N629US

MINR
None

BOEING 747-200

Accident Details

Date
Saturday, September 25, 1993
NTSB Number
ANC93IA188
Location
ANCHORAGE, AK
Event ID
20001211X13284
Coordinates
61.109458, -149.899658
Aircraft Damage
MINR
Highest Injury
None
Fatalities
0
Serious Injuries
0
Minor Injuries
0
Uninjured
3
Total Aboard
3

Probable Cause and Findings

FOREIGN OBJECT DAMAGE TO THE COMPRESSOR FORWARD FAN ASSEMBLY AS A RESULT OF THE INGESTION OF A BIRD.

Aircraft Information

Registration
N629US
Make
BOEING
Engine Type
Turbo-jet
Year Built
1980
Model / ICAO
747-200 B742
Aircraft Type
Fixed Wing Multi Engine
No. of Engines
4

Registered Owner (Historical)

Name
KALITTA AIR LLC
Address
818 WILLOW RUN AIRPORT
Status
Deregistered
City
YPSILANTI
State / Zip Code
MI 48198-0899
Country
United States

Analysis

On September 25, 1993, at 0835, Alaska daylight time, a Boeing 747-200, N629US, experienced a partial power loss after it had ingested 28 ounce Gadwell duck into its number one engine during takeoff rotation at Anchorage International Airport. The pilot in command shut down the affected engine, dumped fuel and landed without further incident at 0911. The airplane was operated by Northwest Airlines on a regularly scheduled cargo flight to Tokyo as NW Flight 905, under 14 CFR Part 121, on an international IFR flight plan. Visual meteorological conditions existed. A flight crew of 3 were the only persons on board, and they were uninjured. Damage was limited to the number one engine and the event was classified as incident damage.

The pilot told NTSB and FAA investigators that while he noticed waterfowl in the area on taxi out, he did not see birds at the time he experienced the engine failure. The airplane reportedly weighed 752,000 pounds at takeoff and dumped 84,300 pounds of fuel while orbiting at the direction of ATC. The landing gross weight was approximately 628,000 pounds. Investigators found blood and material resembling feather parts in the number one engine inlet. Damage was seen to the rotor blades of the fan, inside and outside of the inlet cowl. The fiberglass spinner cone was destroyed. No wing or fuselage damage was seen.

The engine damage was examined by Northwest Airlines with the assistance of Pratt & Whitney. The NTSB was advised that failure was due to downstream ingestion of fiberglass spinner parts and pieces of first stage fan blades.

The NTSB investigator contacted Pratt & Whitney at East Hartford Connecticut. The powerplant investigator at P&W told the NTSB that there "were a limited amount of 10 ply fiberglass spinners out there." He said that "P&W was aware of about one inflight failure per year with these thin spinners from bird strikes." He also said that he and the FAA had discussed it and didn't feel that an AD (Airworthiness Directive) was necessary, but that they were watching the numbers (as an in-house study). He also said that these were being replaced with a newer model spinner that had 20 plys, and there were no known instances of inflight failure known.

The findings of the investigation were forwarded to the NTSB's Engineering Division ((AS-40). On October 4, 1993, the NTSB NW Field Office was advised that the Engineering Division was reviewing the information for possible safety recommendation activity.

Data Source

Data provided by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). For more information on this event, visit the NTSB Records Search website. NTSB# ANC93IA188