Debris Examination Item 24: Difference between revisions

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<h2>Debris Examination Item </h2>
<h2>Debris Examination Item 24 </h2>
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<h5>Safety Investigation Report (2018) Appendix 1.12T </h5>
<h5>Safety Investigation Report (2018) Appendix 1.12T </h5>
<h3>Summary</h3>
<h3>Summary</h3>

Latest revision as of 07:06, 14 September 2025

Debris Examination Item 24

Safety Investigation Report (2018) Appendix 1.12T

Summary

Item 24 - Unidentified Part

Two items of fibreglass-honeycomb composite debris were recovered near Sainte Luce on the south-east coast of Madagascar, having reportedly washed ashore in February 2016.

They were hand-delivered to the ATSB on 12 September 2016. The items were initially reported in the media as being burnt.

No manufacturing identifiers, such as a part numbers or serial numbers were present on either item that may have provided direct clues as to their origin. Despite no evidence of overall gross heat damage, two small (&lt;10mm) marks on one side of the larger item and one on the reverse side were identified as damage resulting from localised heating. A burnt odour emanating from the large item was isolated to these discrete areas. The origin and age of these marks was not apparent. However, it was considered that burning odours would generally dissipate after an extended period of environmental exposure, including salt water immersion, as expected for items originating from 9M-MRO.

Source: Safety Investigation Report 2018:1 Factual Information/1.12/1.12.3 SIR-2018

Source: Safety Investigation Report 2018 Appendix 1.12T SIR-APP-SET5