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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Thursday, October 16, 2008

Airport loses power during systems test

By Dave Dondoneau
Advertiser Staff Writer

Power was lost at the Honolulu International Airport control tower for 20 minutes Sunday night during an annual electrical systems check, but no damage occurred and just four flights were delayed, a spokes-man for the Federal Aviation Administration said yesterday.

Portions of the radar room also lost some radar and radio frequencies during the outage, but no flights were affected, said Ian Gregor, FAA spokesman.

"The air traffic controllers and supervisors performed flawlessly in switching to emergency plans," Gregor said. "The outage happened during a planned maintenance check scheduled for when there would be little air traffic and good weather. It's never a good thing to lose power, even during a check, but everyone handled the situation perfectly and the problem has since been fixed."

Gregor said the outage occurred at 7:47 p.m. during testing to ensure the switch to a backup generator goes smoothly if power is ever lost at the airport.

While most of the power transition was seamless, Gregor said something happened to prevent the backup power from reaching some electrical systems, particularly all power at the tower and some radar and radio frequencies at the control center. Twelve planes were in the air at the time and four departures, two from Honolulu and one each from Maui and Hilo, were briefly delayed.

Controllers in the air traffic control tower immediately began using emergency radios to communicate with airborne aircraft. In the radar room, they quickly transferred operations to sectors that retained radar and radio capabilities, Gregor said.

"We had full radar and radio capabilities back by 8:07 p.m.," Gregor said. "All in all, the impact was very minimal. The planes in the air were never in danger. None came close together. We were able to keep them safely apart."

Gregor said FAA investigators and technicians have already reconfigured the power delivery system so the blockage won't happen again.

Reach Dave Dondoneau at ddondoneau@honoluluadvertiser.com.