Narrative:

During descent on the arrival; left spoiler stuck in the stowed position resulting in a significant right rolling moment. I immediately stowed the spoilers and determined that they were probably frozen (heavy rain and icing earlier in the flight during departure.) this is not a rare event but still requires some steps. We immediately notified center that we were requesting relief on the STAR from the airspeed constraints and would be unable to make the next STAR altitude constraint because our spoilers were unavailable. I did not declare an emergency because ATC said that there was no problem with that 'do the best you can with the altitude' and airspeed restrictions were removed. The rest of the descent was uneventful with regard to the spoiler system and they thawed out around 6;000-8;000 feet and were usable normally for landing. We never declared an emergency nor requested traffic priority and the requests and notifications we made to ATC were acknowledged quickly and they were a great help. I believe that water intrusion caused ice to form on the left set of spoilers keeping them stuck in the stowed position until we descended in to a warmer air mass. While this is not a normal occurrence it isn't extremely rare either (when encountering a significant precipitation event during climbout and then climbing to cold air) - probably 4-5 times over my aircraft 12+years. I'm not sure that this can be prevented per say - because you aren't aware of when the ice formation actually happens; so using a spoiler extension/retraction procedure following a precipitation encounter when freezing air mass is involved may not solve the problem.

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Original NASA ASRS Text

Title: MD-11 Captain reported the left spoiler became stuck in the stowed position during descent.

Narrative: During descent on the arrival; left spoiler stuck in the stowed position resulting in a significant right rolling moment. I immediately stowed the spoilers and determined that they were probably frozen (heavy rain and icing earlier in the flight during departure.) This is not a rare event but still requires some steps. We immediately notified Center that we were requesting relief on the STAR from the airspeed constraints and would be unable to make the next STAR altitude constraint because our spoilers were unavailable. I did not declare an emergency because ATC said that there was no problem with that 'do the best you can with the altitude' and airspeed restrictions were removed. The rest of the descent was uneventful with regard to the spoiler system and they thawed out around 6;000-8;000 feet and were usable normally for landing. We never declared an emergency nor requested traffic priority and the requests and notifications we made to ATC were acknowledged quickly and they were a great help. I believe that water intrusion caused ice to form on the left set of spoilers keeping them stuck in the stowed position until we descended in to a warmer air mass. While this is not a normal occurrence it isn't extremely rare either (when encountering a significant precipitation event during climbout and then climbing to cold air) - probably 4-5 times over my aircraft 12+years. I'm not sure that this can be prevented per say - because you aren't aware of when the ice formation actually happens; so using a spoiler extension/retraction procedure following a precipitation encounter when freezing air mass is involved may not solve the problem.

Data retrieved from NASA's ASRS site and automatically converted to unabbreviated mixed upper/lowercase text. This report is for informational purposes with no guarantee of accuracy. See NASA's ASRS site for official report.