Plane crash at Louisville airport

BBlueD

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Apr 12, 2023
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TeamAmerica

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Jul 3, 2025
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MD11 capacity is 38000 and can add aux tanks to push to 41500.

I can't visualize 38000 or 280000 gallons of any liquid though.

That plane was 34 years old.
You know your planes. they are now saying it was 280k pounds of gas or 38,000 gallons.
 

Joe-King

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Sep 18, 2025
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My son works there, and his friend pushed that plane out to take off. He was close when this happened. Told me several things about that plane before taking off. It is a shame and prayers to those who lost loved ones,
 

trueblujr

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Dec 14, 2005
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I know the person who refueled the plane before it took off, you guys think they will get in trouble?

Also they said the plane was in maintenance before it took off.
The people in maintenance will have some answering to do. A good friend of mine who passed away in 2020 was a UPS aircraft mechanic. His son is one now. Anytime there was an incident with a plane, any name signed on that maintenance log is questioned for accountability. Whoever fueled it will likely be questioned too just for good measure. Probably not at fault though. But thoughts planes go through some sort of maintenance check very routinely so it’s not odd that it had just came from maintenance. But somebody was negligent or heaven forbid complicit.
 

Tskware

Heisman
Jan 26, 2003
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^
Or maybe just a horrible accident, those happen all the time.

FWIW, same plane flew to Hawaii just a week or two ago without incident.
 
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Tskware

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Jan 26, 2003
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Just curious, why is UPS flying from Louisville all the way to Hawaii.What type of cargo would that plane be carrying?
 

parrott

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Feb 4, 2003
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Just curious, why is UPS flying from Louisville all the way to Hawaii.What type of cargo would that plane be carrying?

Louisville is the all points hub so any package or cargo comes into Louisville and goes out accordingly. Cargo, small package, mail consigned from USPS. Could be most anything. Plus Intl volume heading to points in the Far East that is sorted in Hawaii and sent out from there.
 

KYWildCatsFan

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Aug 18, 2017
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Why wouldn't the pilots know the engine was on fire immediately & abort?
Once a plane surpasses V1 (decision speed to safely stop within the remaining runway) the pilots decision is made. It’s likely the engine fire happened after they reached V1 and had no other choice but to take off.

The plane could have flown with just its right engine and vertical stabilizer engine(this plane type has 3 engines), but it seems as though right at takeoff, the vertical stabilizer engine suffered a compression stall. That reduced thrust in that engine and left the plane without enough thrust to gain altitude.

Plane eventually rolled to the left which is the side that had the separated engine. Either the left wing stalled first probably caused by damage to the flaps from the engine Fire which would have reduced the lift in the left wing causing it to stall first at that speed or asymmetrical thrust from only having one functional engine.
 

BBlueD

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Found on Reddit. Semi dash cam.

Maybe at the Ford plant?



Longer vid with sound with interior cab view side by side.



Truck is parked in the back of the lot facing West Northwest at this location.

Screenshot 2025-11-05 7.32.04 AM.png
 
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Hank Camacho

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May 7, 2002
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Longer vid with sound with interior cab view side by side.

First person I've seen with the good sense to skedaddle in the face of emergency rather than continue filming.

Props to that guy and his self-preservation instincts.
 

vhcat1970

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Jul 2, 2025
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Once a plane surpasses V1 (decision speed to safely stop within the remaining runway) the pilots decision is made. It’s likely the engine fire happened after they reached V1 and had no other choice but to take off.

The plane could have flown with just its right engine and vertical stabilizer engine(this plane type has 3 engines), but it seems as though right at takeoff, the vertical stabilizer engine suffered a compression stall. That reduced thrust in that engine and left the plane without enough thrust to gain altitude.

Plane eventually rolled to the left which is the side that had the separated engine. Either the left wing stalled first probably caused by damage to the flaps from the engine Fire which would have reduced the lift in the left wing causing it to stall first at that speed or asymmetrical thrust from only having one functional engine.
Thanks. Good info. But why is it likely the fire started after V1 was reached?