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Fuel System Failure Might Be Behind Tu-154 Plane Crash

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Nikolay Antoshkin, former deputy chief of the Russian Air Forces, said that a fuel system failure could have caused the Tu-154 plane crash in the Black Sea.

In this late Monday, Dec. 26, 2016 frame grab image provided by the Russian Emergency Situations Ministry Press Service, ministry employees lift a fragment of a plane in the Black Sea, outside Sochi, Russia - Sputnik International
Russia
Engine, Landing Gear of Crashed Tu-154 Discovered in Black Sea - Russian MoD
MOSCOW (Sputnik) – A fuel system failure such as rupture of a duct or a flow divider valve could have caused the Tu-154 plane crash in the Black Sea, Nikolay Antoshkin, former deputy chief of the Russian Air Forces, said on Tuesday.

"I think that if engine fail, one should examine the fuel system. A rupture of a duct, a ducting or a flow divider valve could have occurred – one should look for a problem there," Antoshkin told RIA Novosti.

He also said that other possible problems are unlikely to have caused the crash.

"I do not think that the crash was caused by a foreign object penetrating the engine. The jet could not have been fueled by low-quality fuel, the pilots were experienced and there was no sabotage," Antoshkin said.

Specialists unload submersibles for underwater search, after Russian military Tu-154 crashed into the Black Sea on its way to Syria on Sunday, at a port of the Black Sea resort city of Sochi, Russia December 26, 2016 - Sputnik International
Russia
Defense Minister Says Does Everything Possible to Investigate Tu-154 Causes
He added that the time necessary to decode the plane’s flight data recorder would depend on damages of the black box.

The Russian Defense Ministry's Tu-154 aircraft en route to Syria from Moscow crashed soon after takeoff near Russia's Black Sea resort of Sochi on Sunday.

The plane was carrying 92 people including eight crew members, 64 musicians of the Alexandrov Ensemble, nine reporters, head of Spravedlivaya Pomoshch (Fair Aid) charity Elizaveta Glinka, and two federal civil servants. All 92 are feared dead.

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