Crash Truck Dash Cam #3: AA 383 Engine Fire at O’Hare (Best View of Purple-K; No Audio)
Автор: What You Haven't Seen
Загружено: 2017-12-15
Просмотров: 932888
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If you came here from Crash Truck Dash Cam #2, the description below is substantially similar. The one significant late addition to that video's description was a photo album, which can be found at http://tiny.cc/AA383Pics (case-sensitive link redirects to a Google Drive album).
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On October 28, 2016, at 2:32 p.m. CDT, a Boeing 767-300 (registration N345AN), scheduled as American Airlines flight 383 bound for Miami, Florida experienced an uncontained right engine failure and subsequent fire during its takeoff ground roll on runway 28R at Chicago O'Hare International Airport. The flight crew aborted the takeoff and stopped the aircraft on the runway and an emergency evacuation was conducted. Of the 161 passengers and 9 crew members onboard, one passenger received serious injuries during the evacuation and another 19 experienced minor injuries. The airplane was substantially damaged by the fire.
Here is some more information you likely have not heard elsewhere:
-It took firefighters ten hours to completely stop the fuel leak. To capture leaking fuel, firefighters first used eight containment pools, and eventually placed a fuel bowser beneath the wing.
-Airport firefighters saw this fire from the station and started responding immediately, prior to notification from the tower
-One of the first units on scene included a firefighter who had been with Chicago Fire Department for 36 years. He had never before responded to an aircraft fire and was scheduled to retire the following day. At 11:00 in video #2 you can hear that firefighter saying "I finally got my fire! Luckily no one was hurt!"
-Not all equipment was functional during the incident. Cameras which had recently been tested malfunctioned, and one of the high-reach extendible turrets on a crash truck was out of service.
-One of the ejected turbine disc fragments pierced through the plane's wing and continued thousands of feet through the air, eventually falling through the roof of a UPS shipping facility, bouncing off of (and locally shattering) the floor, and finally landing on a loading rack... over 3,000 feet away. Check out the photo album at http://tiny.cc/AA383Pics (case sensitive, link redirects to a Google Drive album).
-Firefighters used over 24,000 gallons of finished foam (720 gallons of 3% AFFF concentrate) on this fire.
-The estimated cost to repair runway damage due to heat and gouges from flying turbine shrapnel was close to $1,000,000. It was necessary to cut a section of runway out of the ground.
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