with diesel engines), the excess gets returned to the fuel tank, except that it goes back to the wing tank not the center tank. |
Quoting tdscanuck (Reply 22): No. The 787 doesn't use a return-to-tank system. The fuel pumps just deadhead against the engine. Excess fuel does not come back to the tank. |