They can say that planes should be able to fly while losing an engine, but that usually refers to an engine that needs to be shut off, not when the engine breaks off, damaging other parts of the plane, leaking fluids, affecting aerodynamics, and worse of all, right at takeoff. This isn't a "glide safely to the ground from cruising", they had no safety of altitude to figure out what happened and respond with a margin for error.
@nlwilson48924 ай бұрын
There was another case of an engine falling off on take-off and it landed safely. But that was much later and improvements have been made. Mentour Pilot covers it, he's a flight instructor so is excellent at explaining the more technical detail.
@Riva_Ridge4 ай бұрын
That's what i was thinking, the hydraulics had to be damaged. The weight and aerodynamics had to be dangerously off as well.I also remember reading somewhere that the tail was damaged due to the engine falling off, but I could be wrong
@saragrant97494 ай бұрын
Yeah, it’s definitely different when an engine detaches versus loses power. Not only the damage done by the engine coming off but the sudden loss of weight in that part of the plane makes it damn near impossible to control.
@adammidderigh41504 ай бұрын
Well said, exactly what I was thinking. Sudden weight imbalance alone from the entire engine fully detaching at that altitude (or lack of) , sadly cant see anyone recovering that.
@Tokamak3.14154 ай бұрын
@@saragrant9749 The loss of mass on one side does throw off the center of gravity but in this case it would actually help the side that had no thrust which is the side that would dip if there was a single engine failure on a dual engine. It's the asymmetric thrust that would need to be applied right as all the control surfaces are changing from takeoff configuration to flight (like retracting flaps) that makes a difficult situation that much more difficult. I'm not a commercial jet pilot but I do have my fixed wing license and have experienced single engine flame out on a dual engine craft but at stable flight. The engine flipping over the wing just destroyed any chance the plane had of making it back to Earth safely. As noted above Mentour Pilot has multiple videos about the topic of asymmetric thrust.
@Tishers4 ай бұрын
The engine just didn't fall off and drop down. It was under full thrust and when the rear pylon broke free the engine tried to go forward and instead rotated on the front pins. That caused it to go up and over the wing. As it did that it tore out the hydraulic lines that were above the engine. The stress fractures were also complicated by the means of lifting the engine/pylon assembly. They were using a forklift to raise the engine up to take the load off of the pins. What had happened was that in the middle of removing the pins they had a lunch break and it was left with half the pins still in and the forklift to take the weight. The forklift had a very slow leak in its hydraulic cylinder so over the lunch break the load was taken up entirely by the remaining pins. The NTSB report even went so far as to find the forktruck that was used and to do forensic inspections on it as well.
@SittingBearProd4 ай бұрын
Yay for unions and their mandated breaks 🥴🥴
@neilkurzman49074 ай бұрын
@@SittingBearProd Is there anything you won’t blame on unions? Right nonunion people would’ve been forced to work nonstop through the entire day with no breaks.
@hellomark14 ай бұрын
This must have been surreal to watch from a window seat inside the plane
@neilkurzman49074 ай бұрын
@@Beachgirl1 Yes, you sound triggered. Is there anything else that you needed?
@arturoaguilar60024 ай бұрын
So, it fell with style.
@davidclaro1524 ай бұрын
That crash still haunts me at times because my dad was almost on that flight. He had finished a business meeting in Chicago early and was trying to get on that flight. Fortunately, he was told that the flight was completely booked, so he had to wait for his original flight. Man, was he lucky and I’m always blessed that he is still around.
@davidclaro1524 ай бұрын
I forgot to add that what I learned from him and that incident was “Don’t rush to make a flight or a trip.”
@billymacktexasdetective58274 ай бұрын
@davidclaro152 I'm sorry, but that has no bearing on anything. Your dad's flight was just as likely to crash as this one or any other. To think otherwise is superstitious.
@beaka634 ай бұрын
It can't "haunt" you if your dad is still alive. It might come to mind if you wish your dad dead...and he's not...but you misunderstand "haunting" with your statement. Just FYI.
@EyezLikaFox̌4 ай бұрын
@beaka63 respectfully, who are you to tell this person how they should think/feel? It would mess with me forever too. ✌️
@reddfoxx914 ай бұрын
Stop trying to relate something to nothing. Almost is the key word. Move on.
@moviefanatic224 ай бұрын
My Dad's brother was on that flight, he was coming home from Vietnam to be with his wife who was having their first child, a baby girl, my cousin! My father was devastated when he heard about this horrific accident! My father recently passed away in Feb. and I bet he's up there with his brother in paradise! RIP Dad and Uncle Rick 😢
@kimkovaly30964 ай бұрын
I'm so sorry for the loss of your Father
@cathywhite94154 ай бұрын
😢 I'm so sorry for the loss of your Uncle. May he RIP 🙏🕊🕯
@karenblaine72664 ай бұрын
What was he going in Vietnam in 1979?
@marthamartha32224 ай бұрын
Together ❤ again 🙏
@keithbradley11974 ай бұрын
Was your uncle a pow or what, why did as he just coming home from Vietnam
@AE6YT-Glenn4 ай бұрын
I knew someone on that flight. She was one of our sales reps returning to the plant for a meeting. Forever rest in peace, Rebecca.
@SkunkApe4074 ай бұрын
There are better ways to skip a meeting...
@Bintexas4 ай бұрын
How kind of you to remember her. ❤
@reneedennis20114 ай бұрын
I am so sorry 😞.
@alfx54324 ай бұрын
Nice of you to Remember her. ❤
@nomoretwitterhandles4 ай бұрын
@@SkunkApe407 Keep Yourself Safe
@9Apilot4 ай бұрын
As aircraft mechanics we have studied this incident in-depth in training.
@get2dachoppa2494 ай бұрын
Agreed. JAL 123 is another accident that was explored while I was in A&P school.
@SkunkApe4074 ай бұрын
Training for Naval Aviation is a bit different, but even our mechs learn a bit about this in A-school. We have our own history of mishaps to pore over and learn from, but the civvie side also has some critical failures that are excellent learning experiences, across the board.
@thecontraguy55364 ай бұрын
Whats aviation mechanics like? I'm an automotive mechanic and your field seems very high stress to me but I'd love to know more about it
@9Apilot4 ай бұрын
@@thecontraguy5536 It depends on the use of the aircraft you work on. Commercial aircraft have very stringent documentation requirements and licensed certified mechanics. There is a lot of overlap in terms of automotive repair and fixing airplanes. You will often see automotive based components on general aviation aircraft like alternators and AC compressors.
@atankersview4 ай бұрын
Still remember the module
@EnduringFoliage4 ай бұрын
This crash is one of four fatal crashes with that flight number. That's why no U.S. airlines have the flight number 191. It's considered a cursed number in aviation
@monicarenee79494 ай бұрын
Woah!! I didn’t know that
@robr23894 ай бұрын
@@EnduringFoliage i can't remember right now but, wasn't that the same flight number Delta L-1011 had when going to DFW from Fort Lauderdale?
@thomasgriffin82694 ай бұрын
@@robr2389yeah Delta Flt 191 it was the boeing 727.. not the L1011 into the water tank.. the pilots forgot to set the slats on front of the wings for take off
@robr23894 ай бұрын
@@thomasgriffin8269 Yep. That's right. Both accidents happened at DFW. Remember it now. That 727 three man flight deck crew got distracted by a flight attendant and a whole bunch of non-pertinent conversation. Didn't complete the pre-takeoff checklist. Totally preventable.
@jenbunny19844 ай бұрын
Oh wow!!! 😮
@goodoakpress4 ай бұрын
A friend of mine knew Captain Lux personally. He was a friend of her family, and she called him Uncle Walter. She told me he hadn't been scheduled to fly that day, and at the last minute traded places with the pilot who was was supposed to take that flight. She also told me about how his widow had to hire an answering service, because she was getting too many crank calls from people claiming to be American Airlines and saying he needed to get back to work. It amazes me how heartless and evil people can be.
@Simonsays904 ай бұрын
That is true. One of my dads best friends is the son of the original pilot(they were teenagers at the time). He said his sister(the pilots daughter) was involved in a fairly serious accident the day before the flight and Captain Lux generously offered to swap weeks on their rotation so he could stay home and get everything settled for his daughters recovery. The son told me his father struggled with PTSD and survivors guilt for the rest of his life because of it
@clonejones79554 ай бұрын
That is unspeakably foul.
@jaydee95934 ай бұрын
😢
@jaydee95934 ай бұрын
@@Simonsays90😢
@edl63984 ай бұрын
I was dating his son at the time and was at the house that day. The press was relentless too. It was a horrible experience.
@ds79004 ай бұрын
It's still sad to learn that the crew chief, Earl Russell Marshall, who monitored the aircraft during its final inspection, committed suicide. He couldn't live with the tragedy.
@RipRoaringGarage4 ай бұрын
Most crew chiefs do after a crash, be it a heavy or a smaller plane with one fatality. I left specifically to not be responsible for a crash, because there were four of us, on over 30 DC-10s
@redjacketjesse44664 ай бұрын
@@calvinweesedamn buddy take it easy lol
@sithisdawnsend27304 ай бұрын
@@calvinweese Easy to talk like that behind a keyboard, cutie pie
@who2u3334 ай бұрын
This is how seriously those unseen mechanics can take their role in the safe travels of the public.
@mito884 ай бұрын
@@calvinweese please surrender your account
@warrenbrenner49724 ай бұрын
As a Chicago cab driver,I took a really nice old lady to the American terminal for that flight at 1 pm. Shocked and saddened when I learned of the crash.
@kittybitts5673 ай бұрын
God bless her soul. May she rest in peace. May perpetual light shine upon her. May her soul and the souls of the faithful departed through the Mercy of God rest in peace in Jesus' Holy Name, Amen.
@Qrtuop3 ай бұрын
Can you cut the Jesus lunacy, thanks. The sane among us don't have to put up with your delusion.
@jacquelinea33582 ай бұрын
Oh my that's terrible. I can only imagine how sad that was for you. And her family, of course.
@KathyWright-r2k2 ай бұрын
I guess I'm a lunatic too (gladly) because I too love Jesus and will NOT refrain from praising His name.
@robertwestover2125Ай бұрын
@@Qrtuopyou must be a lot of fun at parties 😂
@richardwadholm40193 ай бұрын
OMG - I know somebody who survived Flight 191. He was late for the flight and the doors shut in his face, and he was arguing with the gate people when the flight took off. He still had his boarding pass in his wallet when I worked with him (This would have been in the mid-1990s). I can't say what he was like before the accident, but he was still spooked when I met him. As I suppose anyone would be.
@jacquelinea3358Ай бұрын
@@richardwadholm4019 I guess it can feel spooky, but it just wasn't his time to pass on. Fate (some say God) intervenes in our plans sometimes. Imagine being so angry when you're too late to board a plane or a ship, and it turned out it was AA Flight 11, or the Titanic. There are many famous examples of those near misses.
@lifespanwellnessbeauty-60i64Ай бұрын
He wasn't a survivor since he wasn't on board the plane. However, he was certainly very blessed to have missed the flight . ✈️
@dylanj738122 күн бұрын
I guess he's probably not a fan of the final destination franchise
@SGTSAS4 ай бұрын
I have been here since the start of this channel, The music and soothing voice - all is just perfection. Never change any of this as it is perfect. Greetings from Mallorca/Spain!
@rubberneckinc.89374 ай бұрын
I like it very much as well. I'd like it if you stayed "just the way you are" as well
@speedslayerr4 ай бұрын
YES❤
@erichollar55034 ай бұрын
Wow. Internet on Mallorca? It IS a cool place! 😂
@Catenfur4 ай бұрын
Yes, this channel is perfection
@heinzriemann32134 ай бұрын
Yes, but the sponsorship live reads ruin much of it.
@mdturnerinoz4 ай бұрын
I was coming home on flight 119 that day from Dallas (I recall), and my then-wife freaked out when she thought 191 was me!
@heinzriemann32134 ай бұрын
Poor wifey, that's a shock for life.
@misfitbrit19894 ай бұрын
That had to have been hell for her to think you were there and such a relief when she learned it wasn't your plane.
@kelf1144 ай бұрын
I bet you got the biggest hug ever when you walked in the door!
@Vydio4 ай бұрын
Had a friend who had just completed Basic Training. US Army. She was coming home to Chicago for a week prior to heading to her additional training. Her relatives were hysterical as first reports were not specific as to what plane had crashed. She wound up circling the airport for almost 2 hours before they allowed her plane to land.
@trafficjon4003 ай бұрын
@@Vydio Emagen seeing the disaster below them. horrible
@nooneherebutuschickens52014 ай бұрын
A family friend was on that flight, coming home from a business trip. I remember watching the news that afternoon and feeling so bad for his family. RIP, Clark.
@robertmielke61964 ай бұрын
Clark was born and spent his childhood in our city of Wausau, WI
@heehoopeanut4204 ай бұрын
It's very sweet of you to keep his memory alive
@nooneherebutuschickens52014 ай бұрын
@@robertmielke6196 He had such a lively personality and was a bit of a prankster. Our families attended the same small church in Costa Mesa. I was a year younger than his daughter.
@jaydee95934 ай бұрын
😢
@BIGBOYMATD4 ай бұрын
How do so many of you attention seeking window lickers end up in these comments? We all know that never happened, shut up.
@korbell10894 ай бұрын
The miracle in all this was the fact that only 2 people on the ground were killed. If you look at a map of Chicago, this could have been so much worse.
@davidcox30764 ай бұрын
It is quite surprising. In most cases crews will try to ditch their aircraft away from a populated place. But in this case there wasn't any chance to do so. Pure luck it wasn't much worse.
@thrashmetalfiend4 ай бұрын
O'Hare is actually on the outskirts of Chicago, and the crash technically occurred in the Chicago suburb of Des Planes.
@lelandq40014 ай бұрын
Wow I didn’t even think of that. Horrible.
@windsofmarchjourneyperrytr28234 ай бұрын
If if we're MDW, it WOULD have been. Midway has LOTS of houses by a four lane street away from runways!
@mickcollins19214 ай бұрын
@@rgs6236 or all the people who died on the plane...
@lindadeters86854 ай бұрын
I was working as a Nurses Aid at the closest Trauma Hospital to OHare. The hospital staff were informed to be ready for a mass casualty and extra staff was called in to work. Sadly, there were no survivors. We could see the smoke from the west-facing windows.
@maryroberts2099Ай бұрын
Was that Lutheran General?
@Forflipsake4 ай бұрын
I’ve heard many stories of tragedies like this but this one really stuck with me. The pilot saying “ damn “ knew it was allover.
@joshuaguenin95074 ай бұрын
@Forflipsake highly unlikely he knew the engine was gone
@9foxgrl154 ай бұрын
The crazy thing, that pilot wasn’t supposed to be working. He was covering a shift for a colleague.
@neilkurzman49074 ай бұрын
No, the pilot didn’t know it was all over. The pilot knew his instrument panel went blank. Unfortunately, for the plane, if the engine on the opposite side was the one that came off they might’ve had a chance to safely land.
@arturoaguilar60024 ай бұрын
People you never want to hear saying "damn": pilots, plumbers and hairdressers.
@n1mie4 ай бұрын
@@arturoaguilar6002And nuclear power workers … ;)
@ellenbryn4 ай бұрын
ironically, considering the spate of accidents that made the American public doubt, the DC 10, which eventually led to McDonnell Douglas, going bankrupt, some refurbished DC-10s equipped as firefighting tankers now perform the most jaw-dropping aerial stunts and climbouts almost all year round, protecting millions of homes and saving thousands of lives. Tanker 910 is legendary for flying at extremely low altitude to lay down up to a mile of flame retardant, and has occasionally done unauthorized drops to save firefighters who have gotten surrounded.
@brandyjean70154 ай бұрын
Shoddy, corner-cutting maintenance will do you in every time.
@BritanniaPacific4 ай бұрын
And to think the dc-10 still flies today with FedEx as freighters and as aerial refueling jets. Who would’ve thunk it.
@BritanniaPacific4 ай бұрын
@@brandyjean7015just like Japan airlines flight 123, Alaska airlines flight 261, and China airlines flight 611.
@JasonWardStudios4 ай бұрын
Both the DC-10 and Lockheed Tri-Star were amazing aircraft that faced a lot of backlash for issues that weren't completely warranted. Although the DC-10 cargo door blowout events were definitely manufacturer error, and the lessons learned in the Windsor, Ontario blowout should have completely prevented the Turkish Airlines crash, but since no lives were lost, it wasn't prioritized until it was too late.
@jamessimms4154 ай бұрын
@@BritanniaPacific. USAF is retiring the KC-10 by the end of this year, there are still a few flying. I think that’s a mistake as all of the kinks & problems of the KC-46 Pegasus haven’t been worked out yet.
@duncancurtis51084 ай бұрын
The chap who took the photos at O Hare was a key witness to a tragedy, what with the explosion in the distance .
@jocelynharris-fx8ho4 ай бұрын
Obviously there were passengers and others at the airport who took pictures. Those photographs were not as well publicized as the Michael Laughlin photos.
@efromhb4 ай бұрын
My father was a check airman/captain for AA and on the day of this accident he finished signing off a crew on a flight from New York to Chicago. He and his crew went to the ticket agent to see about getting a flight back to LAX. He was told there was no room on the first flight out and that he and his crew would be on the second flight. After some time the agent contacted my father letting him know he and his crew would be able to go on the first flight after all. Upon arrival to LAX they found out about the crash. My dad knew the flight crew and stewardesses on AA191. After this accident US carriers who operated DC-10s trained for incidents such as this one. My dad told me that it was recoverable if flight crews had been trained to respond to an incident like this one. My father flew over 27,000 flight hours over the course of his life. He was one of the first to be trained on both the 747 and DC-10 for American Airlines. He preferred the DC-10. RIP dad. I miss you every day.
@kittybitts5673 ай бұрын
God bless his soul. May he rest in peace. May perpetual light shine upon him. May his soul and the souls of the faithful departed through the Mercy of God rest in peace in Jesus' Holy Name, Amen.
@hilaryeckberg78844 ай бұрын
One small correction: the USA does not have a flag carrier airline. American Airlines is just the name of the company.
@krashd4 ай бұрын
PanAm was their flag carrier before the airline went tits up.
@hilaryeckberg78844 ай бұрын
@@krashdPan Am was never an official flag carrier either.
@mickcollins19214 ай бұрын
@@hilaryeckberg7884 They were considered by many to be the unofficial flag carrier before their demise, but yes, we have never had an official flag carrier airline and it has certainly never been American.
@carolharris24013 ай бұрын
Theyre all private airlines.
@priscillaross-fox94073 ай бұрын
@@carolharris2401 Just like their share holders.
@57buickcentury4 ай бұрын
At the time my family lived about ten miles north of O'Hare and we could see the plume of white smoke from the wreck. Eerie coincidence: When the accident happened, the current issue of _Chicago_ magazine had an interview with author Judith Wax written shortly before her death in the crash - not only was the interview on page _191_ of the magazine, but on page 192 was an ad for American Airlines showing a DC-10!
@Fetidaf4 ай бұрын
… that’s an enormous magazine. That’s basically a book.
@13DreamRiders4 ай бұрын
😳😳😵💫😵
@reneedennis20114 ай бұрын
😲
@ron234halt4 ай бұрын
Eerie coincidence, indeed. Yikes.
@Sebastianator014 ай бұрын
@@Fetidafwelcome to 2024
@MelissaDisha4 ай бұрын
I worked on DC-10s at Northwest as a flight attendant. It was my favorite widebody to work. Very manageable and layed out nicely. Loved the World Business Class up front. Flight AA 191 has a lot of folklore surrounding it. People had premonitions, some people just missed the flight by minutes, very interesting stories. There was even a man who had murdered his girlfriend and said she was a passenger on the flight. That didn't work out for him. Flight 191 was a completely full flight. Captain Lux wasn't even supposed to be on it. He took it for a friend! Lots of paranormal activity in that trailer park for years after.
@paulsengupta9714 ай бұрын
I had the premonition. I had had a recurring dream leading up to this. This dream was an aircraft in an unusual attitude going low across the sky, right to left, and disappearing behind the terminal building. In my dream, the aircraft was nose directly up, tail directly down with the top of the aeroplane facing me, wings left and right. It took the same trajectory the accident aeroplane did. When it disappeared behind the terminal in my dream, I knew it had crashed but there was no flames or smoke. I had the same dream night after night until shortly before it happened. I was nine years old at the time and I'm from, and still live in, the UK, not the USA. Someone once said this event was the one with the highest number of premonitions in recorded history.
@j.d.thompson35054 ай бұрын
I'm glad you had a successful and safe career. Thank you for your insights.
@nigeldepledge37904 ай бұрын
Yes, of course. Lots of people said they had had premonitions after they saw the news reports. But the actual number of people who had premonitions was exactly 0.
@MrsBlaileen12 ай бұрын
Did you ever work a 191 flight?
@Red_Foxxy_FoxАй бұрын
@nigeldepledge3790 you're the only person who doesn't get premonitions
@thephantomeagle24 ай бұрын
My mother was friends with a family that was on that flight. She was in shock when we saw it on the news. Being a talented violinist, she offered to play at the service for that family. Not wanting to impose on people I didn't know, and it being a small family service, I went downtown and spent the day at the Art institute and walked around Chicago. We stayed at a hotel just a few blocks from the church. She remembers how hard it was to play for the funeral, rare for her, due to the fact that the entire family perished. They were neighbors of another good friend.
@ice95944 ай бұрын
@@Die-AngstPicky picky picky. Hard to be friends with a corpse. Past tense is absolutely acceptable.
@thephantomeagle24 ай бұрын
@@Die-Angst my mother passed away 4 year ago
@BIGBOYMATD4 ай бұрын
No she wasn't, shut up
@dbeachmawmaw3 ай бұрын
So sad. May they Rest in Peace.
@101Volts3 ай бұрын
@@BIGBOYMATD *"Nobody talks about their life experiences on the internet,"* do they?
@SAOS4513164 ай бұрын
Complacency kills. If you see something wrong, say something, especially when lives depend on it.
@05DonnieB4 ай бұрын
Unfortunately, many people often speak up only for their superior to do nothing
@lindacollins69393 ай бұрын
Right..in a perfect world….😢
@danijuggernaut4 ай бұрын
I'm an Aircraft mechanic and i can tell you, we don't handover half jobs to the next shift. It was a bad practice, but you don't pass a fork lifter with load to your next shift mate to finish the maneuver.
@neilkurzman49074 ай бұрын
Yes, but it was extremely common back then which is why other aircraft were also damaged. The other issue was even without the shift change. The forklift was too coarse of a tool to handle the reinstallation.
@danijuggernaut4 ай бұрын
@@neilkurzman4907 I'm from back then. The fact was that the new shift fork lift operator smashed the engine to high damaging the pilon mounts and cracking them. Cheers mate thanks for the comment
@neilkurzman49074 ай бұрын
@@danijuggernaut No, that’s not what happened. The Forklift sagged because it had a hydraulic leak. But remember this wasn’t the only damaged plane. several others were damaged in a similar way. It just wasn’t unacceptable way to do the job.
@danijuggernaut4 ай бұрын
@@neilkurzman4907 Ooooh!!!
@danijuggernaut4 ай бұрын
@@neilkurzman4907 This is not the way to do a job in aviation. Allways maintenance manual according to our rule.....cover your ass!!!
@PersianDiamond4 ай бұрын
I knew someone who lived in a nearby trailer park who was one of the first people on the scene. His description was beyond. Body parts hanging off a fence is what stuck with me the most. I dont know how anyone seeing and experiencing such trauma could not be affected emotionally for life. For sure my friend was. At the time i was living about 15 miles to the east in a different suburb but remember watching the news being reported on tv. It was horrific.
@Dulcimertunes4 ай бұрын
Residents of the trailer park report seeing victims walking past them and smelling of smoke. Creepy
@Plasmastorm73_n5evv4 ай бұрын
@@Dulcimertunes Souls leaving the area.
@OSTARAEB44 ай бұрын
I lived in a nearby suburb close to the airport and remember that Friday afternoon vividly. It was a warm and slightly hazy afternoon. I saw the smoke out our living room window and said to my late mother the tank farm for the airport was on fire. Then we heard it was a plane crash. I remember surrounding communities and the sirens of emergency services. For years, I couldn’t drive down Touhy Avenue off Elmhurst Road Route 83. It was a field with a small, randomly dotted trailer park. It could’ve been worse had she crashed onto the Northwest Tollway which led into The Kennedy Expressway which was the major artery for NW Chicago and suburbs. What was truly shocking was there nothing left but what looked like shards of tin foil from a DC-10. It was seared into anyone from the Chicagoland area like the prior year 1978 with the horror of JW Gacy.
@jaydee95934 ай бұрын
😢
@AnAdorableWombat14 ай бұрын
Sure you did . This happened in 79. If you are in your 20s, 30s, or even 40s, you’re lying
@asdfreii4 ай бұрын
I first learned about this as a teenager when I was intrigued by the Bloodhound Gang lyric “like a DC-10 guaranteed to go down”
@lindonrussell76624 ай бұрын
Kiss me where it smells funny
@seanpetaia4 ай бұрын
Wow must been a hard quote.
@BobbySacamano4 ай бұрын
Kiss me where it smells funny.
@MrCtsSteve4 ай бұрын
Yea I was 13 when this happened...I remember it well . Was huge news for awhile
@anionleader4 ай бұрын
Which song was this?
@Straswa3 ай бұрын
RIP to all those souls lost in this tragedy, condolences to their families. Nice work FH.
@samr.england6133 ай бұрын
On average, over 100 people die in automobile crashes and collisions EVERYDAY in the US. But the death toll is diffused. Imagine the outrage if ONE passenger jetliner, with 100 passengers, crashed everyday in the US! Most of us all need our cars in this country. Slow down!
@grapeshot4 ай бұрын
I see that photo with the plane on its left side spewing hydraulic fluid, and you can imagine what the horror that the people were experiencing on that plane.
@Randomly_Browsing4 ай бұрын
Pretty sure everyone have seen it
@infernalchaos10664 ай бұрын
What wasn't mentioned in this video is that AA had installed a large screen at the front of the plane so the passengers could see what the pilots see. A new feature. After realizing that everyone on board watched their own deaths hurtling towards them, AA discontinued that.
@grapeshot4 ай бұрын
@infernalchaos1066 Yeah, they showed that on the documentary series entitled Mayday.
@glasperle774 ай бұрын
considering that you so fast can't experience anything. it happens in a very short span and it's more tha tyou deal inside with the turbulences and then you are dead. people picture it always so horribly but if you know aviation cases when the whole airplane spins and twists for 30 minutes and then crashes it is way worse especially if it goes down in height then up again with pressure etc.
@grapeshot4 ай бұрын
@glasperle77 yeah but at the end of the day, a minute is a minute or minutes.
@crazedvole4 ай бұрын
I barely remember this when I was a kid. I think it was the first time I ever saw, "We interrupt this program for a special report" for a local news event. 3:04 pm. yeah, just about the time I got home from school it would have been hitting the news
@markbrown40394 ай бұрын
WLS Channel 7's initial coverage is on KZbin somewhere.
@bluestatedem4 ай бұрын
I was a kid living in the northwest suburbs of Chicago and home sick from school that day. I remember the breaking TV coverage on the local Chicago stations. That one picture is so haunting.
@peggyl28494 ай бұрын
I lived in the Chicago area at the time - I was in a store where there was radio music playing and they broke in to make that announcement. At first they just said "a plane" and I was thinking, "please let it be a cargo plane" but I soon found out otherwise :(
@AnthonyOMulligan-yv9cg4 ай бұрын
@@peggyl2849thank you for your lovely thoughts Peggy
@agtpaper4 ай бұрын
I was 9 years old at the time. I remember seeing the column of smoke when I got off the school bus. My friend and I ran to her house to turn on the TV and see what was going on. We didn't expect what we saw.
@GermanShepherd19834 ай бұрын
What happened during the engine removal was that when it was being replaced, the maintenance crew had inserted the rear pin in the pylon but quit work for the day with the front pins still out. When they returned the next day the fork lift had dropped a little and had cracked the rear bracket on the pylon but wasn't noticed. This is how the crack got there.
@Guillotines_For_Globalists4 ай бұрын
I too had read this reason, I remember reading about the forklift hydraulics lowering the engine putting stress on the mounts that went unnoticed.
@evanray84133 ай бұрын
They stopped for lunch. Not for the day.
@amberbankord25804 ай бұрын
The lack of altitude to give them some time to potentially solve the problem is the final nail in the coffin, but the dirt was already on the casket. RIP.
@pioneercynthia14 ай бұрын
I've never heard the second part of that phrase.
@amberbankord25804 ай бұрын
@@pioneercynthia1 I’m a whiz at made up lines!
@danielshannon60274 ай бұрын
You missed your calling in bumper sticker design.😉
@jhagestad3 ай бұрын
Another contributing factor was the fact that the DC-10 emergency checklist the pilots were using at that time required them to reduce their speed by a couple knots instead of going to full power. This reduction of speed made the loss of lift on the left wing (from the flaps having been retracted from the loss of hydraulic fluid from the left engine tearing out the lines upon separation) even worse. Sadly, simulators showed that had they not reduced their speed, there would have been enough lift on the left wing that they could have continued their takeoff climb. Tragic.
@SilverEagleDev4 ай бұрын
Minor correction: American Airlines is indeed the largest airline in the US (and currently the world) by passengers carried, but the United States does not have a designated "flag carrier" airline.
@SpicyTexan644 ай бұрын
What does "flag carrier" even mean? lol
@SilverEagleDev4 ай бұрын
@@SpicyTexan64 It's a transport company that has preferential treatment by a given country. Sometimes it's wholly owned by the country itself. Airlines like British Airways and Air Canada come to mind; both were previously state-owned.
That last photo of the plane rolling over is haunting.
@SKPMissAngel4 ай бұрын
My dad was an Aircraft engineer and his favourite aircraft was the VC10 (Vickers)... It never occurred to me why he was always so quick or defensive to correct people when they thought he said a DC10.... Now I know why!! (I was very young and always assumed I'd heard wrong or something)
@13DreamRiders4 ай бұрын
🤷♀️ I'd assume the same thing since I normally do hear the wrong thing. Usually with funny consequences 😅. But this is one thing thing I would definitely try to get right 😬.
@navelriver4 ай бұрын
The VC10 was a favourite with passengers. It certainly was a beautiful and well designed airplane! It was designed with more powerful engines than standard in order to operate safely at high density altitude airports. As a result it was slightly less efficient than some competitors and fell out of favor with management.
@NightimeInDeepSpace4 ай бұрын
When I was a little kid Dc10 was my favourite plane, I flew on so many. I just liked the look of it.
@paulsengupta9714 ай бұрын
My first flight ever was when I was two years old, on a Super VC10 from the UK to India. BOAC. I am a member of the BOAC Junior Jet Club, with a badge and log book with the signature of the pilots on all the aeroplanes I flew on that trip. Later, I was a volunteer at Brooklands Museum, the site where they built the VC10.
@navelriver4 ай бұрын
@@paulsengupta971 You are part of VC10 history!!
@fransiscoalvarezinski62933 ай бұрын
My uncle was on that flight. It was devastating for our entire family, mostly because my uncle (early 40s) had worked as a mid-level insurance agent for years and finally received a major promotion and moved from Michigan to California. We were all so happy for and proud of him. He was returning home from a business trip that completed early, which allowed him catch an earlier flight home. The decision to take the earlier flight cost him his life. We were fortunate his body was identified quickly and we held a funeral within days, albeit closed casket. I watched as his son descended into a drug filled lifestyle with friends who took advantage of his new found wealth from a lawsuit settlement and the massive life insurance policy my uncle's job afforded him. We almost lost him as well. Thankfully God stepped in and stopped his downward spiral. I pray for those who lost friends and relatives on this flight. I know first hand how it can further damage or kill others as a result of the tragedy. My Aunt and cousins still live productive lives today, 45 years later. Proof there is a God.
@ValerieGriner3 ай бұрын
Thank-you for sharing.
@dbeachmawmaw3 ай бұрын
So sorry this happened to your family and that you lost your uncle. Thankfully God restored your cousin and though I'm sure you all miss your uncle very much. May God continue to bless you & your entire family.
@endtimeslastdays77773 ай бұрын
I'm sorry 😢😢
@kittybitts5673 ай бұрын
God bless his soul and the souls of all lost in that tragedy. May they rest in peace. May perpetual light shine upon them. May their souls and the souls of the faithful departed through the Mercy of God rest in peace, Amen. God bless and comfort your family and all who lost a loved one in this tragic accident. All this in Jesus' Holy Name, Amen.
@christinel54863 ай бұрын
I often wonder about the families left behind after something like this happens. As well as the circumstances of the people on those flights. Like the one guy who ran late to board that plane in Brazil last week. He was angry they wouldn't let him on....Little did he know then, that him not being allowed on that flight, saved his life. How many, if any have similar stories? Or like you said, you uncle finished early and got on an earlier flight of which took his life. I am so sorry for your entire family and for the effects it had on your cousin. Much love to you all.
@pibbitybibbity4 ай бұрын
As a kid in the ‘70s I remember the concern over the safety of the DC-10 as so many incidents & crashes had occurred. My parents didn’t fly a lot, but during that time they were adamant that they would NOT travel on a DC-10. I remember this was the feeling of a lot of people.
@windsofmarchjourneyperrytr28234 ай бұрын
Too bad. SO unique looking. Bars on board! Where do I sign.
@chesspiece814 ай бұрын
I would love to see some longer format content Fascinating Horror. You always do such a good job with your content.
@karltork6040Ай бұрын
Look around KZbin, you might be able to find the documentary about the cause, that Discovery or History channel produced. Excellent detail of the investigation.
@brooksmc4 ай бұрын
Did you know: that there was a screen at the front of the plane that showed what it would look like from the captains view. They quickly got rid of that feature after this flight.
@Randomly_Browsing4 ай бұрын
It's a nose camera
@HealThyAse4 ай бұрын
They sure did. One where the passengers could see what the pilots were seeing. Watching the plane go down in POV mode had to be awful.
@michaelblasingame36814 ай бұрын
Wow. I never knew that. Crazy.
@danielabackstrom4 ай бұрын
This feature is a thing yet again
@volvo094 ай бұрын
@@HealThyAse not really much different than looking out the window, or feeling the G force of a sideways plane.
@jonathankleinow20734 ай бұрын
One of the most morbid aspects of this crash was that the American DC-10 fleet was equipped with cameras in the tail facing toward the nose, and the live footage was shown on the in-flight entertainment screens throughout the cabin. I don't know that anyone's confirmed whether the screens lost power after the engine detached, but if they didn't, the passengers would have had a clear view of their impending demise as the nose of the plane spiraled toward the ground.
@kcoffey07084 ай бұрын
Yes, I thought this was the flight that the passengers watched it going down as if they were in the cockpit. Glad the cables broke and the passengers did see.
@heinzriemann32134 ай бұрын
Metal as duck
@BIGBOYMATD4 ай бұрын
No one's looking at a TV screen when your plane is rolling on its side 🤡
@choppergirl4 ай бұрын
Awesome every airline should have this. The pilots also should have cameras looking out at the wings engines and gears all the time.
@lindacollins69393 ай бұрын
271 lost their lives…
@kathrinecarrozza2784 ай бұрын
My mom lived in the trailer park next to the crash site. She said she was doing her homework and suddenly there was a huge boom and her cat jumped so high it hit the ceiling. My grandpa was one of the first people on the scene since he was the manager at the office for the trailer park. Nobody saw him until later that day. Everyone thought he died from the impact.
@tatianamelendez4904 ай бұрын
If you want this story told with even more detail, as well as the other 2 plane accidents mentioned here with the cargo doors, I highly recommend Mentour Pilot. He's easily one of the best at narrating and explaining airplane disasters without scaring people away from flying. I've actually felt safer after watching his videos.
@victorialawhon22513 ай бұрын
I also like Hoover on Pilot Debrief
@fortunatecookie4 ай бұрын
My dad works with highly specialized instruments used to measure chemical reactions and such. I don’t know the name of his job ‘cause I’m not a nerd, but yeah he knows a lot about maintaining intricate machines. Every time he talks about someone at his work “finding a short cut” in the cleaning process of one of these machines, he compares it to “taking the whole pylon off the plane. Just don’t do it” The people that build things and then come up with instructions for how to handle those things did not “miss” a short cut when writing their instructions! Every choice is deliberate, and if you can’t tell why your way is dumber than the official way… just assume that it is anyway!
@politecat42364 ай бұрын
You should find out the name of your father's role and ask for a simplified explanation of it bruh. Sounds like an occupation to be respected and proud of
@Plasmastorm73_n5evv4 ай бұрын
If that's what you think, you give companies way too much credit. I build test equipment for electronics lab testing. I can tell you most of the cleaning procedures are not even close to being the best or most accurate way to go about it.
@Plasmastorm73_n5evv4 ай бұрын
Chemists and materials scientists research and analyze the chemical properties of substances to develop new materials, products, or knowledge.
@Fortaker4 ай бұрын
I first heard about this due to a paranormal story: someone named David Booth had a series of nightmares about the plane crashing for several days leading up to the disaster. His story has gone down as one of the most famous "nightmare premonitions" of all time,.
@indy_go_blue60484 ай бұрын
It's featured on "In Search of... Dreams" (IIRC.) Unbelievable story if it wasn't so well documented.
@SuperSaiyanGuyver4 ай бұрын
Yeah he tried to call his local airport (Cincinati I think) and described the exact maneuver the plane took, trying to warn somene.
@windsofmarchjourneyperrytr28234 ай бұрын
Wait. Weren't there a few other DC-10 incidents by then? I ALWAYS think the plane is going to crash.
@andrewmurray55424 ай бұрын
Ah yes, I saw that on Arthur C Clarke's programme. The colour photos they showed of the plane on its side in the air and the explosion seconds later freaked me out as a kid. I don't know if Booth's dreams were just a coincidence or if they were a enuine premonition, but it was uncanny.
@theoztreecrasher26474 ай бұрын
@@andrewmurray5542 I have premonitions that I'm going to die. They've been getting more regular as I get into further into my eighth decade! 😱🙄
@KlaunFuhrer-du7fr4 ай бұрын
My dad was DC-10 captain in Yugoslav airlines.... I have many precious memories from jump seat of this beautiful bird
@GM4mp0352 ай бұрын
I was lucky enough to fly Yugoslav Airlines in 1987 and again in 1989 before it JUA ceased its flights. It was the best service I've experienced.
@SubPablum4 ай бұрын
I remember this was shortly after PSA 182 went down in San Diego, I looked it up, September 25, 1978. That was a Boeing 727, my often faulty memory thought it too was a DC-10. It collided with a Cessna 172 that was not where it was supposed to be and there was some confusion between the tower and 182 where exactly that was. No survivors. Good job on the video as always.
@Plasmastorm73_n5evv4 ай бұрын
The Cessna broke BRAVO airspace and collided with the airliner. They almost had a similar event in LA a few months ago where again a small plane broke BRAVO airspace and an airliner had do abruptly dive below it during final approach.
@mspetersen4 ай бұрын
My father worked less than a mile from the crash site. Heard the crash inside at work and could see the thick smoke from there. 13:02
@debraball26414 ай бұрын
I was in my car, driving South along the east shore of Lake Michigan, listening to a Chicago radio station. I will never forget the horror of the news announcement and later learning that several people I knew had loved ones on that flight. Terrible tragedy.
@Gatherway4 ай бұрын
As soon as I hear "DC-10" all I can think is, "Oh, nooooo..."
@DaveSCameron4 ай бұрын
Why?
@Cyber_kumo4 ай бұрын
@@DaveSCameron DC-10 was the 737 Max of the 70's. Has a bad reputation of falling apart in flight, the cargo door in particular.
@elizabethallen9304 ай бұрын
In other air accident videos they say that some pilots said DC stood for Death Chamber because of all the early incidents and crashes.
@GiordanDiodato4 ай бұрын
even though the plane wasn't at fault
@Astro95Media4 ай бұрын
@@GiordanDiodato Not in this instance, but it already had a checkered reputation because of AA96 and TK981. Those were caused by a faulty design.
@robertphillips62964 ай бұрын
The Cargo Door failure was a design flaw, but this crash was because of improper maintenance!
@paulrasmussen89534 ай бұрын
And design flaw. The fact instruments doed when one engine seperated is a big issue. If they still had instrumentation they might have saved the plane. Also by having the proper way to remove the engine be so time consuming and complicated guaranteed people looking for short cut. This this an engineer and design failure
@None-zc5vg4 ай бұрын
A need to save money means a lot of potential redundancy is edited out of airframes and their operating systems, so that there's 'only one of this, only one of that' and there's nowhere to go when something vital goes wrong.
@paulrasmussen89534 ай бұрын
@@None-zc5vg meaning the peeny pincher shoild lose their job.
@Plasmastorm73_n5evv4 ай бұрын
@@paulrasmussen8953 NO no no. AA was given the option to have the upgrades put in but they cheaped out. Once again airline fault not manufacturer. Also not government mandated so why spend the extra money?
@Plasmastorm73_n5evv4 ай бұрын
@@paulrasmussen8953 Well, only if it was a government mandate. No law means you save the money until there is.
@Kylie_Conley4 ай бұрын
Love your videos! They make this disabled 24y immensely happy.
@tracitorello75114 ай бұрын
I saw this plane crash walking home from school. I was with my brother and we looked up to see a plane sideways and falling. The boom and following fire will last with me for a lifetime. I was in 1st grade and have been petrified of flying ever since. God bless those poor souls on that flight.❤😢
@flywheelshyster4 ай бұрын
apparently i didn't have the bell on but new vids for FH always show up at top of home feed, always get clicked...the algorithm knows me well
@MarcelaElviraTimis4 ай бұрын
Same 😂
@Plasmastorm73_n5evv4 ай бұрын
Same. I click it as soon as I see it.
@C2JZ4 ай бұрын
It really is amazing how much safer aviation has become, I think people take that for granted.
@darlenegriffith61864 ай бұрын
I don't take it for granted.
@fluffyfour4 ай бұрын
@@mmd195401 Why is that?
@ashkebora72624 ай бұрын
Nobody takes it for granted more than Boeing management, so I wouldn't be so sure about feeling good...
@mmd1954014 ай бұрын
@@fluffyfour DEI chooses D, E, and I before choosing the best qualified. We all pay the price. Like our now resigned Secret Service leader. It perpetuates ineptness.
@PhantomThiefOfSports4 ай бұрын
Are people that dumb and ignorant to believe that DEI is a reason to not trust pilots these days? 🤦🏿♂️
@makmelaf4 ай бұрын
The crash site has been mostly paved over. Semi trailers use the spot for parking now. The memorial is almost two miles to the east of the site and was not erected for decades afterwards.
@politecat42364 ай бұрын
Damn why is that? To deflect public memory from the crash or just make the site accessible for visitors or what?
@JamesJozef4 ай бұрын
Space is at a premium around O’hare. There’s physically no room for sentimentality.
@hollymccormack40814 ай бұрын
@@politecat4236 They are building an alternate route to O'hare from I-90 and it will travel over the crash site.
@Guillotines_For_Globalists4 ай бұрын
Correct, it's in a park, I visited it last May in 2023.
@makmelaf4 ай бұрын
If you go to 320 w touhy on google maps you'll see the mobile home park with the concrete paving next to it.
@KappaSigDAW4 ай бұрын
Once again, well presented and for my part: I thought it was stellar! Among your best yet. Thanks.
@tebzy71094 ай бұрын
The DC-10 really was the 'if it's Boeing I ain't going' of last century
@MS-374 ай бұрын
It still flys believe it or not. It’s used as a firefighting plane.
@Randomly_Browsing4 ай бұрын
@@MS-37but only as cargo
@Nat_7784 ай бұрын
It was actually a cheap and reliable workhorse aircraft. But being cheap ended up working against it because airlines were reluctant to spend the money to properly and safely maintain it. Thus a lot of accidents were caused by crappy maintenance practices... including this one
@d.adrien74234 ай бұрын
DC10 was not a Boeing aircraft but a McDonnell Douglas.
@patrickglaser15604 ай бұрын
Douglas bought out Boeing... hence the quality of today
@aileencastaneda37244 ай бұрын
I remember watching this on Mayday, you can really feel the intensity of the episode. Even though it’s a reenactment seeing how they must have felt must’ve been terrifying and horrifying all at once.
@joegreen2684 ай бұрын
I’m sure it was just awful for them. I couldn’t imagine how they must’ve felt.
@jacekatalakis83164 ай бұрын
It's Tuesday again. To be fair to the DC-10 it wasn't that bad of a plane overall, pilots loved it and it was ahead of its time and it's similar to how the 737 MAX has tarnished the reputation of the 737 though but I did read somewhere that the stick shaker was not included with the aircraft and was an optional extra which blows my mind. EDIT: Lux wasn't meant to be flying that plane, he had switched schedules with another captain though. The famous photos of the plane spiralling down are haunting in their own right too and were all over the news globally though. Also Boeing bought up McDonnell Douglas in the 90s, make of that what you will
@woodenseagull18994 ай бұрын
The DC10's reputation was awful. It even looked sinister and ugly !....
@Randomly_Browsing4 ай бұрын
@@woodenseagull1899no
@user-xu2pi6vx7o4 ай бұрын
@@Randomly_BrowsingYes.
@jacekatalakis83164 ай бұрын
@@woodenseagull1899 How can a plane manage to look ugly in a livery as minimal and good looking as American's livery though? That's quite a feat but remember, at that time trijets were seen as the future, you had MD with their idea of putting engines on or in the DC-10's case in the tail, the DC-9 with tail mounted engines, just on the sides. The DC-8 was more traditional with engines under the wing only. Okay compared to a 727, the DC-10 didn't have the clean lines but it was by no means a bad looking plane. For that, the Ilyushin Il-62 and Vickers VC-10 both look far far worse with the four engines attached to the very back of the fuselage though.
@Peannlui4 ай бұрын
Huh, so it's not a coincidence the logos look so similar. :U
@matthewstorer82364 ай бұрын
Im not one for believing in supernatural stuff but my aunt Cindy and my three cousins lived in that trailer park. My aunts trailer literally dodged a bullet. The trailer in front of hers received damage from fire and human remains. My aunt said for about a year after that crash crazy things were happening in that trailer park. She saw dark shadows walking around in that field in the dark. Dogs would howl while looking in the direction of that field. Some residents heard voices over there and heard knocking on their doors and nobody being there when they opened the door. She got tired of being creeped out and moved.
@ice95944 ай бұрын
I’d be a believer after that! 👻
@matthewstorer82364 ай бұрын
@ice9594 I definitely believe her. My Aunt is a no nonsense straight shooter. She didn't believe in it either until she witnessed things nearly every night. She moved in April of 1980 and things were still happening. Its to be expected when over 270 lives are extinguished in a split second in the same area.
@lindaoneil50854 ай бұрын
Wow! I'm sure those were the spirits of the passengers, walking around, asking for help. The crash happened so fast those poor people didn't know what hit them..I trust the dog's instincts; their senses are so much sharper than a human's. Very interesting story!
@grass78644 ай бұрын
Fascinating. I hope she's doing okay now.
@BIGBOYMATD4 ай бұрын
None of that happened, shut up
@genghis_connie4 ай бұрын
I lived in the Chicago suburbs about 15 miles from O’Hare. I was 9, and the wee gal who joined all the boys on our bicycles to get closer (none of us knew it would be impossible). At the edge of our neighborhood was a huge field, and I remember seeing smoke going on and on. I swear I felt the crash hit up in my bedroom, but I wouldn’t be surprised that much of this was a patchwork of that bike ride and the sad, seemingly never-ending news coverage.
@DaveTexas4 ай бұрын
I was in middle school in 1979. I clearly remember seeing that photo on the front page of both our local papers. It absolutely terrified me. I used to fly with my grandmother to visit relatives every summer, so I was a fairly experienced flyer by age 12. I had no fear of flying before this crash, but I no longer wanted to fly after reading about this crash. I only flew two more times throughout middle and high school, the soonest being in 1984. Thankfully, I’ve gotten over my fear of flying, which is good since I fly three or four times per year now. My big fear now is dealing with TSA in the airport…
@GenXfrom754 ай бұрын
Those poor people watching the ground get closer… 😢
@SkunkApe4074 ай бұрын
I do it every few weekends. It's called skydiving. The scary part is closing your eyes. You KNOW the ground is getting closer, you just don't know HOW close.
@joãoAlberto-k9x4 ай бұрын
Why the adjective poor? Nobody on the Earth is poor.❤. Change your mind or head.
@katherinesmallbean35944 ай бұрын
@@joãoAlberto-k9x They aren't on earth anymore :(
@katherinesmallbean35944 ай бұрын
I know. It's so scary and tragic
@triggeredcat1204 ай бұрын
@@joãoAlberto-k9xTasteless comment. People DIED.
@dusseau134 ай бұрын
I am 68 and am familiar with this crash but this was a well done refresher for me.
@garypippenger2024 ай бұрын
I was married in So California in 1976. My wife's pastor, Ed Elliot, officiated. Ed died on flight 191, flying back from Chicago. RIP.
@Arizonaheat9564 ай бұрын
My father was working for American Airlines in 1979. He was able to determine that my family flew the same DC10 1 week earlier into Chicago by looking up its registration number. I was on that same aircraft only 1 week earlier. I was in Chicago when the crash occurred. My father retired in 1981and passed away years ago.
@dbeachmawmaw3 ай бұрын
Wow. God was watching over you and everyone on your flight!
@pauledgewater4 ай бұрын
I used to live in Chicago when I was a kid. I'll never forget that day. It was beautiful spring weather, and I was playing softball with my friends when someone's mom came out and told us what happened. We lived pretty close to the airport, so we were always seeing planes flying overhead. At first the news reported that it was a cargo plane, but then they corrected the story.
@severinjohn4 ай бұрын
I lived in the northwest suburbs and I vividly remember that very warm Friday afternoon just prior to the Memorial Day weekend. It was very gusty and windy as I recall, but with no threat of storms.
@stevenblacker17004 ай бұрын
@@severinjohn I was a teenager living in Schaumburg at the time and saw the smoke at soccer practice.
@pamelasmith62214 ай бұрын
I was living in the western suburbs at the time and was 11 years old. We experienced the same thing. Beautiful day and I remember my mom coming outside and we looked to the northeast. You could see smoke. It happened on a Friday at 3:04 pm. So it must have just been home from school for a short time.
@Indoor_Carrot4 ай бұрын
I remember in a documentary that this plane had a camera installed at the nose with a live feed video for passengers to get a "pilots view" of the takeoff. When this happened, they had a live video in front of every passenger showing the hanger getting closer before they crashed. I can't imagine anything worse in this situation.
@arturoaguilar60024 ай бұрын
It doesn't sound right; because how ironic that vital control systems lost power, while the camera feed for the passengers still worked.
@jolene544 ай бұрын
I don't think passengers were watching TV as the plane was tilted 90 degrees, plus I don't think the pilots saw much either 😢 I had heard about that camera too.
@Indoor_Carrot4 ай бұрын
Bear in mind this was one of those overly-dramatic American documentaries so take this with a massive pinch of salt.
@AnotherPointOfView9444 ай бұрын
This was 1979. There were no video screens in front of every passenger. LCD screens didnt exist. There was only a single screen on the center bulkhead of each passenger section. This was a projector based system to watch movies, and not video based.
@Plasmastorm73_n5evv4 ай бұрын
@@arturoaguilar6002 Well, those passenger systems ran off of the rear engine so yeah they would have been active, but I doubt anyone was watching. They were probably all (or most) in crash position. BRACE BRACE BRACE! HEAD DOWN, STAY DOWN!
@AEMoreira814 ай бұрын
The crash that destroyed the DC-10''s reputation as a passenger plane. (BTW, the USA doesn't have a flag carrier.)
@najaB764 ай бұрын
"BTW, the USA doesn't have a flag carrier." This stood out for me at first, but by strict definition it does: under US law, any US-based airline operating international routes is a US flag carrier airline. So American Airlines is just one of many US flag carriers.
@SkunkApe4074 ай бұрын
@@najaB76the term "flag carrier airline" implies that said airline is the property of that nation's government. The US Government doesn't own any passenger airlines. So no, you're wrong.
@GlenMcCabe4 ай бұрын
Agreed, the US never had a flag carrier. You could argue that for a time Pan Am was the 'de facto' flag carrier, but I don't think you could argue that American Airlines has been been the flag carrier
@cuestaverde4 ай бұрын
Though the definition under US law is technically correct. Historically, the term 'flag carrier' referred to airlines that were government owned. Carriers like Air Canada, British Airways, Lufthansa, and were all, at one time, owned by their respective governments before being privatized in the 1980s and 90s. The US government has never owned/operated an airline in its history and as such, never had an "official" flag carrier. Though many carriers throughout the years have seen as unofficial flag carriers. Namely Pan Am, which for several years was the only US air carrier permitted by the US government to conduct international operations. @@najaB76
@najaB764 ай бұрын
@@SkunkApe407 "So no, you're wrong." I suggest you do a little research before making such a definitive "correction". Various US laws (for example the _Federal Acquisition Regulation_ ) define a US Flag Air Carrier thusly: "U.S.-flag air carrier means an air carrier holding a certificate under section 401 of the Federal Aviation Act of1958." So no it doesn't have anything to do with government ownership in the general case (for example the French and Netherlands governments have minority stakes in Air France-KLM and the UK government has zero ownership of British Airways), and in the case of the USA there is a specific legal definition.
@MMAFanFromKrypton4 ай бұрын
This happened not too far from where I grew up.. it always sounded so unreal but as you get older, it's even more unfathomable.
@tylers824 ай бұрын
You should do a video on Southern Airways Flight 242 (1977). It happened in my area way before I was born. Love your channel, keep it up
@DKN1174 ай бұрын
The whole "taking the pylon off with the engine" thing was, IIRC, done because the number of bolts that would have to be unscrewed and re-screwed upon removal/reattachment was MUCH greater at the engine/pylon connection than at the pylon/wing connection, meaning that removing the engine from the pylon or reattaching it during maintenance would take much, MUCH longer. I can't remember where I read it, but one airline, instead of using a forklift from below, put together an overhead hoist type of system to do the job, and none of their planes had any of the damage found in the airlines who used forklifts.
@loco4x44 ай бұрын
I know at least Continental used the one piece procedure and in the post accident inspection campaign, found a few aft pylon bulkheads cracked. Fortunately, the cracks were small enough that they were found before they grew big enough to let go.
@mycosys3 ай бұрын
United managed the same procedure safely, with an overhead hoist (whose operator could see the joint and had finer control)
@ykm2054 ай бұрын
Perfectly laid up and explained. The channel's quality only gets better with the years.
@shiroshika14 ай бұрын
Always a fast must watch! :D Love your vids! Any yes the intro music has become legendary by this point.
@joeheid27764 ай бұрын
People who were alive at that time can never hear the name DC-10 without thinking of this accident.
@reneedennis20114 ай бұрын
Exactly.
@sometimesleela59474 ай бұрын
That's why they soon after changed its designation to MD-11.
@helengraves78504 ай бұрын
You are absolutely right!
@Plasmastorm73_n5evv4 ай бұрын
I was alive at the time and never heard about this accident...
@jackie0604oxon4 ай бұрын
Very true, my family used to fly a lot at that time and would try to avoid any airline flying DC10s.
@mschwage4 ай бұрын
I was at the top of the Sears Tower when the plane crashed. We saw a big plume of black smoke in the distance, and wondered what could have caused such a fire. By the time we took the blue line back to the Rosemont stop, the Tribune had a small special edition newspaper for sale at the newsstand, covering the crash. (Iirc, that story only had a headline and there were no details inside).
@Banichi044 ай бұрын
Back when big-city newspapers were truly badass. I went to college in the ‘80s wanting to be “Lois Lane, Girl Reporter” working at the Daily Planet! By the mid ‘90s print journalism was already in decline. It’s really a shame what’s left of the newspapers of the 20th century.
@danv42533 ай бұрын
The Rosemont stop on the Blue Line did not open until February 27, 1983. Four years after the crash.
@skinwalker90834 ай бұрын
Every video you make excites me more than almost anything all week. Thank you for your dedication, quality, and quest for knowledge. I really appreciate all you do.
@robertfitzgerald92424 ай бұрын
I was at a hospital recovering from surgery. I was doing my laps in the hall saw the smoke from from the sight. It was a horrible sight. Will never forget it
@peterdeane44902 ай бұрын
I've always been leery of flying. The first time I ever flew was in the summer of 1979, when I went from Edmonton to Yellowknife to visit a friend. I was sat right behind the wing on a DC10. I remember thinking: "Oh, great. I get to watch the engine fall off." It was a form of gallows humour, as I was really terrified. I didn't take my seatbelt off for the entire flight, which was uneventful, and I'm sure I left fingernail marks in the arm rests. The last time I flew was a couple of years ago, when I was airlifted to Vancouver during a medical crises. I was so sick I was hallucinating, so I wasn't lucid enough to be scared. Thank you for these interesting and well-presented videos.
@holydiver65114 ай бұрын
A 500,000 fine is an insult to the victimd. May they rest in peace
@jonathancarlson61274 ай бұрын
$2.166 million in today money. Nothing to sneeze at, but not justice either.
@danielboom724 ай бұрын
That amount is not what the passengers families received. That's just the fine from the FAA.The widow of the pilot Mrs. Lux, got 4.1 million alone in the civil lawsuit.
@willzimjohn4 ай бұрын
According to a National Geographic documentary on the crash, AA made a $25M profit on the insurance payout.
@ercanar-senpai83454 ай бұрын
mentour pilot did a great breakdown of that accident (and others). i greatly recommend his channel
@MarcelaElviraTimis4 ай бұрын
Not just him. I'm pretty sure Disaster Breakdown and Mini Air Crash Investigations covered it too
@DavidGibson-vt6rk4 ай бұрын
Here's an interesting fact: Philly soul songwriters Gene McFadden and John Whitehead (better known as McFadden and Whitehead) were promoting their 1979 disco/black anthem hit "Ain't No Stopping Us Now," which was supposed to be on the American Airlines 191 to Los Angeles but they were late for the flight. The tragic plane crash has impacted the two men for the rest of their lives.
@artytoons34473 ай бұрын
Actor Ben Gazzara ("Run For Your Life" TV series star) and director Peter Bogdanovich ("What's Up Doc?") were also booked for that flight but missed the flight. Bogdanovich directed Gazzara in the 1981 movie They All Laughed that also starred ill-fated Dorothy Stratton, the Playboy Centerfold model who was murdered by her jealous husband.
@georgecrenshaw63093 ай бұрын
I heard Casey Kasem mention that on a replay of the 8-04-1979 American Top 40 show. He said they missed the flight because they stayed in Chicago to do another interview with a local reporter.
@lw09872 ай бұрын
I remember Casey Kasem telling this story on American Too 40 in the summer of 1979!
@lw09872 ай бұрын
They also said that they’d been trying to take a positive outlook in life and felt that the good vibes kept then off that plane. Casey Kasem mentioned that.
@firehorse_44alpha-omega3 ай бұрын
I was on a DC-10 a few days before this incident. I clearly recall looking at the wing and engine thinking to myself and in awe of the forces involved keeping it "on" the wing. Sitting at a dinner table in metro Detroit, we had a moment of silence that evening for all the souls lost. Condolences to the survivors. May those that died that day Rest in Peace.
@samr.england6133 ай бұрын
On average, over 100 people die in automobile crashes and collisions EVERYDAY in the US. But the death toll is diffused. Imagine the outrage if ONE passenger jetliner, with 100 passengers, crashed everyday in the US! Most of us all need our cars in this country. Slow down!
@Dovietail4 ай бұрын
😱 I was 13 and gasped out loud at that photo across page 1 of the Dallas Morning News. I am now 59 and STILL go breathless every time my flight makes a hard turn while climbing during take-off! 😖🙊😬
@lostvictims97694 ай бұрын
In remembrance: Captain Walter Herman Lux, 53 First Officer James Robert Dillard, 49 Flight Engineer Alfred Frank Udovich, 56 Flight Attendant Linda Kay Bundens, 31 Flight Attendant Pauline M. Burns, 32 Flight Attendant James Truitt DeHart Jr., 28 Flight Attendant Carmen Linda Fowler, 36 Flight Attendant Katherine Ann Hiebert-Lillie, 39 Flight Attendant Carol Marie Ohm, 34 Flight Attendant Linda M. Prince, 29 Flight Attendant Michael W. Schassburger, 36 Flight Attendant Nancy T. Sullivan, 32 Flight Attendant Sally Jo Titterington, 33 James William Adams III, 35 Jeffrey Norman Adams, 32 Richard Kellogg Adams, 51 Kathleen Adduci, 23 Robert Ernest Aeschbacher, 30 Abdullah A. Al-Swailem, 40 Mona Al-Swailem, 35 Basil A.A. Al-Swailem, 8 Ahmed A.A. Al-Swailem, 3 Jessica A. Altman, 30 Colleen Adele Anderson, 26 Gary S. Ang, 31 Edward Paul Armenta, 22 Ruth C. Armstrong Robert Manford Artz, 48 Sharon M. Atkinson, 31 Ruth T. Baldini, 55 George E. Barich Sr., 44 Robert Edward Baum, 40 Jeanette LaVanway Bean, 44 Charles E. Becker, 42 Carroll Dean Begley, 53 Judith Racz Bennett, 35 Itzhak Emery Bentov, 55 Jeff J. Bett Jr., 20 Stephen D. Blake, 30 Paul A. Blouin Sr., 39 James Bollinger, 36 Wilbert Henry Borchers, 67 Corrine R. Borchers, 63 Edmund Arthur Bower, 50 Reginald Norman Braine, 54 Oran Bridges, 54 Allen Edgar Bryson, 50 Eugene Frank Bugajski, 45 Terence G. Cady, 53 Gerald Lee Campbell, 39 Robert Lamar Cannon, 45 Carol G. Carlson, 31 Dana Lynn Castronovo, 19 Sheilah Collean Charisse, 32 Charles William Cheng, 42 Ping Chun, 26 Stephen Wood Clark, 46 Ira S. Cohen, 35 Sara W. Collins, 63 Dennis T. Connell, 26 John Luther Conner, 47 Bruce David Corrigan, 48 Anthony J. Costello, 35 David J. Coughlin, 51 Francis Lee Coulter Jr., 48 Sedonna O. Crawford James M. Crossley, 38 Mario A. Crucioli, 54 Elena Crucioli, 54 Edwin Benjamin David, 45 Marilyn H. Davis, 30 Patricia Dean Davis, 30 Joseph Gilbert Thorp DeBerry, 47 Jean C. De Verrier, 44 Rhonda Ann DeYoung, 18 Gail Susan Dhariwal, 28 Gail Anne DiCastro, 18 Donald M. Dick, 42 Patrick Sean Di Credico, 31 Robert J. Dimicelli, 34 Darlene Marie DiPietro, 22 Wilbur Martin Dittmer, 48 Lloyd Dixon, 56 John Albert Donahue, 36 Donald Driscoll, 16 James William Dudley, 49 Kathleen M. Dzwonkowski, 29 Frederick G. Eaton, 22 Amy Eisenberg, 28 Edward Eugene Elliott, 65 Carl Entner, 69 Terry E. Ernest, 37 Roy Walter Eshenaur, 71 Marian Edith Eshenaur, 74 Susan Jeanne Falcone, 31 Carol A. Ferntheil, 51 William T. Files, 36 Lawrence M. Fink, 25 Robert A. Fish Sharon Fitzgerald Richard John Forstrom, 37 Walter L. Frasier, 40 Joan Fay Fuselier, 53 Kathleen Gallagher Robert Morrow Gardner, 33 Francis Robert Gemme, 45 Clem Campbell Glass, 65 Craig Robert Goetz, 31 Mark Steven Goldsmith, 31 Joseph L. Gonzalez Sr., 45 Lloyd Elvin Gray, 49 Kenneth Alan Green, 37 Judith B. Green, 33 Michael Patrick Green, 34 Stephen Greene, 64 Loy Eugene Greenroyd, 40 Kenneth E. Greger, 29 Raymond L. Griego, 22 William F. Guthrie, 30 Victoria Chen Haider, 34 Paul Morris Halopoff, 50 Mattie Mae Hammond, 64 Robert D. Hampel, 25 Jong-bin Han, 26 Charles Thomas Harlin, 33 Anna Sahra Harrison George Hart, 61 Nigel Williams James Hawkins, 28 Daniel R. Hayes, 36 Samuel William Henderson III, 37 Peter Dunne Herdman, 51 Philip Lawrence Higginbotham, 41 Edward C. Hill, 54 Donald Edward Hoover, 42 Olin W. Hoskins, 52 Elaine Neila Howell, 55 Eichi Ing, 52 Stuart Noel Janis, 41 Ferdinand Jaworowski, 32 Charles Alexander Johnstone, 57 Hans Jürgen Kahl, 35 Marc Salomon Kamhi, 30 Richard B. Keely, 51 Howard F. Keeney, 44 Jerri Ann Koch, 29 Thomas S. Koneski, 39 Priscilla C. Kostohryz, 28 Bert Krell, 48 John David Kuykendall, 33 Deborah Jean Kuykendall, 25 John C. Lakotas, 36 Kenneth Truman Lamb, 61 Elroy Stephen Lang Jr., 34 Susan Lang, 33 Anthony Michael LaVorgna, 69 Margaret E. LaVorgna, 61 Lorene Katz Leiman, 45 Richard E. Lent, 44 Albert Leunens, 61 Shu-Ren Lin, 42 Henry Campbell Magner, 72 Virginia Kathryn Magner, 63 Michelle E. Malacynski, 27 Dorleen L. Malek, 22 Timothy J. Malone, 17 Jacques Manning Joel David Markus, 26 Laura Marquet, 78 Jon D. May, 40 Gordon Conway McAtee, 27 Majorie Lee McCorkle, 30 William T. McGinnis, 35 Marvin Milner Jr., 22 Myron H. Miyagawa, 34 Michael Matthew Mlsna III, 47 Romeo R. Mon, 33 John Gillie Moncrieff, 41 Peter Soo Duck Moon, 35 Debra Ann Moruzi, 21 Karl Fred Muller, 39 William Corbett Muller, 23 Willard Richard Nary, 61 Julia Thomasyna Nary, 55 Yvonne Nasch, 49 Jeffery W. Nordhaus, 21 Don J. Novelli, 52 James Robert O’Bannon, 26 Margaret Mary O’Rourke, 19 Andrew David Creer Oliver, 25 John Richard Ondreck, 43 Donald Gene Optican, 47 Julie Louise Ozminkowski, 26 John E. Pillivant, 42 James R. Pint, 36 William Tyler Pittenger, 26 Marcia E. Platt, 26 Eileen M. Plesa, 22 Rossmoyne Harold Pohlson, 56 Constance Polley, 43 Henry Francis Regnery Jr., 34 Jack Edward Reich, 53 Allen Riddle, 32 Alfred Taylor Rider, 61 John H. Robison, 40 Dean E. Rogers, 46 Geertruida Rothfusz Robert Rothfusz Douglas Ruble, 29 Jack Russell Edwin Lyle Salisbury Jr., 39 Paul William Schade, 38 Zaida R. Schade, 37 Majorie L. Schade, 10 Zaidita Louise Schade, 7 Wilhelmina Elfrida Schots Ann Piet Schots Charles Max Schrader, 15 Richard P. Schuster Jr., 53 Beatrice Schwartz, 50 Bernard Schwartz, 51 Vernon W. Sharpe, 70 Lloyd Shatkin, 22 Ina Perez Shatkin, 27 Wayland Sheffield, 45 Mary Tierney Sheridan, 37 Lawrence Marshall Anthony Silva, 54 Michael J. Silva, 24 Sikes R. Simmons, 36 Michael S. Sirota, 44 Michael R. Smith, 20 Robert Rey Spicuzza, 34 Salvatore F. Spina, 47 Margaret Ann Stacks, 26 Leonard Stogel, 44 Jack Stone, 50 John Stone, 55 Eleanor J. Stromme, 49 Stephen Paul Sutton, 38 Carolyn May Sutton, 38 Colin P. Sutton, 9 Christopher S. Sutton, 7 William R. Swift, 46 Michael Allen Taylor, 34 Kerry Douglas Tims, 19 Paul Richard Tramell, 36 Paul Roger Trautmann, 57 Clark Turner, 48 Margaret Mary Tyne, 65 Craig Lee Valladares, 30 Rene Valle, 31 Margaret Louise Valuch, 57 Peter Van Berkhout, 44 Robert Walton Vaughan, 37 Narda Vetor, 31 Martha Jean Vickery, 38 Carl Vincent, 33 Doyle W. Walker, 36 Rebecca Ann Washburn, 35 Richard Alan Watson, 37 Sheldon Sloan Wax, 51 Judith Caroline Wax, 47 John Brewster Wear Jr., 49 Richard John White, 31 Theodore Whyland, 31 Ronald Willner, 42 Dale Alan Witthoft, 32 Walter Tasuku Yamashiro, 44 Richard Anton Zevnik, 55 James M. Zielinski, 30 Diane Eva Ziemba, 32 Jon Jacob Ziemba, 3 Albert J. Zvanut, 54 And to those on the ground: John Wayne Craig, 42 Andrew David Green, 54
@artytoons4 ай бұрын
Read that Actor Ben Gazzara ("Run For Your Life" tv series) and Movie Director Peter Bogdanovich ("What's Up Doc?:) were booked on that flight but both missed it.
@disc0pat12 ай бұрын
There were a number of apparent couples on the flight. As if that wasn't bad enough, there were 2 whole families with young children. 😢 One of my family members won't have the whole family travel together for just that reason.
@user-ll8be9vt4u4 ай бұрын
Those poor passengers got to see what was going to happen as they had put a camera in the cockpit and showed in the cabin.
@volvo094 ай бұрын
Even without a camera you can still look out the window and feel the G forces being "wrong". I don't think that would make it more terrifying.
@Plasmastorm73_n5evv4 ай бұрын
Not true. NO DC-10 had seat back screens. The only screens available at the time were IFE screens and they took up a LOT of space.
@user-ll8be9vt4u4 ай бұрын
@@Plasmastorm73_n5evv they didn't have seat back screens, it was a screen attached to the wall at the front of the plane
@user-ll8be9vt4u4 ай бұрын
@@Plasmastorm73_n5evv look at the day the sky fell, shows that flight at 3:30 shows the screen
@libbylandscape35604 ай бұрын
They probably weren’t watching a screen. The plane was rolled over on its side, so they were most likely getting into crash position, I know this doesn’t make it any better, maybe makes it worse. But it all happened in seconds, so their brains would have put up a barrier…like being startled and it was over really fast, and the shock of hitting would have knocked them out. 💔
@lunayoshi4 ай бұрын
This disaster has been covered on so many channels already, but damn if I love hearing about it every time. It's not that I don't have compassion for the victims of the crash. I do. But wow, what an epic failure of the maintenance crew. That guy that captured the final moments of the flight is a hero, even if that image causes me nightmares. I know it's a right-place-right-time situation, but it's fascinating to me the way United 175 is fascinating when it hit the second WTC tower. RIP, passengers, and hopefully your last moments were swift and forgiving.
@ice95944 ай бұрын
How does an airplane built of light metal fly “through” a skyscraper made of steel columns like a knife through butter, with news video showing its undamaged nose coming out the other side?…Answer: It doesn’t! There’s more to that story than most people know or would believe.
@joegreen2684 ай бұрын
@@ice9594It penetrates the building because it was made of aluminum and titanium and flying at 600 miles per hour. Is it your belief that there were no planes that day?
@Skyloftt21 күн бұрын
As a Chicagoan, I can't believe I never heard of this tragedy. Thanks for covering this.
@dyates63804 ай бұрын
This was probably the best video I've seen concerning this disaster. I remember this day so well when it happened, as I was meeting some friends after work and they asked if I'd heard about it. Very sad day and it was amazing that something like just skipping a few steps in doing maintenance caused this to happen.
@neiloflongbeck57054 ай бұрын
The slats and flaps were set for take-off, not for landing. The take-off settings are less drag inducingtgan landing flap settings. The sudden loss of lift on one side would cause a roll into that side.
@juliehogan89644 ай бұрын
What was even sadder was Captain Lux wasn't even supposed to be on that flight. He did a friend a favor and took the flight over for him
@glass.hammer4 ай бұрын
My dad was a kid when the THY DC-10 crashed in France and he and most of his generation still resent MD for producing such a horrifyingly dangerous aircraft. The way that people were sucked out of that plane still strapped into their damn seats, the way that plane was shredded on impact, the heroic attempts of the pilots to rescue a doomed flight, it absolutely traumatized his generation.
@Plasmastorm73_n5evv4 ай бұрын
EVERY plane crash ends up looking the same. Why it traumatized his "generation" is unfathomable when plane crashes happened all over the world in all manner of aircraft.
@dfuher9684 ай бұрын
The really sad part is, that after that crash the DC-10 was thoroughly fixed. It became 1 of the most reliable and beloved by pilots planes in service. But those high profile accidents are all, ppl remember. Plenty of plane types, fx. the 737, have had far more casualties. But the reason for the Turkish Airlines crash being so impactful for the DC-10 was, that it was due to an already known problem, that they had first chosen to ignore with a faulty "failsafe" in design and then failed to properly fix after the previous incident 2 years earlier (American flight 96). And ofc that it was a completely full flight (due to strikes and rebookings), so the casualty count was huge, in fact the deadliest crash until the Tenerife disaster in 1977 and the deadliest single airplane crash until JAL123 in 1985.
@cusebruce81794 ай бұрын
I flew that route on AA exactly one month earlier from LA to Chicago. It was a weird feeling knowing that the people on that plane were watching the takeoff from their seats as they had them up on the screen showing the pilot's view. I was 16 at the time and a plane nerd and a few months later I called AA at Chicago and found out that at that time there were 4 AA on that route. You just never know when your time is up. Those people had a few seconds of horror then nothing. There are worse ways to go.
@theminingassassin164 ай бұрын
I really like the simplicity of your videos.
@CharizardMaster693 ай бұрын
Not so fun fact, but both of my grandfathers witnessed this accident about a decade before my parents met. My paternal grandfather witnessed the accident as he was on his way home from his job as a Chemical Engineer at a nearby chemical company and called it “the best flying he ever saw” and praised the crew for not crashing into the trailer park on the other side. My maternal grandfather was on the otherside going to his home in Park Ridge while coming back from his job at the old Nordstrom warehouse by woodfield mall.
@samr.england6133 ай бұрын
On average, over 100 people die in automobile crashes and collisions EVERYDAY in the US. But the death toll is diffused. Imagine the outrage if ONE passenger jetliner, with 100 passengers, crashed everyday in the US! Most of us all need our cars in this country. Slow down!
@PXAbstraction4 ай бұрын
McDonnell-Douglas, the company that Boeing would later merge with and whose cost-cutting-above-all-else leadership took over Boeing and led to things like the 737 Max 8. No one knew in 1979 how prophetic this event was.
@fluffyfour4 ай бұрын
This wasn't just down to McDonnell-Douglas or the DC10, though. It was mainly due to American Airlines lack-a-daisical maintenance procedures. The lack of redundancy in the design met all international requirements at the time and it's only because of such incidents we have better systems now.
@dfuher9684 ай бұрын
The DC-10 definitely had its problems. And it was unforgivable, that the cargo door problem was not fixed after the first incident. In fact, once the problems were fixed, the DC-10 became 1 of the most reliable and beloved by pilots planes in service. Something that has sadly been forgotten. But this was not about the plane type. This was about the faulty maintenance, about the airlines making up their own "procedures" to save time and cost and ignoring the maintenance manuals and safety rules. Cant blame this 1 on the plane or the manufacturer.
@blackjack59084 ай бұрын
MCD, cult of the MBA and penny pinchers. They ruined Boeing
@niyois2 ай бұрын
@@fluffyfour
@seandelap85874 ай бұрын
Always look forward to a Tuesday morning video by FH
@kiryuandgodzillagirl4 ай бұрын
FH goes above and beyond, wonder what else they got
@georgemallory797Ай бұрын
The screaming aboard that jet would have been horrific. Thank God they only knew they were going to die for about 5 seconds. My uncle was a corporate pilot but was off work that day in Grand Rapids, Michigan. His two coworkers were on the taxiway in their Learjet awaiting takeoff on the same runway and saw the entire thing happen. This awful crash affected THOUSANDS of people's lives forever. God bless each and every person involved with this terrible event on May 25, 1979.
@menmykrazycat812912 күн бұрын
I grew up in Chicago, this happened when I was 8 & I still remember it clearly at 56. My parents had friends who lived in Elk Grove Village near O’Hare - & one of my mom’s friends (my Aunt Joyce who wasn’t my aunt) was over, she was home early from work the day it happened. She sat in our kitchen probably about a week later describing to my mom how the explosion was so loud she thought we were under attack. I even remember what she was wearing. Weird how that happens. Those poor people, I can’t even imagine.