[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 14, Volume 1]

[Revised as of January 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 14CFR21.3]



[Page 120-121]

 

                     TITLE 14--AERONAUTICS AND SPACE

 

CHAPTER I--FEDERAL AVIATION ADMINISTRATION, DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION

 

PART 21_CERTIFICATION PROCEDURES FOR PRODUCTS AND PARTS--Table of Contents

 

                            Subpart A_General

 

Sec. 21.3  Reporting of failures, malfunctions, and defects.



    (a) Except as provided in paragraph (d) of this section, the holder 

of a Type Certificate (including a Supplemental Type Certificate), a 

Parts Manufacturer Approval (PMA), or a TSO authorization, or the 

licensee of a Type Certificate shall report any failure, malfunction, or 

defect in any product, part, process, or article manufactured by it that 

it determines has resulted in any of the occurrences listed in paragraph 

(c) of this section.

    (b) The holder of a Type Certificate (including a Supplemental Type 

Certificate), a Parts Manufacturer Approval (PMA), or a TSO 

authorization, or the licensee of a Type of Certificate shall report any 

defect in any product, part, or article manufactured by it that has left 

its quality control system and that it determines could result in any of 

the occurrences listed in paragraph (c) of this section.

    (c) The following occurrences must be reported as provided in 

paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section:

    (1) Fires caused by a system or equipment failure, malfunction, or 

defect.

    (2) An engine exhaust system failure, malfunction, or defect which 

causes damage to the engine, adjacent aircraft structure, equipment, or 

components.

    (3) The accumulation or circulation of toxic or noxious gases in the 

crew compartment or passenger cabin.

    (4) A malfunction, failure, or defect of a propeller control system.

    (5) A propeller or rotorcraft hub or blade structural failure.

    (6) Flammable fluid leakage in areas where an ignition source 

normally exists.

    (7) A brake system failure caused by structural or material failure 

during operation.

    (8) A significant aircraft primary structural defect or failure 

caused by any autogenous condition (fatigue, understrength, corrosion, 

etc.).

    (9) Any abnormal vibration or buffeting caused by a structural or 

system malfunction, defect, or failure.

    (10) An engine failure.

    (11) Any structural or flight control system malfunction, defect, or 

failure which causes an interference with normal control of the aircraft 

for which derogates the flying qualities.

    (12) A complete loss of more than one electrical power generating 

system or hydraulic power system during a given operation of the 

aircraft.

    (13) A failure or malfunction of more than one attitude, airspeed, 

or altitude



[[Page 121]]



instrument during a given operation of the aircraft.

    (d) The requirements of paragraph (a) of this section do not apply 

to--

    (1) Failures, malfunctions, or defects that the holder of a Type 

Certificate (including a Supplemental Type Certificate), Parts 

Manufacturer Approval (PMA), or TSO authorization, or the licensee of a 

Type Certificate--

    (i) Determines were caused by improper maintenance, or improper 

usage;

    (ii) Knows were reported to the FAA by another person under the 

Federal Aviation Regulations; or

    (iii) Has already reported under the accident reporting provisions 

of Part 430 of the regulations of the National Transportation Safety 

Board.

    (2) Failures, malfunctions, or defects in products, parts, or 

articles manufactured by a foreign manufacturer under a U.S. Type 

Certificate issued under Sec. 21.29 or Sec. 21.617, or exported to the 

United States under Sec. 21.502.

    (e) Each report required by this section--

    (1) Shall be made to the Aircraft Certification Office in the region 

in which the person required to make the report is located within 24 

hours after it has determined that the failure, malfunction, or defect 

required to be reported has occurred. However, a report that is due on a 

Saturday or a Sunday may be delivered on the following Monday and one 

that is due on a holiday may be delivered on the next workday;

    (2) Shall be transmitted in a manner and form acceptable to the 

Administrator and by the most expeditious method available; and

    (3) Shall include as much of the following information as is 

available and applicable:

    (i) Aircraft serial number.

    (ii) When the failure, malfunction, or defect is associated with an 

article approved under a TSO authorization, the article serial number 

and model designation, as appropriate.

    (iii) When the failure, malfunction, or defect is associated with an 

engine or propeller, the engine or propeller serial number, as 

appropriate.

    (iv) Product model.

    (v) Identification of the part, component, or system involved. The 

identification must include the part number.

    (vi) Nature of the failure, malfunction, or defect.

    (f) Whenever the investigation of an accident or service difficulty 

report shows that an article manufactured under a TSO authorization is 

unsafe because of a manufacturing or design defect, the manufacturer 

shall, upon request of the Administrator, report to the Administrator 

the results of its investigation and any action taken or proposed by the 

manufacturer to correct that defect. If action is required to correct 

the defect in existing articles, the manufacturer shall submit the data 

necessary for the issuance of an appropriate airworthiness directive to 

the Manager of the Aircraft Certification Office for the geographic area 

of the FAA regional office in the region in which it is located.



[Amdt. 21-36, 35 FR 18187, Nov. 28, 1970, as amended by Amdt. 21-37, 35 

FR 18450, Dec. 4, 1970; Amdt. 21-50, 45 FR 38346, June 9, 1980; Amdt. 

21-67, 54 FR 39291, Sept. 25, 1989]