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chornedsnorkack
21st Jan 2006, 13:44
What is the longest time any aircraft has flown while on fire?

There are several notorious disasters from planes that caught fire. Swissair MD-11, which crashed in 25 minutes or so. Saudia Tristar. Manchester B-737 which burnt on runway. Some B747 crashing in Indian Ocean... All of those were doomed in a few minutes.

Is it the general rule that any plane that catches fire crashes in less than half an hour, unless it happens to be near an airport and land in less than half an hour?

And does it follow that any aircraft farther than 30 minutes from a diversion that catches fire has no chance at all?

Onan the Clumsy
21st Jan 2006, 13:48
I imagine that metal airframes have a considerably better prognosis than do wooden ones :}

Scoob
21st Jan 2006, 13:56
Unclear from your post if you know this or not but large aircraft (almost all turbine powered) have fire extinguishers for each engine and other areas. Most planes that catch fire just shut the engine down, use the extinguisher then land it is not that big a disaster if dealt with promptly and correctly. I am sure many many aircraft have had fires mid Atlantic/Pacific and landed fine even though they are multiple hours from an airfield. If the fire is severe enough to burn regardles of the extinguisher and airspeed then yes you will probably have a much bigger problem that will result in a crash if you cannot land very soon.

Getoutofmygalley
21st Jan 2006, 14:16
Scoob I think chornedsnorkack means a fire inside the aircraft. The Swissair MD-11 fire was in the insulation between the outer airframe and the inner skin of the aircraft, resulting in smoke and flames inside the cockpit.

BOAC
21st Jan 2006, 14:48
chornedsnorkack - you will need to refine your definition of 'fire' - since ETOPS allows up to 180 mins from a diversion and possibly more, so 30 minutes would be a bit of a problem.:)

If it is a question on fire suppression/resistance you will do better on 'Tech Log' and I am putting you over there. You may wish to refine your query there? If it is just a 'spotter's' question, no doubt we will see you back here.

Re the BA 737 at Manchester - it did not 'fly'.

Moved from Spectators' Balcony

Old Smokey
21st Jan 2006, 16:37
I think that the Ansett ANA Viscount disaster at Winton (Australia) back in the sixties proved for once and for all that, if you have an uncontrollable fire, the planned landing point is just under your nose. The poor sods were trying for an airport (Winton) only 15 minutes away, and didn't get half the distance.


Regards,


Old Smokey

Brenoch
21st Jan 2006, 16:55
Which is why it can't be stressed enough to the punters that smoking in the bog is not only a serious offence but also a severe hazard to all on board.

Empty Cruise
21st Jan 2006, 20:09
Hi BOAC et al,

Yep 180 min. IS a problem - but then again, there was an FAA study some years back that suggested that:

1) If a fire broke out inside the aircraft, you had - on average - 2 min. to put it out, or it would become uncontrollable and...

2) if a fire became uncontrollable, you had on average 14 additional minutes before chances were that nobody would walk away from it.

So - 16 minutes give or take. The difference ETOPS/non-ETOPS suddenly seems academic :sad: It translates to - racing towards nearest land while getting into a position from where you can transit to a ditching in just a few minutes, when the situation becomes untenable & the citadel is about to fall :{ Or -any other good suggestions out there???

Cheers,
Empty

blck
21st Jan 2006, 23:04
1) If a fire broke out inside the aircraft, you had - on average - 2 min. to put it out, or it would become uncontrollable and...
2) if a fire became uncontrollable, you had on average 14 additional minutes before chances were that nobody would walk away from it.


Russian Tupolev 154 lost all hydraulic systems after 4 minutes since engine fire alarm had triggered.
As there is no mechanical control backup the plane has crashed in 2nm from runway threshold.
So the 16 minutes is the only approx value.
Have fire on board - LAND ASAP.

barit1
22nd Jan 2006, 15:28
I think that the Ansett ANA Viscount disaster at Winton (Australia) back in the sixties proved for once and for all that, if you have an uncontrollable fire, the planned landing point is just under your nose. The poor sods were trying for an airport (Winton) only 15 minutes away, and didn't get half the distance.
Regards,
Old Smokey

United (http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/brief.asp?ev_id=81636&key=0) also lost a Viscount due to cabin fire.

And this Air Canada DC-9 (http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/brief.asp?ev_id=20001214X43285&key=1) made it down in one piece in 17 minutes, but only half the occupants were able to evac.

Golf Charlie Charlie
22nd Jan 2006, 17:52
I guess the infamous Saudia Tristar at Riyadh in 1980 came down in one piece after - what - 15-20 minutes..... The cock-up on the ground preventing anyone getting out was of course a different matter.

Old Smokey
23rd Jan 2006, 01:10
Just to keep the record straight, the Ansett ANA Viscount disaster was not a cabin fire, but an engine fire originating in an incorrectly lubricated Rootes blower. The resultant fire was uncontrollable, leading to (wing) structural failure in flight.

Not a correction to any of the historic facts, but I suspected that some readers may have thought of it as a cabin fire.

Regards,

Old Smokey

chornedsnorkack
23rd Jan 2006, 10:41
So, as far as I can gather - some engine fires crash the aircraft in a few minutes, whether by structural failure of the wing (Ansett Viscount), or draining multiple redundant hydraulic systems (Tu-154) or by eating into the fuselage (Manchester B737, on ground). In which case it does not help if the airplane stays within 90 minutes or even 60 minutes of a diversion, or, as shown in Manchester, stays on ground...

And there have been other engine fires which are extinguished quickly and completely... in which case it does not much matter why the engine failed, and the plane can fly on for 60 or 180 minutes or as long as the fuel lasts.

In this light, ETOPS/non-ETOPS distiction seems academic. Are there any flights which were able to make a safe landing directly because of the ETOPS fire resistance/suppression capabilities?

mono
23rd Jan 2006, 14:28
ETOPS aircraft have as standard equipment which is supposed to be more reliable than non ETOPS a/c. However the fire suppression/containment capability of an ETOPS a/c relates to cargo areas only (in fact ALL long range a/c need to have containment/suppression which relates to alternate/diversion times more an EROPS than an ETOPS requirement). The logic here being that if the fire is in the cabin/flightdeck then crew can attempt to extinguish it. Cargo areas however being inaccessible require automatic or semi-automatic systems.

In the case of a/c certified for 180 ETOPS then the cargo containment will be 180+15. For an a/c like a 767 this requires 3 bottles of extinguishant. The first is fired by the crew should they get a cargo fire warning. The other 2 are fired automatically after a set time delay such that the cargo environment would be unable to support a fire for the pre-requesit time. In the event that the a/c lands well within the 180 timeframe then all the remaining bottles are discharged on touchdown.

As far as I am aware (though I MAY be corrected) the engine fire extinguishing capability of ETOPS and non ETOPS a/c are the same.

777fly
23rd Jan 2006, 15:31
This thread touches upon the most dangerous aspect of long range operations.Engine fires are relatively easily extinguished, cargo smoke/fire is contained by sophisticated suppression systems.The significant danger is fire or smoke in the cabin.No aircraft, flying short or long-haul, ETOPS or not, 2 or 16 engines, is immune from the dangers that cabin fire or smoke present. On a shorthaul network, the aircraft can be landed ( generally) within 30 minutes, though even this may not be sufficient time. On longhaul sectors this option is not available and the consequences could be catastrophic.
The Swissair incident demonstrated how lethal and incapacitating fire and smoke could be, if contained within the cabin, a survival time circa 20 minutes. In the 70's, there was a DC8 departure out of Jeddah which had a gear fire on takeoff ( due to a tyre failure) which was retracted into the fuselage.The surrounding structure then caught fire and even though the gear was extended again, the airblast from the slipsteam caused the aluminium structure to burn. The aircraft crashed about 2nm from touchdown only 5 minutes later, as the wing structure folded.
Experience shows that you have about 20 minutes survival if you can contain the fire/smoke within the cabin. If the fire gets through the structure and is fed by the outside airflow, you have only minutes. Even 16 engines will not save you.
My standard brief to my co-pilots,when we are in the middle of nowhere and I am off the flight deck, is: In the event of cabin fire/smoke 1.do the drill.2get descent to MSA 3.Call me. If the fire/smoke hazard clears, we can climb back up and look at the options. If it turns out to be uncontainable, at least we can force-land or ditch under control within 10 minutes, rather than crash and burn.

Dan Winterland
24th Jan 2006, 02:45
An RAF Nimrod was doing a test flight not far from Kinloss in 1995. One of the engines caught fire and despite only being minutes from Kinloss, the pilot decided to ditch. The crew survived.

Jonty
24th Jan 2006, 07:22
We work on the same FAA theory. In an unconstrained cabin fire you have about 14 minutes to get the aircraft on the ground or water. Unfortunately the metal fuselage melts at a lower temperature than the cabin burns at!

idg
24th Jan 2006, 10:15
I fully agree with the sentiments expressed in this thread! Cabin Smoke/Fire=LAND ASAP!
Many of the 'engine fire' scenarios recounted here though, are about a/c with wing mounted engines not podded engines. Has anyone got any stats on the outcome (good or bad) on pod mounted engine fires? My suspicion is that the outcomes are nowhere near as bad, but can find no data to support this.

GraemeWi
25th Jan 2006, 03:49
I fully agree with the sentiments expressed in this thread! Cabin Smoke/Fire=LAND ASAP!
Many of the 'engine fire' scenarios recounted here though, are about a/c with wing mounted engines not podded engines. Has anyone got any stats on the outcome (good or bad) on pod mounted engine fires? My suspicion is that the outcomes are nowhere near as bad, but can find no data to support this.

My first thought was the BOAC 707 "G-ARWE" incident in 1968. Just after takeoff and gear up #2 engine failed. There was a fire which was uncontrolled and the engine dropped away from the aircraft (there is quite a powerful photo of it on the net). The fire spread to the wing root as the aircraft touched down. 5 fatalities including 1 crew (127 on board). Total time from takeoff to landing was about 3 1/2 minutes.

anybodyatall
25th Jan 2006, 04:34
What about World War II planes? I'd imagine there were a few that came back smoldering after a long hellish flight...

cavortingcheetah
25th Jan 2006, 05:38
:sad:

I well remember this incident. I was living there at the time and heard the news on the radio on my way to work at FAJS.
I wouldn't quite dare to say much more than that there seems to be a veil of silence in that valley of death.:

South African Airways Flight 295
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

On November 28, 1987, Flight 295, a Boeing B-747-244B Combi, registered ZS-SAS, called the Helderberg and flying the colors of South African Airways, took off from Chiang Kai Shek International Airport near Taipei, Taiwan, on a flight to Johannesburg via Plaisance International Airport in the Republic of Mauritius. 140 passengers and 19 crew were on the manifest.

While the Helderberg was over the Indian Ocean, a fire had occurred in the main cargo hold, originating on one of the six cargo pallets inside. The fire disoriented and incapacitated the crew, leading to the crash. All 159 people on board were killed.

A commission of inquiry was chaired out by Judge Cecil Margo, who determined eventually that no clear causes for the crash could be determined. Nonetheless, of late there has been significant of controversy around the crash and the subsequent commission's report, with some claiming that the aircraft was carrying dangerous cargo related to the government's weapons programs.

This was further enhanced by the appearance of a cockpit voice recording transcript, allegedly from the Helderberg, which revealed that the captain notified the crew that the plane was carrying explosives. The captain had purportedly initially refused to fly, but he flew anyway, after having been threatened with immediate dismissal. However, experts who were involved in the Helderberg investigation immediately contested the authenticity of the transcript, claiming it was fraudulent.

The result was that the South African Department of Transport conducted a review of all the evidence and new developments. In 2002 it announced that no new evidence had emerged that would justify a new inquiry into the crash.

Therefore, the finding of the commission chaired by Judge Margo, which found no definitive cause, remains the official standpoint on the crash.

*

You can read more on the matter here.

http://www.stanford.edu/class/history48q/Documents/EMBARGO/2chap6b.htm

I do seem to remember that the fire apparently started at TOD and that the poor blighters only just didn't make it into Plaisance.:suspect:

RJM
25th Jan 2006, 05:48
This got me thinking about burning balloons. I suppose the duration of their flight once the fire starts depends on their height at the time... :uhoh:

mtogw
25th Jan 2006, 06:25
DHL A300 back into Baghdad, 25mins approx, wing/fuel fire..

Jonty
25th Jan 2006, 07:23
DHL A300 back into Baghdad, 25mins approx, wing/fuel fire..

There was an advert promoting a new series of "Air Crash Investigation" on one of the Discovery channels last night, and this incident was part of the ad. So I guess they will be covering it in some detail, if you can look past the hysteria! No idea when though.

antic81
25th Jan 2006, 09:20
I had used to have a copy of the Margo report on the Springbok 295 accident, the CVR indicates that the crew may have attempted to aleviate the smoke problem by opening one or more of the ac doors.
Also the fire that eventually brought the aircraft down was actually a re-ignition of a fire much earlier in the flight, this is where it gets complicated....none of this is mentioned in the report.
Not sure if the plane broke up before impact.
I have a question with regards to a cabin fire, as a last resort, what would happen if you depressurised the cabin?

cavortingcheetah
25th Jan 2006, 11:27
:hmm:

No real idea on the de-pressurisation/fire conundrum.
Off the top of the head I should have thought initial smoke dissipation followed by increased fire problems because of increased oxygen supply?

I think that there was a lot that never came out concerning the Helderberg. I don't think the aeroplane broke up before impact. I do seem to remember that the fire started in the rear hold and that the FO either couldn't get the interconnecting door fully open and/or that he was unable to access the fire extinguisher which was behind the door?

I have always rather felt with this incident, that it would be rather injudicious to enquire too deeply as to all the whys and wherefores.:\

lomapaseo
25th Jan 2006, 13:45
B707 cargo over rr4ance with #3 engine missing and wing on fire. Later landed at an air force base and aircraft destroyed on ground.

B707 over SFO with #4 engine missing and wing on fire and outboard section missing. There is a photo taken by a passenger of the burning wing. Aircraft successfuly diverted to an airforce base.

Engine fires typically burn themselves out without burning into the wing or fuselage once the fuel is shutoff. The bigger problem is if the pylon to engine fireshield has been breeched or the engine fire bypasses the shield and reaches the fuselage or wing (with little airflow to stream it in back of the plane)

antic81
25th Jan 2006, 14:07
Yeah, I think your right, I must admit its been a long while since I actually read the report, it all resurfaced around '98, or '99, the families of the victims were pushing for the inquest to be re-opened.
Rumor had it that the aircraft was carrying rocket fuel or something similar for Armscor, there was then talk of intimidation...and so on.
I believe that Armscor used civilian aircraft a lot in the '70's and '80s, probably had a lot to do with the sanctions.

But as you say, perhaps we should just leave it at that.

Anyone else know the likely outcome if one were to depressurise the cabin in the event of a cabin fire?

Empty Cruise
25th Jan 2006, 14:18
Antic81,

On cargo aircraft - yes. On pax aircraft - well, the "rubber jungle" would drop, so each activated PSU would contribute to the oxygen content of the cabin. When the PSU runs out the O2 levels would drop back to ambient, but then the punters would not be around to congratulate the crew on their airborne firefighting skills :hmm: And in order for it to work you'd have to stay up at high level - not something I'd be very big on doing if a fire had broken out.

So it appears there is only one solution - emerg. descent and put the aircraft down somewhere ASAP. Land is a benefit, an airport with FRS a luxury. Re. the ditching - that's prolly the worst decision you can be faced with as a captain, 'cause you know that less than 50% are going to survive the first 5 minutes in the water - but what to do? Just hoping for the best as you race towards the nearest airport another hours flight away sounds like 0% survival rate to me, whereas a couple of people might survive in the water until SAR arrives :(

Empty

chornedsnorkack
25th Jan 2006, 14:37
Does pressure make any big difference in firefighting?

I think that the amount of oxygen per unit volume drops with pressure decrease - and so does heat capacity per volume, cannot see the direction of that effect. The viscosity and heat conductivity of gas should be independent of pressure.

Of course, opening cockpit windows to blow smoke out of cockpit can only be done if the plane is unpressurized...

PSU is set to operate at 14 000 feet, so that would be the maximum height possible - automatic deployment would make a major addition to fire intensity.

Can airliners ditch in one piece?

Empty Cruise
25th Jan 2006, 15:23
chornedsnorkack,

As an ex-firefighter, experience (and some long forgotten theoretical stuff) tells me that yes, pressure will make a difference - put partial pressure i.e. how much of that pressure is made up by oxygen, only takes effect at higher altitudes.

If you lower the pressure without changeing the partial pressure, e.g. by ventilating, the fire will flare (fair 'nuff, since lower presure will mean higher evaporation-rate = more gasseous contents in air = fire flares). Likewise, if you increase pressure by e.g. directing waterfog above the fire, you get a sh#tload of steam out of it (the figure 1680 ltr. steam per litre of water that evaporates completely springs to mind - anybody?). The generation of steam will both take a lot of the heat out of the fire and increase pressure, thereby smothering the fire. This method is useful if you need to put out class B fires but only have water available. But you gotta like saunas - if not, I wouldn't recommend it :E

If you lower both the pressure and the partial pressure - as in an aircraft cabin at, say, 8000 ft. cabin altitude - the fire will die down, but not extinguish until very low concentrations of O2 are present. And then you'd have to allow time for the fire to cool, otherwise it would re-ignite as cabin altitude drops and partial pressure goes up. So if you only have the crew to worry about, dumping the cabin is prolly a good idea - we can sit for 120 min. with masks on before we really have to do something. In the cargo ATRs, that would be the idea - get FD on O2, accomplish QRH, then F/O would swicth to portable 02 full-face-mask and go firefighting. Ho-hum...

Re. staying in one piece on ditching - well, afaik all aircraft with pod-mounted engines have shear-bolts in the struts that will allow the engines to break away rather than break up the wing on contact. The fuselage - depends on sea-state, wind direction & strength, if power & hydraulics are available before impact or not, and the skill of the crew. If all goes according to plan, see no reason why you shouldn't be able to keep fuselage fairly intact, and that should lead to a much more orderly evac, improving long-term survival chanches. But when you think of how willing some of the punters are to follow CC instructions, some will still try to swim to distant land, some will only cling to their family, some will overinflate their lifejackets, some will take off clothes in the wather, and some will not want to float face down in high winds. These people will die anyway within the first 15-20 minutes :mad:

PS - how many have practiced the ditching manoeuvre within the last 36 month sim-cycle? Some airlines seem to take it seriously, others adopt the "Nah, you'll never need it - here's another EFATO for you"-attitude.

Empty

antic81
25th Jan 2006, 15:37
Chornedsnorkak,

Do you remember the footage of the hi-jacked Ethiopean 767 that was ditched 500 yrds of the coast of the Comoros islands in November '96?
The ocean just seemed to rip the aircraft to pieces, the aircraft had run out of fuel and was gliding, but still.
I don't know how much shallower he could have made that approach even with power.
Personally I hope I never get to a point where all the options are spent and I have to make that kind of decision.

Sky Wave
25th Jan 2006, 17:24
If I recall correctly (and I may not) the wing of the Ethiopian 767 hit the water first because a hi-jacker grabbed the controls at the last minute. I was under the impression it should have been ok if they landed wings level.

Grunf
25th Jan 2006, 21:01
Who wants to se the FAA requirements regarding flammability which is actually the only requirement link is:

http://ecfr.gpoaccess.gov/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=ecfr&sid=31902310203df6470da9cc6dedbb3163&rgn=div5&view=text&node=14:1.0.1.3.11&idno=14#14:1.0.1.3.11.7.201.34.20

or you can look for FAR part 25.851 - 25.869 for more explanation and test procedures.

That does not gives you the overall time how the whole structure will last but at least it gives you some intro in requirements.

Cheers

antic81
25th Jan 2006, 21:44
Sky Wave,

You are right about the wing hitting the water first, I remember watching it and thinking to myself, why isn't he wings level?
Its news to me that one of the idiots who hijacked the aircraft was the cause, although its highly likely due to the fact that they couldn't grasp the fact that the plane didn't have the fuel to reach their destination and were told this repeatedly by the pilots.
I know we have gone slightly off topic here and I do apologise, but there is something we could also consider from that particular tragedy, from what I recall the ocean was calm, weather was good and it was in daylight and very close to the shore in shallow water, I think the odds would be stacked right up against you if the weather was less than perfect, it was at night and half way across the atlantic...actually I'd rather not think about it!

RatherBeFlying
26th Jan 2006, 01:11
I recall a Flight International article at the time raised the suspicion that one Taiwanese shipper was less than forthcoming about the contents of his shipment:mad: :mad: :mad:

chornedsnorkack
26th Jan 2006, 11:58
chornedsnorkack,
As an ex-firefighter, experience (and some long forgotten theoretical stuff) tells me that yes, pressure will make a difference - put partial pressure i.e. how much of that pressure is made up by oxygen, only takes effect at higher altitudes.
If you lower the pressure without changeing the partial pressure, e.g. by ventilating, the fire will flare (fair 'nuff, since lower presure will mean higher evaporation-rate = more gasseous contents in air = fire flares). Likewise, if you increase pressure by e.g. directing waterfog above the fire, you get a sh#tload of steam out of it (the figure 1680 ltr. steam per litre of water that evaporates completely springs to mind - anybody?). The generation of steam will both take a lot of the heat out of the fire and increase pressure, thereby smothering the fire.

I doubt that pressure is changed in either case. After all, in uncontained spaces any change of total pressure would blow away very quickly and forcefully. Only in an intact fuselage is pressure a variable...

Re. staying in one piece on ditching - well, afaik all aircraft with pod-mounted engines have shear-bolts in the struts that will allow the engines to break away rather than break up the wing on contact. The fuselage - depends on sea-state, wind direction & strength, if power & hydraulics are available before impact or not, and the skill of the crew. If all goes according to plan, see no reason why you shouldn't be able to keep fuselage fairly intact, and that should lead to a much more orderly evac, improving long-term survival chanches. But when you think of how willing some of the punters are to follow CC instructions, some will still try to swim to distant land, some will only cling to their family, some will overinflate their lifejackets, some will take off clothes in the wather, and some will not want to float face down in high winds. These people will die anyway within the first 15-20 minutes :mad:
PS - how many have practiced the ditching manoeuvre within the last 36 month sim-cycle? Some airlines seem to take it seriously, others adopt the "Nah, you'll never need it - here's another EFATO for you"-attitude.
Empty
Do the simulators give realistic outcomes about airframe breakup and occupant safety?

So, while the airplanes can supposedly be made safe against engine fires and also can be proofed against belly hold fires, they cannot be protected against cabin/cockpit fires...

What does the belly hold safety rely on? Halon bottles?
These supposedly work by interrupting radical chain reaction, and do absolutely nothing about exothermic reactions from other reaction mechanisms... like lithium fire.

I can see a simple physics reason why no plane can be safe against post-crash fires (it carries a lot of fuel, for example Boeing 747-400ER has 240 000 litres, about 200 tons, except naturally if crashing due to fuel exhaustion).

But before crashing... the hold of Boeing 747-400ER is about 160 000 litres volume. Minus the cargo contained, of course. On sea level, 160 000 litres air weighs about 200 kg, if I get it right, and including about 50 kg oxygen. These numbers decrease by about one quarter in cruise and, back-of-the-envelope, to 40 % original value if the fuselage is decompressed to 25 000 feet.

If there is a fire in a cargo hold, does fresh air continue to enter the cargo hold, and does smoke and flames get to cabin and cockpit?

Empty Cruise
26th Jan 2006, 13:32
chornedsnorkack,

My bad, talking transient pressure here - it's typically done from behind a cocked door. And believe me, there are a lot of transient pressure changes in a burning house or aeroplane, either triggered by the fire or by the firefighters, and it does affect the characteristics of the fire.

Empty

broadreach
27th Jan 2006, 22:58
Varig 820, a 707-345C, made a forced landing three miles short of Orly in 1973 after a flight from Rio. Fire in a rear toilet, around the time they were beginning the descent. The aircraft landed gear down in a cabbage patch and remained remarkably intact. Not sure how long it took from discovery of the fire to the forced landing, over twenty minutes I think; someone with a better memory or data to hand might assist there. All but eleven of the 134 on board died. Had an emergency descent and landing anywhere been initiated earlier most would have walked off.

Old Smokey
28th Jan 2006, 02:26
There's a lot of good sensible discussion here on this very serious topic. Much has been discussed with respect to the difference between a cabin fire, which would primarily cause death through asphyxiation, and the structural fire, which would obviously cause death as a consequence of structural failure.

Irrespective of which type of uncontrollable fire that you face, history shows us that you have about 5 minutes to get the aircraft on the ground (or water), 10 minutes at the most.

One poster asked of the experiences of wartime crew, as a young F/O I flew with a great many ex Bomber Command Captains, and their universal consesnus was that with an uncontrollable fire, you have 5 minutes to get out. They could get out, we have to get down and get on.

As a young 'Sixties' F/O in Australia, our Ops Manuals all advised that in the event of uncontrollable fire, "Land at the nearest suitable airport". After the Ansett Winton disaster it was changed to "Land Immediately". As the years advanced, and people forgot the lessons of history, the words subtly changed back to a compromise, "Land as soon as possible". My own philosophy never changed, in the event of an UNCONTROLLABLE fire, I will land immediately.

To my mind, the only possibly survivable uncontrollable fire is for the pylon mounted engine, but, in the past, even those have burned back through the pylons into the wing structure. Does anyone have any manufacturer's information regarding the survivability of uncontrolled engine fires with pylon mounted engines on more modern aircraft such as the B747 and A340?

Regards,

Old Smokey

FougaMagister
29th Jan 2006, 15:54
Wartime crew-wise, I recall that the Randy Cunningham/Willie Driscoll crew of an F4J Phantom from US Navy fighter squadron VF-96 flew while on fire for several minutes and several dozen miles over North Vietnam on May 21, 1972 after being hit by an SA-2 SAM. Their point? Getting "feet wet" and being picked up by US, rather than N. Vietnamese, SAR. They eventually ejected when the Phantom lost all hydraulics. (They were also credited with three MIG kills in the previous minutes, making them the first aces of the Vietnam war).

On the opening day of the first Gulf War in Jan 1991, a French AF 11eme Escadre de Chasse Jaguar came all the way back from a raid on al Jaber air base in Kuwait to Saudi Arabia with part of the rear fuselage on fire, keeping the speed up on the one remaining engine so that the flames would not creep up the fuselage. He landed successfully at a USMC airfield (can't remember the name) in northern Saudi, where the fire crews put the fire out. The plane was reportedly a write-off - but not listed as a loss since it was brought back by its pilot.

Cheers

patrickal
30th Jan 2006, 03:16
There was a Federal Experess DC-10 which landed at Stewart Airport in Newburg, NY back in September of 1996. The aircraft was at cruise altitude (FL 330) travelling from Memphis to Boston when smoke alarms in the cockpit went off signalling a fire in the cargo area. It took about 19 minutes to get the plane on the ground, and the crew used the emergency egress cables to escape out of the cockpit windows. Fortunately there were no fatalities. Flames broke through the fuselage within a minute of them touching down. The plane burned itself in half on the runway. If they were airborne for just two more minutes, they probably would not have made it.

http://www.ntsb.gov/publictn/1998/AAR9803.pdf#search='dc10%20newburgh%20fire'

Ignition Override
30th Jan 2006, 03:32
Mr. Winterland: About that RAF Nimrod, is it true that a crewmember saw a the metal above some engine inlets glowing from the internal fire?
Some serious mistakes made onboard the Air Canada DC-9 were when a pilot reset a popped (lavatory motor) circuit breaker at least twice. This supposedly allowed an overload to trigger the fire.

How about an engine fire warning above 80-100 knots on the takeoff roll?
Would you abort at this speed, even if you took a glance and noticed all engines indicating full, stable thrust?

Do you brief that the non-flying pilot should quickly cancel the bell, especially if very loud?
This could be a very hot bleed air leak-but no fire.

Jonty
30th Jan 2006, 09:20
Mr. Winterland: About that RAF Nimrod, is it true that a crewmember saw a the metal above some engine inlets glowing from the internal fire?
Some serious mistakes made onboard the Air Canada DC-9 were when a pilot reset a popped (lavatory motor) circuit breaker at least twice. This supposedly allowed an overload to trigger the fire.
How about an engine fire warning above 80-100 knots on the takeoff roll?
Would you abort at this speed, even if you took a glance and noticed all engines indicating full, stable thrust?
Do you brief that the non-flying pilot should quickly cancel the bell, especially if very loud?
This could be a very hot bleed air leak-but no fire.
We brief on the B757 that: "....upto V1 we will stop for any fire warning, engine failure confirmed by 2 parameters, one of which should be on EICAS or anything which will effect the safety of the flt."
Below 400ft AGL one of the main actions of the PNF is to cancel any aural warning.
There was a fashion in our airline to brief that if we had a difficulty and got airborne then we could "teardrop" back on the the runway rather than going down wind. The then Fleet Manager had to put out an e-mail stating that this was not SOP and that we should not be briefing this. He then went on to say that the one of the only things that would scare him enough to make this maneuver would be an uncontained cabin fire. I tend to agree with him.
A stop at v1 with any fire warning is, IMHO, the safest thing to do. The fire brigade can only put it out if you put it on the ground!
We say that you have about 14min to but a burning aircraft on the ground, it could be longer, but it could be less!
As for what it could be, base your actions on what you KNOW not on what you THINK you might know.

petitfromage
30th Jan 2006, 10:41
Some very good discussion here...please keep it coming. My 2p worth:

1. ETOPS is irrelevant with an uncontrollable cabin/cargo fire. It takes alot longer to get down than you have a available, even if the perfect airport is right there waiting for (which is seldom the case, outside perhaps Europe or the USA)

2. The FEDEX guys getting down in 19mins from FL330 is incredible!

3. Dan Winterlands example of the RAF Nimrod sets the standard. These guys had 4 engines, and a wing route fire. There were less than 15nm from 'home' and the elected to ditch. The main-spar (I understand) was found to be already broken before the hit the water. In short, there would not have made it 'home'.

4. Fires double in size every 20 seconds (food for thought!!)

So the issue really becomes one of 'mindset'.

1. If a fire of any sort breaks out....it has to be all hands to the pump. You have no time. Are your Cabin Crew aware of just how serious it can be? They might not be time to don fire fighting equipment!

2. Are you prepared mentally to ditch or land on the nearest thing that resembles an airport and accepting (for the rest of your life) the consequences of that decision?

*****Because thats what you get paid the big bucks for......making the decisions; no matter how ugly

*Ref the Ethiopean ditching, the skipper was in fact being beaten on the top of his head, by a hijacker, with a bottle of booze at the time of the ditching. I think we can forgive him for not being perfectly wings level ;)

Critical_Al
31st Jan 2006, 21:09
The Nimrod that ditched in the Moray Firth had suffered a uncontained fire in the wing-root. The crew-member reporting on the fires progress informed the Captain of the upper wing panels peeling away with the fire and the decision was made to ditch only 3 minutes flying time from the nearest airfield. The weather was more or less perfect, with an almost flat calm sea and the aircraft ditched with power on. The Captain said that as the aircraft hit the water there was a violent deceleration and the nose plunged below the surface and everything went black! the aircraft then rose back up to the surface and daylight and then went back down again twice more. The aircraft came to a stop and floated for some time (20mins I believe) despite having broken its back. All the crew members escaped safely and stepped off the wing into the liferafts.
Clearly the calm sea conditions were a major factor in this positive outcome, also the highly trained crew (no pax!) wearing lifejackets and a lightweight jet.
Rightly, the Captain was decorated for his actions in saving his crew.

broadreach
1st Feb 2006, 19:47
Taken from http://www.bosee.com/aviation/videos/product-list/crm.html
quote

When a toilet fire started in an Air Canada DC9 at 33,000 feet, the captain assumed that it was minor and decided to continue the flight.

The on board fire went on to become so severe that the flight attendants had to relocate passengers away from thick black smoke at the rear of the aircraft, yet the decision to finally divert the aircraft was not made until 18 minutes after the first indication of the problem.

The aircraft eventually landed 13 minutes after declaring a full emergency, and the crew began to evacuate the passengers. However, 60 seconds after the evacuation started, a severe flash fire erupted, claiming the lives of 23 passengers.
unquote

CBC archives (http://archives.cbc.ca/IDC-1-73-1125-6190/politics_economy/air_canada/clip6) have a clip where the captain and 1st officer are interviewed.

Lastly, this from NTSB
quote
About 1903, eastern daylight time, while en route at flight level 330 (about 33,000 feet m.s.l), the cabin crew discovered smoke in the left aft lavatory. After attempting to extinguish the hidden fire and then contacting air traffic control (ATC) and declaring an emergency, the crew made an emergency descent and ATC vectored flight 797 to the Greater Cincinnati International Airport, Covington, Kentucky.

At 1920:09, eastern daylight time, Flight 797 landed on runway 27L at the Greater Cincinnati International Airport.
unquote

So. It would seem like 17 minutes from FL330 to landing. Unless the Bosee site is talking about a different aircraft, NOT the 31 minutes they imply.