N681FE

Substantial
None

Airbus Industrie A300-600FS/N: 799

Accident Details

Date
Tuesday, June 11, 2002
NTSB Number
FTW02LA198
Location
El Paso, TX
Event ID
20020702X01033
Coordinates
31.806667, -106.377777
Aircraft Damage
Substantial
Highest Injury
None
Fatalities
0
Serious Injuries
0
Minor Injuries
0
Uninjured
2
Total Aboard
2

Probable Cause and Findings

The flight crew's failure to obtain the Vr speed prior to rotation which resulted in insufficient lift and the subsequent tail strike.

Aircraft Information

Registration
Make
AIRBUS INDUSTRIE
Serial Number
799
Engine Type
Turbo-jet
Year Built
1999
Model / ICAO
A300-600F
Aircraft Type
Fixed Wing Multi Engine
No. of Engines
2
Seats
380
FAA Model
A300 F4-605R

Registered Owner (Current)

Name
FEDERAL EXPRESS CORPORATION
Address
3131 DEMOCRAT RD
City
MEMPHIS
State / Zip Code
TN 38118-1516
Country
United States

Analysis

HISTORY OF FLIGHT

On June 10, 2002, at 2130 mountain daylight time, an Airbus Industrie A300-600F, transport category airplane, N681FE, owned and operated as Flight 1255 by FedEx Express of Memphis, Tennessee, as a Title 14 CFR Part 121 cargo flight, experienced a tail strike during a rejected takeoff (RTO) at the El Paso International Airport (ELP), El Paso, Texas. The captain and first officer were not injured, and the airplane sustained substantial damage. Bright night visual meteorological conditions prevailed for the scheduled flight, and an instrument flight rules (IFR) flight plan was filed and activated. The flight was originating at the time of the accident,, with Memphis as their intended destination.

During a review of company records, the completed Pilot/Operator Aircraft Accident Report (NTSB Form 6120.1/2), flight crewmember statement, and interviews with company personnel following their safety debrief with the flight crewmembers, the following information was revealed. The captain was the pilot flying (PF), and the first officer was the non-flying pilot (PNF). The flight crew briefed a high (ELP elevation 3,958 feet msl), hot (approximately 90 degrees Fahrenheit), and heavy departure (TOGW 297,000 pounds; 375,880 MTOGW), as well as an engine-out departure procedure. The flight crew completed the taxi-out and pre-departure checklist without any anomalies and entered the V-speeds (V1 was 139 knots and Vr was approximately 143 knots.) into the flight management system (FMS). Both crewmember's primary flight display (PFD) displayed the V-speeds with the standard blue lines with no discrepancies noted. The PF entered the V2 speed (approximately 143 knots) into the flight control computer in the glare shield and entered 250 knots for the extended speed to 10,000 feet msl. The PNF did not recall being distracted during the checklist or before takeoff procedures. The flight crew requested and was cleared for departure on runway 04.

The PF aligned the airplane on the runway and applied standard take-off power. The fight instruments were cross-checked at 80 knots (PNF called out 80 knots) and the V-speeds were correctly displayed on the PFD. The PNF checked the engine diagnostic page to observe the #2 engine vibrations. According to the PNF, when he looked back at the PFD, the V-speeds were not displayed, and V2 had reset to 100 knots. According to company personnel, the PNF did not look at the speed index (correct raw speed data) on the left side of the PFD. The PNF called "V1 rotate," and the PF responded by establishing an aircraft pitch of approximately 12 degrees. The PF realized the airplane was not climbing or accelerating properly, and the PNF realized the airspeed was approximately 120-125 knots (below V2), called for the PF to lower the nose of the airplane. The captain [PF] lowered the nose, determined the best and safest course of action was to reject the take-off, and executed a rejected take-off by pulling the throttles to idle. The flight control computer automatically applied maximum auto brakes, the airplane slowed, and the PF taxied the airplane off the runway at high-speed taxiway P.

The safety debrief disclosed no evidence that would have prevented either flight crewmember from obtaining sufficient rest in the 72 hours before the flight. The PF stated that he had never operated a large transport aircraft at speeds well below V2 and was thinking a stall was imminent. According to company personnel, neither flight crewmember recalled the aft end of the airplane strike the runway.

FedEx maintenance personnel and the ARFF personnel observed two tires had deflated during the rejected takeoff. The airplane was taxied to the ramp for maintenance repairs. The flight crew deplaned, entered the discrepancy "rejected T/O due to FMS speeds dumping and blue A/S line rolling back to 100. Rejected @ 120 knots Raw data still indicated properly." in the Aircraft Maintenance Log (AML) and departed the airport.

Maintenance personnel at El Paso removed and replaced the #1 (serial number 98079908) and #2 (serial number 9902A147) FMC's, removed # 1, #2, #3, #4 wheel and tire assemblies, completed inspection of wheel brake assemblies and axels. Installed new #1 and #4 wheel and tire assembly, installed new #3 main tire, remove and replace #4 brake assembly, inspection left main landing gear. All maintenance was performed in accordance with A300-600 maintenance manual. At 2324 on June 10, 2002, the aircraft was released for service per MEL for newly installed FMS NAV data base out of currency.

Next morning, at about 0754, the first officer found evidence of a tail strike during the walk-around inspection. The FAA inspector, who responded to the accident site, and FedEx maintenance personnel found a 1/4 inch gash approximately 100 yards long with purple paint transfer (consistent with the aircraft paint) approximately 3,000 feet beyond the approach end of runway 04. Maintenance personnel removed the DFDR and CVR which were forwarded to the NTSB for readouts. During the on site examination of the aircraft, no discrepancies were found with the flight controls.

PERSONNEL INFORMATION

The captain (PF) held an airline transport pilot certificate with type ratings for the Airbus 310 and Boeing 727. The captain obtained his Airbus 310 type rating on April 15, 1996. His most recent FAA first-class medical certificate was issued on June 5, 2002.

During a review of company records, the completed Pilot/Operator Aircraft Accident record (NTSB 6120.1/2), and interviews with company personnel, the following information was revealed. The captain, hired in March 1978 by FedEx as a second officer on the DC8, was upgraded to first officer on the DC8 in February 1979, and second officer on the Boeing 747 in December 1980. He was upgraded to first officer on the Boeing 727 in May 1984, and captain on the Boeing 727 in April 1993. He has served as captain on the A300 since April 1996. He was current and qualified (ground, emergency, flight line) as captain for the CFR Part 121 flight. The captain's most recent recurrent ground and flight training was accomplished in May 2002 at the facilities of FedEx Express at Memphis, Tennessee. On October 12, 2001, the captain satisfactorily completed his most recent flight line check in the Airbus 300. He had accumulated a total of 3,545 hours of which 1,740 were in the Airbus 300. He had flown 41 and 106 hours in the past 30 days and 90 days, respectively.

The first officer (PNF) held an airline transport pilot certificate with a type rating for the DC9. His most recent first-class medical certificate was issued on April 17, 2002.

During a review of company records, the completed Pilot/Operator Aircraft Accident record (NTSB 6120.1/2), and interviews with company personnel, the following information was revealed. The first officer, hired in March 1996 by FedEx as a second officer on the Boeing 727, was upgraded to second officer on the DC10 in January 1997. He has served as first officer on the Airbus 300 since April 15, 1999. He was current and qualified (ground, emergency, line) to act as second-in-command of the Airbus 300 airplane for the CFR Part 121 flight. The first officer's most recent recurrent ground and flight training was accomplished in March 2002. He had accumulated 3,173 total flying hours of which 1,632 were in the Airbus 300. He had flown 41 and 106 hours in the past 30 days and 90 days, respectively.

AIRCRAFT INFORMATION

N681FE, an Airbus A300-600, serial number 799, was issued an airworthiness certificate on May 19, 1999. The airplane was configured to carry cargo and 2 flight crewmembers. The airplane was equipped with two General Electric, model CF6-80C2A5F engines (left S/N 705274, right S/N 705275) rated at 61,000 shaft horsepower for maximum continuous and normal takeoff. The last continuous airworthiness inspection was the A check performed on May 25, 2002, at the accumulated time of 4,627 hours, and 2,427 cycles. At the time of the tail strike, the airplane had accumulated 78 hours since the last A check.

The flight release weight and balance indicated the takeoff gross weight was 297,184 pounds. The takeoff center of gravity was 24.9 ( allowable range 18.1-35.3).

AERODROME INFORMATION

Runway 04/22 is an asphalt/grooved surfaced runway 12,010 feet long and 150 feet wide. Runway 04 elevation is 3,916.7 feet, and runway 22 elevation is 3,949.2 feet. Runway 04 (latitude 31 degrees 48.09 north; 093 degrees 49.36 west) is equipped with a 4-light precision approach path indicator (PAPI) with a 3.00 degree glide path, runway end identifier lights (REIL), and runway edge lights (high intensity).

FLIGHT RECORDERS

The DFDR recorder which was readout by the NTSB specialists revealed the following: (1) The airplane became airborne for about 4 seconds. During the takeoff roll, pitch attitude reached 13.4 degrees airplane nose up with control column position recorded as 7.1 degree aft and elevator position recorded as 16.6 degree trailing edge up. (2) Pitch attitude decreased and was approximately 6 degrees upon touchdown of the left and right main landing gear, at which time the airplane experienced a vertical acceleration of 1.844 g's. (3) Airspeed was recorded as 114 knots when the nose gear initially left the ground. Airspeed continued to increase and was recorded as 131 knots. Following touchdown of the nose landing gear, airspeed reached its maximum recorded value of 138 knots. (4) Engine 1 and engine 2 thrust reversers were briefly unlocked before both were unlocked again and remained in that state. (5) Longitudinal acceleration reached -0.584 g's and lateral acceleration reached -0.151 g's during the rejected takeoff sequence.

TEST AND RESEARCH

The Honeywell, Inc., Advanced Flight Management Computer (AFMC, part number 4052510-970) FMC-1 (serial nu...

Data Source

Data provided by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). For more information on this event, visit the NTSB Records Search website. NTSB# FTW02LA198