ERfly
Well-Known Member
Also, the fuel system on these ladies doesn't like to sit. Causes all sorts of problems.Got to run the plane every X days or the return to service checks get more difficult. Lessons learned from the Neo/PW groundings.
Also, the fuel system on these ladies doesn't like to sit. Causes all sorts of problems.Got to run the plane every X days or the return to service checks get more difficult. Lessons learned from the Neo/PW groundings.
What do you mean May/June? They’re going to be flying intra Europe in FebruaryRan across a parked MD tonight (er, last night, whatever) in SJU. It was powered up and there were ladders all over the place, so El Capitan ventured over and button-holed a line mechanic. Said line mechanic was just doing routine mx, but believed that they'd be back flying in the May/June area. (He also said that there was not as yet any directive on how to comply with the AD, so). Worth what you paid for it, but interesting.
You know, even for official record keeping purposes, I still think the guy who died from his burn injuries should count as a UPS crash fatality. He’d be alive if it wasn’t for his burns and injuries from the crash. And he was in the hospital the entire time. Sure, legality wise the family can sue, get money, etc.
But there’s something to say about the official count of death for the accident versus not.
NoAny investigation, repair resolution, or potential return to service updates?
Nope! All the MD’s I’ve seen across the system have been sealed up for long term storage. I think the company figured out it’s going to be longer than just a few weeks.Any investigation, repair resolution, or potential return to service updates?
Apparently they de iced ours in ORD as well when they had snow at the beginning or middle of December. Something with a bigger brain and more MX knowledge might have a why.They were doing de-icing on a FedEx MD11 at EWR on New Years Day, kind of surprising. Maybe for training?
The UPS MD11 at MSP is all sealed up COVID style.
Internally, Boeing is understood to believe there is only a 50/50 chance that the MD-11F returns to widespread service, effectively forcing the air cargo industry to confront an emerging capacity gap.Any investigation, repair resolution, or potential return to service updates?
Any investigation, repair resolution, or potential return to service updates?
Boeing told operators in 2011 there could be a problem with the part that cracked after several they found the problem on four failures, but told operators it wasn't a safety issue.
I wonder how much this increases Boeing's liability.
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Cracked part in fatal UPS crash flagged in 2011 by Boeing
A cracked part found on a UPS MD-11 cargo jet that crashed in November in Kentucky was flagged in a Boeing service letter more than a decade earlier, the National Transportation Safety Board said on Wednesday.www.reuters.com
The NTSB just posted an update here (PDF): https://www.ntsb.gov/investigations/Documents/DCA26MA024 Investigative Update.pdf
The last page, which shows selected FDR parameters, seems to indicate to my untrained eye that shortly after engine 1 departed the aircraft, engine 2 began to stall and / or surge, and then shortly thereafter began to spool down. You can see the engine 2 N1 and N2 speeds start to rapidly degrade at the exact same time aircraft roll angle begins to increase commensurately. Absolutely horrible.
There will be some well worn Disney shuttles hitting the market in a few years.Internally, Boeing is understood to believe there is only a 50/50 chance that the MD-11F returns to widespread service, effectively forcing the air cargo industry to confront an emerging capacity gap.
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MD-11 Replacement Looms as Boeing Seeks 777F Lifeline
MD-11 Replacement Looms as Boeing Seeks 777F Lifelineairguide.info
There will be some well worn Disney shuttles hitting the market in a few years.
Yep! If they truly wanted a MD replacement we should’ve been following in Lufthansa’s footsteps when they ordered the 777F. They’ll figure it outConversions take time.
To be clear, I think it’s entirely possible that the bearing failure caused the lug failure. I’d say it’s even likely, it seems like a large coincidence for the failed bearing to just happen to be in the same lug that failed. It’s not hard to imagine a scenario where a broken bearing race and movement of parts not intended to move would initiate fatigue cracking in the lug. We just won’t know until the metallurgy geeks do their thingWellllll we don’t yet know if the bearing race failure was causal to the lug failure. Maybe it was, maybe it wasn’t. If it was, that’s a pretty big oversight in their analysis of the original bearing problem.