Cherokee_Cruiser
Bronteroc
Horrific set of pictures
Agree with the above. They flew the fleet three days post accident until they were grounded by the FAA over the weekend. The seperated engine was sitting on the runway and the "airport surveillance video" would have been immediately available, I would think. Mike, do you think the video could have been withheld from the company due to it being part of an FAA investigation?If anything, #2 appears to be compressor stalling from possibly the flame ingestion, if not FOD ingestion. In the KC-10 series, there’s about 15+ feet or so of distance from the inlet lip of the #2 intake to the front end of the actual engine itself, so any disturbed air entering the inlet that could potentially cause compressor stalling, generally straightens out by the time it reaches the actual engine. But I can’t imagine that this amount of disturbed air, likely laced with FOD from the departed engine, didn’t do some degree of interruption at best, or damage at worst, that there wasn’t some degree of thrust loss at this critical phase of flight. Interestingly, the #2 engine is normally the least susceptible to compressor stalls, just due to its inlet design, but the most susceptible to FOD due to its location, on these jets.
Not only that, looking at the pictures of the fractures of the pylon mount, it would have been obvious that there was a significant issue and would have been noted by the most junior A&P out there...in an instant.And “so fast”, wasn’t fast enough, like I inquired about in the first pages of this thread. UPS should’ve been concerned enough to not keep their MD planes flying for days (and perhaps longer), when they had a separated engine sitting in the infield grass, far before the wreckage of their plane off the departure end of the runway, all right there at their home base. Should’ve been enough concern for the unknown to at least temporarily not fly them, until the Boeing decision did it for them.
The plane came out of C check just a couple weeks before the accident. UPS used a vendor for this.Not only that, looking at the pictures of the fractures of the pylon mount, it would have been obvious that there was a significant issue and would have been noted by the most junior A&P out there...in an instant.
Agree with the above. They flew the fleet three days post accident until they were grounded by the FAA over the weekend. The seperated engine was sitting on the runway and the "airport surveillance video" would have been immediately available, I would think. Mike, do you think the video could have been withheld from the company due to it being part of an FAA investigation?
Not fast enough… but safety firstwell that explains why they grounded them so fast. Damn near exactly like AA191
No mention if #2 compressor stalled or was otherwise comprised.
Wow. It appears number 1 departed post rotation.
I think even if #2 wasn't FOD'd out (or compressor stalled), the fate of that airplane was sealed. It wasn't going to fly anymore.![]()
Actually, that's the whole question: If #2 was operating normally, I think the aircraft would be flyable. In fact, you could argue that they did fly it. We have an engine "...separation" checklist on my fleet. The engine is near enough to the CG that while there would be a CG shift, I'd guess it's still controllable. On the other hand, you aren't climbing with a dual engine failure.I think even if #2 wasn't FOD'd out (or compressor stalled), the fate of that airplane was sealed. It wasn't going to fly anymore.![]()
Theoretically, it would’ve had the climb performance if only the complete loss of #1 was encountered and the other two engines were unaffected. Whether or not there was other damage to the wing, to lift components of the wing, or otherwise, remains to be seen and would obviously be a factor. But as others have mentioned here who fly the plane, loss of the #1 engine, plus any performance degradation of any other engine, and yes in this phase of flight at these weights, fate would be sealed even with no other damage. Sadly.
Actually, that's the whole question: If #2 was operating normally, I think the aircraft would be flyable. In fact, you could argue that they did fly it. We have an engine "...separation" checklist on my fleet. The engine is near enough to the CG that while there would be a CG shift, I'd guess it's still controllable. On the other hand, you aren't climbing with a dual engine failure.
Um, are we not seeing the wing on fire, post engine separation in picture #4? What happened to the other 2 engines would be moot if the wing is on fire, right?
It depends what the damage is at the time and what is on fire. Could be separated fluid lines, etc. One of the questions for investigators will be, aerodynamically, was the plane flyable at that moment of liftoff, damage wise? Damage from engine separation, damage from fire, etc. it’s going to be an interesting forensic analysis by the structure team. Of course, the fire could’ve been not enough to prevent the plane from lifting off and initially flying, but could’ve been enough to cause catostrophic damage later on climbout resulting in loss of control or explosion etc. Any number of factors that will have to be pieced together.
Investigation-wise, I’m not sure how much useable pieces of wreckage there are to investigate, just with the horrendous amount of fire damage from post-impact due to the amount of fuel onboard. It will be very difficult to determine, from main wreckage parts, what might have been pre-impact fire or damage, and what will have been post-impact fire/damage, if any useable pieces from those airframe areas even remain.
Because, in all likelihood, they don't know yet.I don’t understand why this report wouldn’t address what the number 2 engine was doing, and maybe even a little more information on the speed the aircraft attained.