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|
Attributes | |
ACN | 1496923 |
Time | |
Date | 201711 |
Local Time Of Day | 0601-1200 |
Place | |
Locale Reference | ZZZZ.Airport |
State Reference | FO |
Environment | |
Flight Conditions | VMC |
Light | Dawn |
Aircraft 1 | |
Make Model Name | B787 Dreamliner Undifferentiated or Other Model |
Operating Under FAR Part | Part 121 |
Flight Phase | Descent |
Flight Plan | IFR |
Component | |
Aircraft Component | DC Battery |
Person 1 | |
Function | Pilot Not Flying Captain |
Qualification | Flight Crew Air Transport Pilot (ATP) |
Experience | Flight Crew Total 6789 Flight Crew Type 5 |
Person 2 | |
Function | First Officer Pilot Flying |
Qualification | Flight Crew Air Transport Pilot (ATP) |
Experience | Flight Crew Total 12546 Flight Crew Type 1330 |
Events | |
Anomaly | Aircraft Equipment Problem Less Severe Deviation - Procedural Published Material / Policy Flight Deck / Cabin / Aircraft Event Smoke / Fire / Fumes / Odor |
Narrative:
On descent below FL180 on arrival; I first noticed a strong odor of food cooking (like garlic) and commented about it to the rest of the cockpit crew. The flight attendants later commented they had not been cooking anything; and I can only assume the odor may have been related to the battery. This smell went away after a few minutes. Although I am not certain of the sequence of messages that followed due to our workload at the time; I recall seeing two automatically generated frm (fault reporting manual) messages that were copied to our printer. I believe the first message made reference to a battery overheat and the second message referenced the battery charge being below a level adequate for dispatch. As the descent continued; I seem to recall the main batt low EICAS message appearing. There was no open square icon to the left of the message and therefore no electronic checklist to accomplish. The message subsequently disappeared from EICAS and; as I recall; was followed a few thousand feet later by the elec stby system message that also eventually disappeared. Again; there was no square icon; and I asked the international relief officer to review the checklist in the FM. He did and advised both messages were advisory only. I also accessed the electronic checklist on the inboard display to make sure there was no unfinished checklist in the queue and found none.although unrelated to the battery; I found it odd; as I did with a stabilizer EICAS message on a previous flight several weeks ago; that these checklists show the square icon associated with them in the FM; but yet there is no square icon with the EICAS message displayed in the cockpit. My understanding is that the square icon indicates there are steps to be taken in the electronic checklists. In the case of these three checklists; there were none within the electronic checklist system in spite of the square icon in the associated FM checklist. I will conduct some review to make sure my understanding is correct.given our proximity to the airport; our workload; and the lack of guidance from the checklists; we continued our approach without further regard to the battery and assumed the problem was either spurious or of little significance to us at that phase of flight. The approach; landing and taxi to the gate were uneventful. Upon arrival at the gate; I contacted [maintenance] by telephone to follow-up on the automatically generated frm messages; and he indicated he had just seen them. A mechanic arrived at the aircraft shortly thereafter; at which point the international relief officer provided him with a comprehensive debrief.
Original NASA ASRS Text
Title: B787 flight crew reported that during descent they received a 'MAIN BATT LOW' EICAS message that eventually disappeared.
Narrative: On descent below FL180 on arrival; I first noticed a strong odor of food cooking (like garlic) and commented about it to the rest of the cockpit crew. The Flight Attendants later commented they had not been cooking anything; and I can only assume the odor may have been related to the battery. This smell went away after a few minutes. Although I am not certain of the sequence of messages that followed due to our workload at the time; I recall seeing two automatically generated FRM (Fault Reporting Manual) messages that were copied to our printer. I believe the first message made reference to a battery overheat and the second message referenced the battery charge being below a level adequate for dispatch. As the descent continued; I seem to recall the MAIN BATT LOW EICAS message appearing. There was no open square icon to the left of the message and therefore no electronic checklist to accomplish. The message subsequently disappeared from EICAS and; as I recall; was followed a few thousand feet later by the ELEC STBY SYS message that also eventually disappeared. Again; there was no square icon; and I asked the IRO to review the checklist in the FM. He did and advised both messages were advisory only. I also accessed the electronic checklist on the inboard display to make sure there was no unfinished checklist in the queue and found none.Although unrelated to the battery; I found it odd; as I did with a STABILIZER EICAS message on a previous flight several weeks ago; that these checklists show the square icon associated with them in the FM; but yet there is no square icon with the EICAS message displayed in the cockpit. My understanding is that the square icon indicates there are steps to be taken in the electronic checklists. In the case of these three checklists; there were none within the electronic checklist system in spite of the square icon in the associated FM checklist. I will conduct some review to make sure my understanding is correct.Given our proximity to the airport; our workload; and the lack of guidance from the checklists; we continued our approach without further regard to the battery and assumed the problem was either spurious or of little significance to us at that phase of flight. The approach; landing and taxi to the gate were uneventful. Upon arrival at the gate; I contacted [maintenance] by telephone to follow-up on the automatically generated FRM messages; and he indicated he had just seen them. A mechanic arrived at the aircraft shortly thereafter; at which point the IRO provided him with a comprehensive debrief.
Data retrieved from NASA's ASRS site and automatically converted to unabbreviated mixed upper/lowercase text. This report is for informational purposes with no guarantee of accuracy. See NASA's ASRS site for official report.