DC 10 Crash Landing at Sioux City Airport 1989.?

Hi. Does anyone know if the problem of loosing all hydraulic systems in the DC 10 incedent at Sioux City Airport in 1989 has been solved so that loosing all backup systems will never happen again . Thanks.

strech2007-05-13T03:51:46Z

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Yes.
Check valves have been installed to prevent one ruptured system from draining the entire hydraulic system.

?2016-04-01T13:08:05Z

The engineering flaw in the DC-10 that caused the Sioux City crash was having the lines for all three hydraulic systems running in close proximity underneath the #2 engine, so when that engine suffered an uncontained failure all three of those systems got breached. I think when they designed the MD-11 they did something about that, so IMO a crash exactly like Sioux City would have a very, very low probability of happening. There are still a lot of DC-10's in the air, but virtually all of them have been converted to freighters. Global still has a few in the air in passenger service, but they only do military troop movements.

stacheair2007-05-13T07:49:48Z

The original DC-10’s were certificated under part 25 that did not require hydraulic fuses. Part 25 has since been changed to requires hydraulic fuses and several AD’s were issued by the FAA to install hydraulic fuses in older aircraft. New emergency procedures were also written in the aircraft flight manuals. The turbine disk that failed had a flaw and new inspection procedures and manufacturing procedures were put in place.

Several of the early Airbus did not have hydraulic fuses same as the DC-10 to save weight and cost. That has been changed also. The NTSB issued a full report and the report is on there web site at: http://www.ntsb.gov

Yesugi2007-05-13T07:31:38Z

Similar (hydraulic control loss) happened with the Concorde crash in 2000. Nothing's "fail-safe," but, as others here have noted, significant measures have been taken.

Every safety improvement has a cost, which needs to be weighed against the probability that the benefit will be realized. The safest airplane is one that never flies, but...

sherijgriggs2007-05-13T03:23:19Z

actually, it was nothing short of a miracle that the pilot of that flight was able to rough land that huge jet using everything else but those hydraulics. They say it was impossible to keep that bird in the air the way that pilot did. They are not even able to use that type of incident in a flight simulator. There were a lot of angels around that day to help all the souls who did survive, including that courageous pilot and copilot and one other person who were present in the cockpit.

There will never be any way to ensure that there will not be any future tragedies in regards to that particular type of mechanical failure. That isn't logical. As long as humans are designing and maintaing any type of machinery on this planet, there is going to be mistakes. It is just your luck of the draw if you don't end up in that automobile, boat, train, plane, etc....there are no true guarantees.

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