Mike wrote:
Adam Kline wrote:
If the FAA saw signs of predetonation...
The FAA didn't. The investigation is being carried out by the NTSB. The FAA is basing their letter on findings from that investigation that have presumably been communicated to them by the NTSB as a safely concern.
The NTSB is investigating to determine the cause of an accident that resulted in death or serious injury, and further determine if there was an underlying inherent 'engineering' issue.
The FAA investigation is to determine regulatory compliance, or lack thereof that may have contributed to the accident.
Those investigations run concurrently, with the actual labor and expertise being provided by a commercial contractor with greater experience with the systems in question. NTSB and FAA representatives will supervise the inspections. In my experience, there is also often pizza.
The FAA portion of the investigation has yielded enough evidence to be used in the regulatory sphere to rescind Collings' authorization for these flights. To the purpose of the FAA's investigation, the preliminary findings are enough. The NTSB's investigation will be more exhaustive and their findings more detailed with a report released later.
As an analogy, the FAA will say the stop light was RED when you went through it, the NTBS report will say that the traffic light was emitting light on wavelengths determined to be within the parameters of "RED"