FedEx Express Flight 80
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FedEx Express Flight 80 was a scheduled cargo flight from
Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport is an international airport serving Guangzhou, Guangdong, China. The airport codes were inherited from the Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport (former), former Baiyun Airport, and the IATA code is de ...
, China to
Narita International Airport , also known as Tokyo-Narita International Airport or simply Narita Airport, formerly and originally known as , is the secondary international airport serving the Greater Tokyo Area, the only other one being Haneda Airport (HND). It is about e ...
, Japan operated by
FedEx Express FedEx Express is a major American cargo airline based in Memphis, Tennessee, United States. As of 2023, it is the world's List of largest airlines, largest cargo airline in terms of fleet size and freight tons flown. It is the namesake and leadi ...
. At 06:48 JST ( UTC+09:00) on March 23, 2009, the McDonnell Douglas MD-11F (N526FE) operating the flight crashed while attempting a landing on Runway 34L in gusty and highly variable weather conditions, including winds in excess of . The aircraft became destabilized after the
flare A flare, also sometimes called a fusée, fusee, or bengala, bengalo in several European countries, is a type of pyrotechnic that produces a bright light or intense heat without an explosion. Flares are used for distress signaling, illuminatio ...
, which was executed late and with excessive nose-up elevator input. Subsequently, large, nose-down inputs caused abrupt changes in the plane's pitch and increased the speed and severity of touchdowns during the bounced landing. This resulted in a structural failure of the
landing gear Landing gear is the undercarriage of an aircraft or spacecraft that is used for taxiing, takeoff or landing. For aircraft, it is generally needed for all three of these. It was also formerly called ''alighting gear'' by some manufacturers, s ...
and
airframe The mechanical structure of an aircraft is known as the airframe. This structure is typically considered to include the fuselage, undercarriage, empennage and wings, and excludes the propulsion system. Airframe design is a field of aeros ...
. The plane came to a stop off of the runway, with the plane both inverted and on fire. The captain and first officer were the only occupants, and were both killed in the crash. The airport's rescue crew got the pilots out of the aircraft and tried getting them to a hospital, but the crew succumbed to their injuries before they could receive medical attention. Filmed deaths during aviation accidents and incidents


Accident

The flight took off from Guangzhou at 02:06 CST ( UTC+8:00) and was expected to arrive at Narita at 06:53 JST ( UTC+9:00), a planned flight time of just under four hours. At 06:43:57, air traffic control informed the flight crew that a
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had landed at 06:41 and reported
wind shear Wind shear (; also written windshear), sometimes referred to as wind gradient, is a difference in wind speed and/or direction over a relatively short distance in the atmosphere. Atmospheric wind shear is normally described as either vertical ...
of ± below 2000 ft. Surface winds at the time of the accident were reported from 320° at gusting to . After making a hard landing on runway 34L, the plane bounced three times, coming back down on its nose gear first (a condition called "porpoising") resulting in the loss of directional and attitudinal control. The left wing struck the ground as the gear failed, causing the aircraft to veer to the left, burst into flames and invert as the airframe broke up, and came to rest upside down in the grass to the left of the runway. It took firefighters about two hours to extinguish the blaze, which completely destroyed the aircraft and its contents.


Fatalities

The only people on board the aircraft were the Captain, Kevin Kyle Mosley, 54, of Hillsboro, Oregon, and First Officer Anthony Stephen Pino, 49, of
San Antonio San Antonio ( ; Spanish for " Saint Anthony") is a city in the U.S. state of Texas and the most populous city in Greater San Antonio. San Antonio is the third-largest metropolitan area in Texas and the 24th-largest metropolitan area in the ...
, Texas. Both pilots were taken to the Japanese Red Cross Narita Hospital (成田赤十字病院 ''Narita Seki Jūji Byōin'') where they were pronounced dead. Captain Mosley, a former
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fighter pilot, had been with
FedEx Express FedEx Express is a major American cargo airline based in Memphis, Tennessee, United States. As of 2023, it is the world's List of largest airlines, largest cargo airline in terms of fleet size and freight tons flown. It is the namesake and leadi ...
since July 1, 1996, and had accumulated more than 12,800 total career flight hours, including 3,648 hours on the MD-11. First Officer Pino, a former
C-5 Galaxy The Lockheed C-5 Galaxy is a large military transport aircraft designed and built by Lockheed, and now maintained and upgraded by its successor, Lockheed Martin. It provides the United States Air Force (USAF) with a heavy intercontinental-rang ...
pilot in the
United States Air Force The United States Air Force (USAF) is the Air force, air service branch of the United States Department of Defense. It is one of the six United States Armed Forces and one of the eight uniformed services of the United States. Tracing its ori ...
(1981–2004), joined FedEx Express in 2006 and had accumulated more than 6,300 total career flight hours, 879 of them on the MD-11. No one on the ground was injured.


Runway closure

Runway 16R/34L (length ) was closed for many hours after the accident, leaving the shorter 16L/34R as the only available active runway. As a result, many flights operated by larger aircraft had to be canceled or diverted to other airports such as nearby
Haneda Airport , also known as and sometimes abbreviated to ''Tokyo-Haneda'', is the busier of the two international airports serving the Greater Tokyo Area, the other one being Narita International Airport (NRT). It serves as the primary domestic base of J ...
, as 16L/34R is too short (length ) for some types to land safely, and other infrastructure limitations further prevented the operation of larger commercial aircraft.


Aircraft

The aircraft was built in 1994 as an MD-11 passenger airliner. It was acquired temporarily by the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA ) is an independent agency of the US federal government responsible for the United States's civil space program, aeronautics research and space research. Established in 1958, it su ...
(NASA) to use as the test bed for their Propulsion-Controlled Aircraft system (PCA) in 1995. Later it was owned and operated by
Delta Air Lines Delta Air Lines, Inc. is a Major airlines of the United States, major airline in the United States headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia (U.S. state), Georgia, operating nine hubs, with Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport being its ...
from 1996 to 2004 under the FAA registration N813DE in such configuration. The trijet was sold to FedEx in October 2004 when Delta
retired Retirement is the withdrawal from one's position or occupation or from one's active working life. A person may also semi-retire by reducing work hours or workload. Many people choose to retire when they are elderly or incapable of doing their j ...
its MD-11 fleet in favor of switching to more-efficient twin-engine
Boeing 767 The Boeing 767 is an American wide-body airliner developed and manufactured by Boeing Commercial Airplanes. The aircraft was launched as the 7X7 program on July 14, 1978, the prototype first flew on September 26, 1981, and it was certified ...
s and
Boeing 777 The Boeing 777, commonly referred to as the Triple Seven, is an American long-range wide-body airliner developed and manufactured by Boeing Commercial Airplanes. The 777 is the world's largest twinjet and the most-built wide-body airliner. ...
s on its long-haul routes. Following its acquisition by FedEx, the plane was stored at Phoenix Goodyear Airport in
Goodyear, Arizona Goodyear is a city in Maricopa County, Arizona, United States. It is a suburb of Phoenix and at the 2020 census had a population of 95,294, up from 65,275 in 2010 and 18,911 in 2000. The city is home to the Goodyear Ballpark, where the Clev ...
pending its conversion there to an MD-11F b
Dimension Aviation, Inc.
Boeing's Douglas Products Division airframe conversion contractor located at that field. The aircraft entered service with FedEx in its all-cargo configuration in late 2006 as N526FE. It was powered by three Pratt & Whitney PW4462 engines.


Cause

The
Japan Transport Safety Board The is Japan's authority for establishing transportation safety (excluding related United States Forces Japan). It is a division of the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism (MLIT). The agency formed on October 1, 2008 as a ...
(JTSB) dispatched six investigators to the airport. The United States'
National Transportation Safety Board The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) is an independent U.S. government investigative agency responsible for civil transportation accident investigation. In this role, the NTSB investigates and reports on aviation accidents and inci ...
(NTSB) sent a team to Japan to assist with the investigation. The crash was FedEx's second fatal accident involving a jet aircraft, following the loss of a FedEx owned B747-249F that crashed February 18, 1989, near Kuala Lumpur, while still painted in the Flying Tigers livery after the acquisition of the Flying Tigers Line by FedEx in December 1988. This was the first fatal accident at Narita Airport. The accident was attributed by the JTSB to a series of " porpoising oscillations" that developed during touchdown, following a high sink rate during the final approach. The first officer executed a late flare, in which sink rate was not suppressed until the plane was nearly on the runway, but which also would minimize "float" that might carry the plane further down the runway and reduce its safe stopping distance, or carry it off the centerline in the existing crosswinds. This high touchdown sink rate, coupled with large nose-up inputs, caused the first bounce. A large nose-down input was applied, causing a touchdown on the nose gear. This deviates from approved procedures for the MD-11 during a bounce, which specifies the pilot is to hold a pitch angle of 7.5 deg and use thrust to adjust the descent rate. The plane bounced off this second touchdown, pitching upward. The large control inputs by the first officer resulted in a hard touchdown on the main landing gear. This final touchdown was hard enough () to cause the left wing to fail as the left main landing gear transferred force up into the wing, exceeding its design limit. The JTSB report suggested the fire might have been averted if the landing gear fuse pin had failed as designed, but that much of the touchdown force was horizontal to the pin rather than vertical, keeping it intact. The report also cited the crew's use of autothrottle during landing despite gusty wind conditions. As a result of this accident the Japan Transport Safety Board published its final report on April 26, 2013, in which it made a number of new safety recommendations including that "in order to reduce the occurrence of MD-11 series airplanes' severe hard landing and bounce in which an overload is transferred to the MLGs and their supporting structure, the Boeing Company should improve the controllability and maneuver characteristics by improving the LSAS ( Longitudinal Stability Augmentation System) functions, reducing the AGS (Auto Ground Spoilers) deployment delay time and other possible means. Possible improvement on LSAS functions may include: a function to limit large nose-down elevator input during touchdown phase, which is a common phenomenon in severe hard landing cases accompanied by structural destruction for MD-11; and a function to assist bounce recovery and go-around in case of bounce. In order to help pilots to conduct recovery operation from large bounces and judge the necessity of go-around, studies should be made to install a visual display and an aural warning system which show gear touchdown status on MD-11 series airplanes." The investigation into the two pilots' performance during Flight 80 found that both exhibited signs of lack of sleep and fatigue, and the first officer was heard on the cockpit voice recorder talking about how he had not slept very much prior to operating the flight. A look at both pilots' activity in the days leading up to the flight found that, based on accounts from hotel staff, credit card transactions, and other signs of activity, neither pilot could have had more than four hours of consecutive sleep in the twenty-four hours leading up to the crash. Additionally, the pilot flying, First Officer Anthony Pino, usually served as a relief pilot, taking control in the middle of long-haul flights. He therefore had little experience in landing the MD-11, and performed landings very infrequently.


1997 FedEx MD-11F accident

On July 31, 1997, another FedEx MD-11F (N611FE), operating as FedEx Express Flight 14, was written off after a similar destabilized landing accident at
Newark Liberty International Airport Newark Liberty International Airport is a major international airport serving the New York metropolitan area. The airport straddles the boundary between the cities of Newark, New Jersey, Newark in Essex County, New Jersey, Essex County and E ...
. After a flight from
Anchorage, Alaska Anchorage, officially the Municipality of Anchorage, is the List of cities in Alaska, most populous city in the U.S. state of Alaska. With a population of 291,247 at the 2020 United States census, 2020 census, it contains nearly 40 percent of ...
, that aircraft crashed at the airport just before midnight when it bounced twice after a hard touchdown on Runway 22R, resulting in the failure of the right main landing gear. As in the Narita accident, the plane also caught fire as the airframe broke up, flipped over, and came to rest inverted off the runway. The captain, first officer, and three passengers on board all survived the 1997 Newark crash and were able to escape from the burning aircraft with only minor injuries.


In popular media

The crashes of both FedEx Express Flights 80 and 14 were covered on Season 14 of ''Mayday'' (''Air Crash Investigation''), episode 5 (episode 114 overall), titled ''The Final Push''.


See also

* FedEx Express Flight 14 – an MD-11 that crashed after a bounced landing and right roll in 1997 * China Airlines Flight 642 – an MD-11 that crashed while landing during strong winds in 1999 * Lufthansa Cargo Flight 8460 – an MD-11 that bounced and broke up on landing in 2010 * List of accidents and incidents involving commercial aircraft


References


External links

* JTSBbr>Final reportin Japanese
*
FedEx FedEx Corporation, originally known as Federal Express Corporation, is an American Multinational corporation, multinational Conglomerate (company), conglomerate holding company specializing in Package delivery, transportation, e-commerce, and ...
**
FedEx Express Releases Additional Information Regarding FedEx Express Flight 80

Archive
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( ttps://web.archive.org/web/20130510014233/http://www.fedex.com/jp/about/narita2.html Archive
Unrecovered "bounced" landing
at flightsafety.org * (from the
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) * {{DEFAULTSORT:Fedex Express Flight 80 Accidents and incidents involving the McDonnell Douglas MD-11 Airliner accidents and incidents caused by pilot error Aviation accidents and incidents in 2009 FedEx 80 Aviation accidents and incidents in Japan Narita International Airport March 2009 in Japan Accidents and incidents involving cargo aircraft