WASHINGTON (AP) Airlines should inspect the emergency locator transmitters of all Boeing 787 "Dreamliners," the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration urged Friday following a fire earlier in the week aboard one of the airliners while parked at London's Heathrow Airport.
British aviation authorities, who are investigating the fire, said the transmitters should be disabled after finding that one of the squat orange boxes was the only thing with enough power to start a fire in the plane's tail section, which was scorched.
The FAA made no mention of disabling the transmitters in a brief statement provided to the media. Instead, the agency said that after reviewing the British investigators' recommendations, U.S. officials have begun working with Boeing to develop instructions for how airlines should conduct the inspections.
The inspections would ask airlines to examine for proper wire routing, damage or pinching, and to inspect the transmitter's lithium battery compartment for heat or moisture, the statement said.
An order making the inspections mandatory for U.S. operators is expected in the coming days, the FAA said.