FedEx Express Flight 14

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FedEx Express Flight 14
FedEx Express Flight 14 wreckage (1997).jpg
FedEx Flight 14 after the fire was extinguished.
Accident summary
Date July 31, 1997
Summary Pilot error
Site Newark International Airport runway 22R , Newark, New Jersey, United States
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Passengers 3
Crew 2
Injuries (non-fatal) 5
Fatalities 0
Survivors 5 (all)
Aircraft type McDonnell Douglas MD-11F
Aircraft name Joshua
Operator FedEx Express
Registration N611FE
Flight origin Singapore Changi Airport
Singapore
1st stopover Penang International Airport
Penang, Malaysia
2nd stopover Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport
Taipei, Taiwan
Last stopover Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport
Anchorage, Alaska, United States
Destination Newark Liberty International Airport
Newark, New Jersey, United States

FedEx Express Flight 14 was a scheduled cargo flight from Singapore to Newark, New Jersey, via Malaysia, Taiwan, and Alaska. On July 31, 1997, the aircraft flying this route crashed during landing on its final segment at Newark Liberty International Airport (EWR), catching fire as it flipped upside down.

Summary

Flight 14 crashed while landing on runway 22R at Newark Airport on July 31, 1997. The flight originated in Singapore with intermediate stops in Penang, Malaysia followed by Taipei, Taiwan, and then Anchorage, Alaska. In addition to the Captain and First Officer there were three passengers on board, including one riding in the jump seat.

During the flight, the pilots were concerned that they would have little stopping distance after landing, and the captain said that he wanted to put the aircraft down early on the runway. The aircraft had departed with one thrust reverser (on the left wing) inoperative, and the pilots knew of incidents in the craft's maintenance log where the auto-brakes had failed to activate during landings. They had also misinterpreted the runway data, and so believed they had less stopping distance than was actually available.[1][2]

The landing was normal until the beginning of the flare phase. The MD-11 touched down, bounced, and rolled to the right. On the second touchdown, about 1,100 feet later, the right gear snapped and the No. 3 engine (right wing engine) contacted the runway, with the right roll continuing until the right wing spars broke. The aircraft came to rest off the right side of the runway, on its back, and on fire. All five occupants escaped through a cockpit window. The airplane was destroyed by fire.[3][2]

Aircraft

The aircraft, named Joshua by FedEx, construction number 48603 and line number 553, was a McDonnell Douglas MD-11F freight model, powered by three General Electric CF6-80C2D1F engines. Registered in the United States as N611FE,[4] the aircraft was delivered new to FedEx in September 1993. Prior to the crash, the aircraft had a total of 13,034 flight hours and 2,950 flight cycles (a flight cycle is defined as a takeoff and landing), and had been involved in two prior incidents. In January 1994, when it sustained underbelly damage during a bounced landing at Memphis International Airport. Then in November 1994, the aircraft was involved in a tailstrike at Anchorage International Airport. Permanent repairs were made from the Anchorage incident within days of the tailstrike, and permanent repairs to the Memphis incident were made at the next C check in August 1995.[1]

Investigation

The National Transportation Safety Board conducted a full investigation of the accident and concluded that the probable cause was the captain's over-control of the aircraft during the landing and his failure to go around after a destabilized flare. Beginning about 17 feet above the runway, the captain had let the nose lower, probably to achieve an earlier touchdown, then raised it and increased thrust to slow the plane's descent, then pushed the nose down again (around the time of the first touchdown) to try to keep the plane on the runway. These last control inputs were "too late and too large" to stabilize the landing, and the plane's high sink rate and rightward roll compressed the right landing gear strut at the second touchdown, which broke the right wing rear spar and ruptured the right fuel tank.[1][3][2]

NTSB safety recommendations

As a result of its investigation of this accident, the NTSB made new recommendations based on their findings and conclusions to improve the safety of operations of the MD-11 type aircraft including that the FAA develop new pilot training tools to "include information about factors that can contribute to structural failures involving the landing gear, wings, and fuselage, such as design sink rate limits; roll angle limits; control inputs’ roll rate; pitch rate; single-gear landings; the effect of decreased lift; and structural loading consequences of bottoming landing gear struts and tires; provide a syllabus for simulator training on the execution of stabilized approaches to the landing flare, the identification of unstabilized landing flares, and recovery from these situations, including proper high sink rate recovery techniques during flare to landing, techniques for avoiding and recovering from overcontrol in pitch before touchdown, and techniques for avoiding overcontrol and premature derotation during a bounced landing; and to promote an orientation toward a proactive go-around."[1][3][2]

Flight number

FedEx Express continues to use Flight 14 as an active flight number today; the route has been modified to originate in Tokyo, doubling back to Hong Kong and Taipei before continuing on to Anchorage; its eastern terminus is now Memphis.

In common media

The crashes of FedEx Express Flight 14, and a similar crash in 2009 of another McDonnell Douglas MD-11, FedEx Express Flight 80 at Narita International Airport in Japan, are both covered on Season 14 of Mayday (Air Crash Investigation), episode 5, titled Death at Narita.

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 "Destabilized Approach Results in MD-11 Bounced Landing, Structural Failure" Accident Prevention, Vol. 58, No. 1, January, 2001. Alexandria, VA:Flight Safety Foundation. pp. 1-8
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Dismukes, R. Key, Benjamin A. Berman , Loukia D. Loukopoulos. "The Limits of Expertise: Rethinking Pilot Error and the Causes of Airline Accidents". Hampshire, UK:Ashgate Publishing Ltd (2007), pp. 85-94
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links