With the obvious comparisons to AA 191, especially, since if I understand it correctly, both started with failure of the aft pylon mount that put the rest of the events into motion...
From the NTSB report yesterday, the separation looks to have happened just like AA 191, with the #1 engine going up and over the plane. As we know, though, and the photos yesterday show, with UP 2976, a wing fire happened either with or almost immediately after the separation. With AA 191, at least from what I've seen and read of the crash in the past two weeks, there was no fire until the crash.
Is there a possible explanation for why the wing fire happened on separation in the UPS crash, and not in AA 191.
And, just to extend the similarities/differences a bit further-at least from what I understand, the AA 191 separation didn't impact the other engines, while on UP2976, there was at least dramatic reduction in thrust if not a complete failure of #2(probably from ingesting debris associated with #1 and/or the wing fire). AA 191 crashed because of the hydraulic failures associated with losing #1, and redudancy/safely redesigns put in place after that crash would keep that same sequence of events from happening on any DC10/MD10/MD11 still flying today.
Would it be reasonable speculation to say that had it not been for the fire(and likely associated failure of #2) that this plane could have at least completed take off? I know there are a lot of what-ifs in that, but I guess what I'm asking is, can we speculate that even though the starting point of the failure is similar to AA 191(#1 pylon separating at rear attachment), the fixes implemented after AA191 did their