Being perfectly honest, how could anyone, be they pilot or passenger, be comfortable flying in that thing, after its horrible history of crashes and problems, that it has been plagued with since its introduction decades ago?
But now AA191 may not be due to maintenance procedure after all. That procedure may have just better exploited the inherent design weakness.
The AA191 crash WAS the result of improper maintenance, as per the NTSB report, since AA was trying to shorten the labor time needed to reinstall an engine. Proper maintenance procedures are there for a good reason.But now AA191 may not be due to maintenance procedure after all. That procedure may have just better exploited the inherent design weakness.
I can't help but think that Boeing will also do a new, modern stress and fatigue analysis while working on the enhanced inspection criterion, since that Aft Wing/Pylon fitting has been identified in two accidents.Until a fix exists for this problem, the airplane remains grounded. I suspect that Boeing as the manufacturer of the type, is working hard to come up with inspection criteria and process that will satisfy the FAA, but that may be quite a while. Months at a minimum.
Based on a 2011 Boeing Service Letter to all MD-11, Boeing stated "failure of the spherical bearing would not result in a safety of flight issue."
Would replacing these parts with the same parts on a scheduled basis provide you confidence for the air worthiness of this aircraft, or are you saying new/ bigger/ better parts should replace the parts causing this failure?My theory today is the two containment lugs were too narrow, and the spherical baring too small, for the type of material in which they were composed.
Yes and with a shortened inspection/lube schedule.Would replacing these parts with the same parts on a scheduled basis provide you confidence for the air worthiness of this aircraft,
With the currently defined inspection/lube schedule, yes.or are you saying new/ bigger/ better parts should replace the parts causing this failure?
Truth is, I'd feel a whole lot safer climbing into an DC-10/MD11/KC-10 right now, as is, compared to a privately owned C172 or Cirrus or similar being flown by a weekend warrior with a little too much money in his pockets who flies 3-4 hours a month and thinks his name should be Maverick.
All the tragic garbage was created for international travel. It’s always a good thing in the airlines to have redundancy. Nothing man-made will ever be perfectly reliable.It seems like how to properly attach an under-wing engine should have been worked out by then.
Was the MD11 the last tri-jet? The optimum number of engines on an airliner is two, unless they could be made perfectly reliable, then it would be one.
So you're basically lowering your standards to what pretty much is the aviation basement, in order to establish a false comfort level, for flying on one of the most problem plagued commercial airliners in existence.
What data specifically? I'm sure it is skewed in some way. If based on fatalities, then of course it is as the MD has been primarily freighter for quite some time while the 737 is passenger. The 737 is also flown in far more sketchy areas with sketch operators. And probably has far older units still flying vs the MD. I would hope at a minimum that we aren't talking raw incidents, but adjusting for quantity of aircraft and flight hours. A passenger 737 is in the air far more than a cargo MD-11 and sees more flight cycles.Actually, if you go back and look at the data, the Boeing 737 series has the worst safety record. It’s more than double that of the MD11
Actually, if you go back and look at the data, the Boeing 737 series has the worst safety record. It’s more than double that of the MD11
Not sure what data you're referring to.Actually, if you go back and look at the data, the Boeing 737 series has the worst safety record. It’s more than double that of the MD11
I said I'd feel a whole lot safer, I didnt mean to imply I'd necessarily be completely comfortable. And in the scenario I gave, the comfort level wouldnt be false either.So you're basically lowering your standards to what pretty much is the aviation basement, in order to establish a false comfort level, for flying on one of the most problem plagued commercial airliners in existence.
There are two lugs that contain or house the spherical bearing. It is believed that one or more of these lugs broke allowing the engine and pylon to rotate downward, breaking the front mount, and flipping over and above the wing.
However, continued operation would only further damage that bearing and stress those lugs. I think this was a progressive wear problem. The spherical bearing started to wear excessively, due to insufficient inspection and lubrication, placing further stress on those lugs.
My theory today is the two containment lugs were too narrow, and the spherical baring too small, for the type of material in which they were composed.
None of the incidents listed on the F28 wikipedia page are mechanical failures. It's all pilot error, weather/icing, one blown tire, and one contaminated fuel. Seems a remarkably safe plane from the criteria of "is anything vital going to break down / blow up / fall apart?" Regional jet pilots may not be very good though.worse hull loss rate is the F-28