Investigators are now looking further into a fuel contamination incident involving an A321 in the UK in 2020. All rather strange.
Aviation Herald - News, Incidents and Accidents in Aviation
avherald.com
The AvHerald is really falling in the integrity stakes with their reporting on this incident. A few days ago they quoted a pilot trained by the accident Captain who claimed the CVR had exonerated the crew from blame, before the CVR data has even been recovered.
Now this fuel contamination theory, which I tracked down to an anonymous random AI employee quoted by the Indian equivalent of the Daily Mail, who seems to think that because the previous fuel contamination incident happened in the UK the fact the UK has sent investigators to India to assist the Indian air accident investigation is “proof” that the two incidents are linked.
With regards to the Titan A321 contamination incident, caused by overuse of biocide, the engine didn’t just “flameout” suddenly, it had been showing signs of damage, failed starts, surging and stalls for a time before the incident flight.
The same can be applied to the post about the fuel shutoff valve failing closed with a total electrical loss. You can purport to be whatever you want in a YouTube comments section and post a theory that can fool people who don’t know better into believing this fantastical one in a billion probability theory happened (although posts on other forums say this type of action of the fuel shutoff is impossible). It’s a shame to see so called “professional” pilots with a YouTube account amplifying these outlandish theories for the sole purpose of clicks.
Real accident investigators aren’t trolling the YouTube comments section. To be honest I think when the actual facts emerge the prime cause will be something of a common error, simple but something none of the YouTube “experts” have speculated about.