Comment by Jtsummers

Comment by Jtsummers 14 hours ago

34 replies

> The crew wouldn't have had any way to know that one of their engines had not simply failed, but was straight-up gone with their wing on fire to boot.

I don't know about the MD-11 itself, but other aircraft from that time period have sensors to detect and report overheat and fire in various parts of the aircraft, including engines and wings.

filleduchaos 12 hours ago

Well, there's a very big difference between "Engine fire: some of the combustion chamber's heat and flame has breached containment" and, say, "Engine fire: the engine has exploded, catastrophically damaging your wing which is now visibly on fire". However, both things are reported in the cockpit as ENG FIRE.

There's also a very big difference between "Engine failure: something has damaged or jammed enough components that the turbines are no longer spinning fast enough to produce thrust or drive the generators" and "Engine failure: the engine is no longer attached to the aircraft, which is why it is no longer producing thrust". However, both things are reported in the cockpit as ENG FAIL.

(Un)fortunately, cockpit warnings prioritise the what (so to speak) and not the how or why. On one hand, this makes decision-making a lot simpler for the crew, but on the other...well, in rare cases the lack of insight can exacerbate a disaster. Depending on when exactly the engine gave out, this poor crew might have been doomed either way, but they might have been able to minimise collateral damage if they knew just how badly crippled the aircraft was. And there was a very similar accident to this one (actually involving the predecessor of the MD-11, the DC-10), American Airlines 191 - one of the engines detached from the aircraft, damaging the leading edge of its wing in the process, causing that wing to stall when the crew slowed down below the stall speed of the damaged wing in a bid to climb. If they could have somehow known about the damage, the accident might have been avoided entirely as the crew might have known to keep their speed up.

  • ragazzina 6 hours ago

    > There's also a very big difference between "Engine failure: something has damaged or jammed enough components that the turbines are no longer spinning fast enough to produce thrust or drive the generators" and "Engine failure: the engine is no longer attached to the aircraft, which is why it is no longer producing thrust". However, both things are reported in the cockpit as ENG FAIL.

    What is the difference?

    • mvkel an hour ago

      It's the difference between "I can't walk because my leg fell asleep"

      and

      "I can't walk because I have no legs"

    • HPsquared 5 hours ago

      Wider effects like damage to the wing or changes to aerodynamics.

      Edit: and damage to other engines, possibly engine #2 in the tail ingesting debris in this instance.

      • bombcar 5 hours ago

        That's the biggest, the weight gone entirely unbalances the plane; if you knew exactly what happened you MIGHT be able to keep it level (and it seems they did for a bit) but eventually airspeed drops, it tips, and cartwheels (which is apparently what it did from the videos).

    • potato3732842 3 hours ago

      >What is the difference?

      Wanting to be in the air vs wanting to over-run the end of the runway.

  • eternityforest 7 hours ago

    Could they add cameras to solve this issue?

    • roryirvine 7 hours ago

      During engine failure / fire situations, I would expect that pilots are likely to be too busy to have any time left over for peering at a video feed, trying to assess the state of the wing.

      In emergencies, information overload tends to make things worse, not better.

      • ExoticPearTree 6 hours ago

        Having cameras pointed at the engines/wings like rearview mirrors would be helpful. It does not add that much workload if you take a quick glance in the “mirror” and figure out what the problem exactly is.

        And now we have technology that allows for cameras everywhere to give a better situational awareness across all critical aircraft surfaces and systems.

        It is going to take a little bit of adjusting to, but it will help improve safety in a tremendous way.

    • zuppy 6 hours ago

      They surely can and this has been done. On one the flights that I took with Turkish Airlines they had a few video streams from different sides of the airplane. One was from the top of the tail and you could see the entire plane.

      Now... not sure how much that is helpful in this kind of emergency, they really didn't have time to do much.

      • fredoralive 5 hours ago

        I'm not sure they usually have the views on screen in the cockpit in flight, even if available (and an old MD-11 freighter won't have the cameras in the first place). The picture of an A380 cockpit (on the ground) on Wikipedia does show the tail view on a screen, but its on the screen normally used for main instruments. With an A380 that had an uncontained engine failure causing various bits of havok (Qantas 32?) IIRC the passengers could see a fuel leak on the in flight entertainment screens, but they had to tell the crew as AFAIK they didn't have access to the view in the cockpit in flight.

appreciatorBus 14 hours ago

I’m sure they knew there was an issue, but I don’t think the sensors can differentiate between “your engine is on fire, but if you can shut it down quickly, everything will be cool.” and “half your entire wing is on fire and your engine is pouring flame out the front/top instead of the back”

positron26 13 hours ago

This puts an impractical amount of faith in the sensor wiring when the whole pylon and cowling are shredded.

  • krisoft 4 hours ago

    It is a very practical amount of fait.

    There are two fire detection loops for each engine.[1] Even if both fails (because they get shredded as you say it) the system will report an engine fire if the two loops fail within 5s of each other. (Or FIRE DET (1,2,3,or APU) FAIL, if they got shredded with more than 5s in between without any fire indications in between.)

    The detection logic is implemented directly below the cockpit. So that unlikely to have shredded at the same time. But even if the detection logic would have died that would also result in a fire alarm. (as we learned from the March 31, 2002 Charlotte incident.)[2]

    In other words it is a very reliable system.

    1: page 393 https://randomflightdatabase.fr/Documents/Manuel%20Aviation/...

    2: https://www.fss.aero/accident-reports/dvdfiles/US/2002-03-31...

  • Jtsummers 13 hours ago

    I don't know what the MD-11 would have had, again I didn't work on it. But the systems used for other aircraft would have reported an alarm based on what I saw in the video, at least they were designed to do that. The LRU receiving the sensor inputs wouldn't typically be in the wing and would be able to continue reporting the alarm condition even if the sensors fail. In fact, the lack of current from the sensor (for the systems I worked on) would have been enough to trigger the alarm if the sensor were completely eliminated.

    • positron26 13 hours ago

      No reading is not quite the same as "hot", but I'm sure it did contribute to discerning simple compressor stall to whatever this was.