I got these photos from a friend at LAX. He works for another airline who uses silver A/C They had taken a 767 out for a high power run and the High presure turbine disc let go.
It not only took out #1 engine tih parts sliced through the belly and took out #2 also as well as opening up the wing and setting the A/C on fire.
Just another boring day in avaition
that is why I never sit next to or slightly behind the engines...."hmmm, wonder what happens when we push it to 130% instead of 110% power?? "
I used to work at Northworst for 19 years and boy did I see my share of A/C damage. The best fodded out engine story I have is a DC-10 that took off from MSP and injested geese (many geese) into the #1 engine...it threw debris into #3 engine and barely made it back to the runway running only on the #2 (tail engine) fully loaded with people, fuel. baggage, freight & cargo...No time to dump fuel...it landed over grossed! (max takeoff weight is a hell of alot more than max landing weight). CLOSE CALL!
Oh that is just what I needed to see, I am leaving in a couple of weeks for Fla.
Can you say flight insurance? I knew you could.
Just gotta think what are the odds of that happening again
Good thing it didn't happen in flight. Not enough motors on that airplane.
Elliot
Probably a flaw from manufactur years ago that got missed and after years of metal fatigue and god knows how many heat cycles to unbeleavable temps it just had enough. Or during a rebuild at overhaul in some third world sweat shop with minimal supervision (but the price is great for the company bottom line) the disk may have got a nick that went undetected when they put it together forming a stress riser and after time POW she comes apart. They will go back into records on that engine and see who did what when. Thats one of the reasons you sign for all the work you do so they can find you when things go wrong
That is scarey,going to cost AA a few bucks to repair that damage unless they can pin it on someone else....3or 4 engines sure are comforting but economics has the final say today.
I would be willing to bet that will not cover the lost rev. I know they haul frieght and US Mail it hurt them big just from that alone. You make more off that than the folks riding upstairs. The wing repair will take a couple of weeks. Just the #1 engine and its pylon damage will run up to your guess. For an exapmle on our smaller motors just to replace the fan section you see as you look at the front of the intake is arounr a half mil. A good bird strike that takes out the fan and some guide vanes and panels with no core damage is close to a million and thats only 1 motor and about a day down time.
I like to think of it as you could buy ALL the stuff and cars for sale here and take everyone in the club out for a good meal for what that bang cost them
The airlines are trying to get their international planes fixed over seas like J-pan. I don't feel that secure about this industry and the fact that there are people out there who want US dead scares me. I'm not certain if the European planes are getting fixed in the orient also but anyone with half a brain would see this is bad for business. India does the work for 25C/hr., what a great deal.
We like the young ones to fix the engines, its cost effective!
Article in this mornings New York Times about the AA 767....the insurance co,that covers the plane, is considering totaling it.The engines were an early model GE cf6 that was modified in 2001 using stronger discs.
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