Leads me to wonder what crosswind landing technique was used during all of these accidents?:
1994, November 4. A Fed Ex MD-11 freighter made a hard landing, and a tail strike at the Anchorage, Alaska airport. After selecting 50 degrees of flaps the first officer, who was flying the plane, was not able to stabilize the approach in the pitch mode. The attitude of the plane varied approximately 2 degrees with corresponding elevator position changes. The captain, because of the high sink rate, grabbed the yoke and pulled back. The plane landed hard, bounced, and oscillated at least three times, reaching a maximum pitch up attitude of 12.3 degrees. The tail struck the runway during the oscillations. This was also the plane that crashed at Newark in 1997.
1997, July 31. A Fed Ex MD-11 bounced on landing at Newark airport and then flipped upside down off runway 22 R. The two pilots and three passengers managed to escape before the plane was destroyed by fire. The investigation is focusing on the failure of the right main gear, which allowed the right engine and wing to dig into the ground, flipping the plane over.
1999, August 22. A China Airlines MD-11 crashed while landing at Hong Kong’s Chek Lap Kok airport, during a rain storm with strong, gusting crosswinds. The right gear struck the runway very hard and then broke off, allowing the right engine and wing to strike the ground. The right wing then broke off and the plane flipped upside down. That is very similar to the type of damage incurred by the Fed Ex MD-11, when it crashed at Newark. Three of the 315 people on board Flight C1642 were killed. The rest owe their lives to the Hong Kong airport’s fire brigade that put out the fire before it engulfed those trapped in the wreckage. It took almost 3 hours to remove all the survivors.
2001, November 20. An Eva Air MD-11 made a hard landing at Taipei, Taiwan. The first officer was flying the plane as it hit hard and bounced. The captain immediately took control and initiated a successful go-around. After the second landing, investigation revealed substantial damage to the nose wheel well structure and one of the two nose tires had failed.
23 March 2009; FedEx Express MD-11F; Flight 80; near Tokyo, Japan: The aircraft was on a cargo flight from Guangzhou, China to Narita Airport near Tokyo, Japan. The aircraft bounced on landing, and contacted the runway a second time nose wheel first before rolling to the left, contacting the runway with its left stabilizer and wing, and catching fire. The aircraft ended up in an inverted position. Both crew members were killed.
27 July 2010; Lufthansa; MD-11F; flight 8460; Riyadh, Saudi Arabia: The aircraft was on a cargo flight from Frankfurt, Germany to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia had a landing accident that fractured the fuselage. The two crew members survived.
Typhoonpilot