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McDonnell Douglas DC-9

The McDonnell Douglas DC-9 is an American five-abreast, single-aisle aircraft designed by the Douglas Aircraft Company. It was initially produced by the developer company as the Douglas DC-9 until August 1967 and then by McDonnell Douglas. After introducing its heavy DC-8 in 1959, Douglas approved the smaller, all-new DC-9 for shorter flights on April 8, 1963. The DC-9-10 first flew on February 25, 1965, and gained its type certificate on November 23, to enter service with Delta Air Lines on December 8. The aircraft has two rear-mounted Pratt & Whitney JT8D low-bypass turbofans under a T-tail for a cleaner wing aerodynamic, a two-person flight deck, and built-in airstairs.

DC-9
A Northwest Airlines DC-9-31
Role Narrow-body jet airliner
National origin United States
Manufacturer Douglas Aircraft Company
McDonnell Douglas (from Aug. 1967)
First flight February 25, 1965
Introduction December 8, 1965, with Delta Air Lines
Status In limited service for cargo transport
Primary users USA Jet Airlines
Aeronaves TSM
Everts Air Cargo
Northwest Airlines (historical)
Produced 1965–1982
Number built 976
Variants McDonnell Douglas C-9
Developed into McDonnell Douglas MD-80
McDonnell Douglas MD-90
Boeing 717

The Series 10s are 104 ft (32 m) long for typically 90 coach seats. The Series 30, stretched by 15 ft (4.5 m) to seat 115 in economy, has a larger wing and more powerful engines for a higher maximum takeoff weight (MTOW); it first flew in August 1966 and entered service in February 1967. The Series 20 has the Series 10 fuselage, more powerful engines, and the Series 30's improved wings; it first flew in September 1968 and entered service in January 1969. The Series 40 was further lengthened by 6 ft (2 m) for 125 passengers, and the final DC-9-50 series first flew in 1974, stretched again by 8 ft (2.5 m) for 135 passengers. When deliveries ended in October 1982, 976 had been built. Smaller variants competed with the BAC One-Eleven, Fokker F28, and Sud Aviation Caravelle, and larger ones with the original Boeing 737.

The original DC-9 was followed by the second generation in 1980, the MD-80 series, a lengthened DC-9-50 with a larger wing and a higher MTOW. This was further developed into the third generation, the MD-90, in the early 1990s,, as the body was stretched again, fitted with V2500 high-bypass turbofans, and an updated flight deck. The shorter and final version, the MD-95, was renamed the Boeing 717 after McDonnell Douglas's merger with Boeing in 1997; it is powered by Rolls-Royce BR715 engines. The DC-9 family was produced between 1965 and 2006 with a total delivery of 2441 units: 976 DC-9s, 1191 MD-80s, 116 MD-90s, and 155 Boeing 717s. As of August 2022, 250 aircraft remain in service: 31 DC-9s (freighter), 116 MD-80s (mainly freighter), and 103 Boeing 717s (passenger), while the MD-90 was retired without freighter conversion.

Development

Origins

During the 1950s, Douglas Aircraft studied a short- to medium-range airliner to complement their high-capacity, long-range DC-8. (DC stands for Douglas Commercial.)[1] A medium-range, four-engined Model 2067 was studied, but it did not receive enough interest from airlines and it was abandoned. In 1960, Douglas signed a two-year contract with Sud Aviation for technical cooperation. Douglas would market and support the Sud Aviation Caravelle and produce a licensed version if airlines ordered large numbers. None were ordered and Douglas returned to its design studies after the co-operation deal expired.[2]

In 1962, design studies were underway. The first version seated 63 passengers and had a gross weight of 69,000 lb (31,300 kg). This design was changed into what would be the initial DC-9 variant.[2] Douglas gave approval to produce the DC-9 on April 8, 1963.[2] Unlike the competing but larger Boeing 727 trijet, which used as many 707 components as possible, the DC-9 was an all-new design.

Entry into service

 
The DC-9 entered service with Delta Air Lines on December 8, 1965.

The first DC-9, a production model, flew on February 25, 1965.[3] The second DC-9 flew a few weeks later,[4] with a test fleet of five aircraft flying by July. This allowed the initial Series 10 to gain airworthiness certification on November 23, 1965, and to enter service with Delta Air Lines on December 8.[3] The DC-9 was always intended to be available in multiple versions to suit customer requirements;[5] the first stretched version, the Series 30, with a longer fuselage and extended wing tips, flew on August 1, 1966, entering service with Eastern Air Lines in 1967.[3] The initial Series 10 was followed by the improved -20, -30, and -40 variants. The final DC-9 series was the -50, which first flew in 1974.[4]

Production

The DC-9 series, the first generation of the DC-9 family, was a commercial success for the manufacturer. It was produced on the final assembly line in Long Beach, California, beginning in 1965, and later was on a common line with the second generation of the DC-9 family, the MD-80, with which it shares its line number sequence. After the delivery of 976 DC-9s and 108 MD-80s, McDonnell Douglas stopped DC-9 series production in December 1982,[4]

The DC-9 family is one of the longest-lasting aircraft in production and operation. Its last family member, the Boeing 717, was produced until 2006. The DC-9 family was produced in total 2441 units: 976 DC-9s (first generation), 1191 MD-80s (second generation), 116 MD-90s, and 155 Boeing 717s (third generation).[6] This compared to 2,970 Airbus A320s and 5,270 Boeing 737s delivered as of 2006.[7][8]

Enhancement studies

Studies aimed at further improving DC-9 fuel efficiency, by means of retrofitted wingtips of various types, were undertaken by McDonnell Douglas, but these did not demonstrate significant benefits, especially with existing fleets shrinking. The wing design makes retrofitting difficult.[9] Between 1973 and 1975, McDonnell Douglas studied the possibility of replacing engines on the DC-9 with the JT8D-109 turbofan, a quieter and more efficient variant of the JT8D. This progressed to the flight-test stage, and tests achieved noise reduction between 8 and 9 decibels depending on the phase of flight.[10][11] No further aircraft were modified, and the test aircraft was re-equipped with standard JT8D-9s prior to delivery to its airline customer.

Further developments (DC-9 family)

Two further developments of the original or first generation DC-9 series used the new designation with McDonnell Douglas initials (MD- prefix) followed by the year of development. The first derivative or second generation was the MD-80 series and the second derivative or third generation was the MD-90 series. Together, they formed the DC-9 family of 12 aircraft members (variants), and if the DC-9- designation were retained, the family members would be: First generation (Series 10, Series 20, Series 30, Series 40, and Series 50), second generation (Series 81, Series 82, Series 83, Series 87, and Series 88), and third generation (Series 90 and Series 95).

Second generation (MD-80 series)

The original DC-9 series was followed in 1980 by the introduction of the second generation of the DC-9 family, the MD-80 series. This was originally called the DC-9-80 (short Series 80 and later stylized Super 80). It was a lengthened DC-9-50 with a higher maximum takeoff weight (MTOW), a larger wing, new main landing gear, and higher fuel capacity. The MD-80 series features a number of variants of the Pratt & Whitney JT8D turbofan engine having higher thrust ratings than those available on the original DC-9 series. The MD-80 series includes the MD-81, MD-82, MD-83, MD-88, and shortest variant, the MD-87.

Third generation (MD-90 series)

MD-90

The MD-80 series was further developed into the third generation, the MD-90 series, in the early 1990s. It has yet another fuselage stretch, an electronic flight instrument system (first introduced on the MD-88), and completely new International Aero V2500 high-bypass turbofan engines. In comparison to the very successful MD-80, relatively few MD-90s were built.

Boeing 717 (MD-95)

The shorter and final variant, the MD-95, was renamed the Boeing 717 after McDonnell Douglas's merger with Boeing in 1997 and before aircraft deliveries began. The fuselage length and wing are very similar to those of the DC-9-30, but much use was made of lighter, modern materials. Power is supplied by two BMW/Rolls-Royce BR715 high-bypass turbofan engines.

Comac ARJ21

China's Comac ARJ21 is derived from the DC-9 family. The ARJ21 is built with manufacturing tooling from the MD-90 Trunkliner program. As a consequence, it has the same fuselage cross-section, nose profile, and tail.[12]

Design

 
A DC-9's two-person flight deck
 
Five-abreast seating (economy class) on a DC-9

The DC-9 has two rear-mounted Pratt & Whitney JT8D turbofan engines, relatively small, efficient wings, and a T-tail.[4] The DC-9's takeoff weight was limited to 80,000 lb (36,300 kg) for a two-person flight crew by the then-Federal Aviation Agency regulations at the time.[2] DC-9 aircraft have five seats across for economy seating. The airplane seats 80 to 135 passengers, depending on version and seating arrangement.

The DC-9 was designed for short to medium routes, often to smaller airports with shorter runways and less ground infrastructure than the major airports being served by larger designs like the Boeing 707 and Douglas DC-8. Accessibility and short-field characteristics were needed. Turnarounds were simplified by built-in airstairs, including one in the tail, which shortened boarding and deplaning times.

The tail-mounted engine design facilitated a clean wing without engine pods, which had numerous advantages. For example, flaps could be longer, unimpeded by pods on the leading edge and engine-blast concerns on the trailing edge. This simplified design improved airflow at low speeds and enabled lower takeoff and approach speeds, thus lowering field length requirements and keeping wing structure light. The second advantage of the tail-mounted engines was the reduction in foreign object damage from ingested debris from runways and aprons, but with this position, the engines could ingest ice streaming off the wing roots. Third, the absence of engines in underslung pods allowed a reduction in fuselage ground clearance, making the aircraft more accessible to baggage handlers and passengers.

The problem of deep stalling, revealed by the loss of the BAC One-Eleven prototype in 1963, was overcome through various changes, including the introduction of vortilons, small surfaces beneath the wings' leading edges used to control airflow and increase low-speed lift.[13]

Variants

The DC-9 series, the first generation of the DC-9 family, includes five members or variants and 10 subvariants, which are the production versions (types). Their designations use the Series (DC-9-) prefix followed by a two-digit numbering with the same first digit and the second digit being a zero for variant names and a nonzero for version/type designations. The first variant, Series 10 (DC-9-10), has four versions (Series 11, Series 12, Series 14 and Series 15); the second variant, Series 20, has one version (Series 21); the third variant, Series 30, has four versions (Series 31, Series 32, Series 33 and Series 34); the fourth variant, Series 40, has one version (Series 41); and the fifth or final variant, Series 50, has one version (Series 51).

Series 10

Subvariant Series 11, Series 12, Series 14, Series 15

The original DC-9 (later designated the Series 10) was the smallest DC-9 variant. The -10 was 104.4 ft (31.8 m) long and had a maximum weight of 82,000 lb (37,000 kg). The Series 10 was similar in size and configuration to the BAC One-Eleven and featured a T-tail and rear-mounted engines. Power was provided by a pair of 12,500 lbf (56 kN) Pratt & Whitney JT8D-5 or 14,000 lbf (62 kN) JT8D-7 engines. A total of 137 were built. Delta Air Lines was the initial operator.

The Series 10 was produced in two main subvariants, the Series 14 and 15, although, of the first four aircraft, three were built as Series 11s and one as Series 12. These were later converted to Series 14 standard. No Series 13 was produced. A passenger/cargo version of the aircraft, with a 136-by-81-inch (3.5 by 2.1 m) side cargo door forward of the wing and a reinforced cabin floor, was certificated on March 1, 1967. Cargo versions included the Series 15MC (minimum change) with folding seats that can be carried in the rear of the aircraft, and the Series 15RC (rapid change) with seats removable on pallets. These differences disappeared over the years as new interiors were installed.[14][15]

The Series 10 was unique in the DC-9 family in not having leading-edge slats. The Series 10 was designed to have short takeoff and landing distances without the use of leading-edge high-lift devices. Therefore, the wing design of the Series 10 featured airfoils with extremely high maximum-lift capability to obtain the low stalling speeds necessary for short-field performance.[16]

Series 10 features

The Series 10 has an overall length of 104.4 feet (31.82 m), a fuselage length of 92.1 feet (28.07 m), a passenger-cabin length of 60 feet (18.29 m), and a wingspan of 89.4 feet (27.25 m).

The Series 10 was offered with the 14,000 lbf (62 kN)-thrust JT8D-1 and JT8D-7.[14][15] All versions of the DC-9 are equipped with an AlliedSignal (Garrett) GTCP85 APU, located in the aft fuselage.[14][15] The Series 10, as with all later versions of the DC-9, is equipped with a two-crew analog flightdeck.[14][15]

The Series 14 was originally certificated with an MTOW of 85,700 lb (38,900 kg), but subsequent options offered increases to 86,300 and 90,700 lb (41,100 kg). The aircraft's MLW in all cases is 81,700 lb (37,100 kg). The Series 14 has a fuel capacity of 3,693 US gallons (with the 907 US gal centre section fuel). The Series 15, certificated on January 21, 1966, is physically identical to the Series 14 but has an increased MTOW of 90,700 lb (41,100 kg). Typical range with 50 passengers and baggage is 950 nmi (1,760 km), increasing to 1,278 nmi (2,367 km) at long-range cruise. Range with maximum payload is 600 nmi (1,100 km), increasing to 1,450 nmi (2,690 km) with full fuel.[14][15]

The aircraft is fitted with a passenger door in the port forward fuselage, and a service door/emergency exit is installed opposite. An airstair installed below the front passenger door was available as an option as was an airstair in the tailcone. This also doubled as an emergency exit. Available with either two or four overwing exits, the DC-9-10 can seat up to a maximum certified exit limit of 109 passengers. Typical all-economy layout is 90 passengers, and 72 passengers in a more typical mixed-class layout with 12 first and 60 economy-class passengers.[14][15]

All versions of the DC-9 are equipped with a tricycle undercarriage, featuring a twin nose unit and twin main units.[14][15]

Series 20

Subvariant Series 21

The Series 20 was designed to satisfy a Scandinavian Airlines request for improved short-field performance by using the more-powerful engines and improved wings of the -30 combined with the shorter fuselage used in the -10. Ten Series 20 aircraft were produced, all as the Model -21.[17] The -21 had slats and stairs at the rear of plane.[citation needed]

In 1969, a DC-9 Series 20 at Long Beach was fitted with an Elliott Flight Automation Head-up display by McDonnell Douglas and used for successful three-month-long trials with pilots from various airlines, the Federal Aviation Administration, and the US Air Force.[18]

Series 20 features

The Series 20 has an overall length of 104.4 feet (31.82 m), a fuselage length of 92.1 feet (28.07 m), a passenger-cabin length of 60 feet (18.29 m), and a wingspan of 93.3 feet (28.44 m).[14][15] The DC-9 Series 20 is powered by the 15,000 lbf (67 kN) thrust JT8D-11 engine.[14][15]

The Series 20 was originally certificated at an MTOW of 94,500 lb (42,900 kg) but this was increased to 98,000 lb (44,000 kg), eight percent more than on the higher weight Series 14s and 15s. The aircraft's MLW is 95,300 lb (43,200 kg) and MZFW is 84,000 lb (38,000 kg). Typical range with maximum payload is 1,000 nmi (1,900 km), increasing to 1,450 nmi (2,690 km) with maximum fuel. The Series 20, using the same wing as the Series 30, 40 and 50, has a slightly lower basic fuel capacity than the Series 10 (3,679 US gallons).[14][15]

Series 20 milestones
  • First flight: September 18, 1968.
  • FAA certification: November 25, 1968.
  • First delivery: December 11, 1968, to Scandinavian Airlines System (SAS)
  • Entry into service: January 27, 1969, with SAS.
  • Last delivery: May 1, 1969, to SAS.

Series 30

 
USAir DC-9-31
Subvariant Series 31, Series 32, Series 33, Series 34

The Series 30 was produced to counter Boeing's 737 twinjet; 662 were built, about 60% of the total. The -30 entered service with Eastern Airlines in February 1967 with a 14 ft 9 in (4.50 m) fuselage stretch, wingspan increased by just over 3 ft (0.9 m) and full-span leading edge slats, improving takeoff and landing performance. Maximum takeoff weight was typically 110,000 lb (50,000 kg). Engines for Models -31, -32, -33, and -34 included the P&W JT8D-7 and JT8D-9 rated at 14,500 lbf (64 kN) of thrust, or JT8D-11 with 15,000 lbf (67 kN).

Unlike the Series 10, the Series 30 had leading-edge devices to reduce the landing speeds at higher landing weights; full-span slats reduced approach speeds by six knots despite 5,000 lb greater weight. The slats were lighter than slotted Krueger flaps, since the structure associated with the slat is a more efficient torque box than the structure associated with the slotted Krueger. The wing had a six-percent increase in chord, all ahead of the front spar, allowing the 15 percent chord slat to be incorporated.[19]

Series 30 versions

The Series 30 was built in four main sub-variants.[14][15]

  • DC-9-31: Produced in passenger version only. The first DC-9 Series 30 flew on August 1, 1966, and the first delivery was to Eastern Airlines on February 27, 1967, after certification on December 19, 1966. Basic MTOW of 98,000 lb (44,000 kg) and subsequently certificated at weights up to 108,000 lb (49,000 kg).
  • DC-9-32: Introduced in the first year (1967). Certificated March 1, 1967. Basic MTOW of 108,000 lb (49,000 kg) later increased to 110,000 lb (50,000 kg). A number of cargo versions of the Series 32 were also produced:
    • 32LWF (Light Weight Freight) with modified cabin but no cargo door or reinforced floor, intended for package freighter use.
    • 32CF (Convertible Freighter), with a reinforced floor but retaining passenger facilities
    • 32AF (All Freight), a windowless all-cargo aircraft.
  • DC-9-33: Following the Series 31 and 32 came the Series 33 for passenger/cargo or all-cargo use. Certificated on April 15, 1968, the aircraft's MTOW was 114,000 lb (52,000 kg), MLW to 102,000 lb (46,000 kg) and MZFW to 95,500 lb (43,300 kg). JT8D-9 or -11 (15,000 lbf (67 kN) thrust) engines were used. Wing incidence was increased 1.25 degrees to reduce cruise drag.[20] Only 22 were built, as All Freight (AF), Convertible Freight (CF) and Rapid Change (RC) aircraft.
  • DC-9-34: The last variant was the Series 34, intended for longer range with an MTOW of 121,000 lb (55,000 kg), an MLW of 110,000 lb (50,000 kg) and an MZFW of 98,000 lb (44,000 kg). The DC-9-34CF (Convertible Freighter) was certificated April 20, 1976, while the passenger followed on November 3, 1976. The aircraft has the more powerful JT8D-9s with the -15 and -17 engines as an option. It had the wing incidence change introduced on the DC-9-33. Twelve were built, five as convertible freighters.
Series 30 features

The DC-9-30 was offered with a selection of variants of JT8D including the -1, -7, -9, -11, -15. and -17. The most common on the Series 31 is the JT8D-7 (14,000 lbf (62 kN) thrust), although it was also available with the −9 and -17 engines. On the Series 32 the JT8D-9 (14,500 lbf (64 kN) thrust) was standard, with the -11 also offered. The Series 33 was offered with the JT8D-9 or -11 (15,000 lbf (67 kN) thrust) engines and the heavyweight -34 with the JT8D-9, -15 (15,000 lbf (67 kN) thrust) or -17 (16,000 lbf (71 kN) thrust) engines.[14][15]

Series 40

Subvariant Series 41

The DC-9-40 is a further lengthened version. With a 6 ft 6 in (2 m) longer fuselage, accommodation was up to 125 passengers. The Series 40 was fitted with Pratt & Whitney engines with thrust of 14,500 to 16,000 lbf (64 to 71 kN). A total of 71 were produced. The variant first entered service with Scandinavian Airlines System (SAS) in March 1968. Its unit cost was US$5.2 million (1972)[21] (equivalent to US$25.92 million in 2021)[22] .

Series 50

 
DC-9-51 of Swissair
Subvariant Series 51

The Series 50 was the largest version of the DC-9 to enter airline service. It features an 8 ft 2 in (2.49 m) fuselage stretch and seats up to 139 passengers. It entered revenue service in August 1975 with Eastern Airlines and included a number of detail improvements, a new cabin interior, and more powerful JT8D-15 or -17 engines in the 16,000 and 16,500 lbf (71 and 73 kN) class. McDonnell Douglas delivered 96, all as the Model -51. Some visual cues to distinguish this version from other DC-9 variants include side strakes or fins below the side cockpit windows, spray deflectors on the nose gear, and thrust reversers angled inward 17 degrees as compared to the original configuration. The thrust reverser modification was developed by Air Canada for its earlier aircraft, and adopted by McDonnell Douglas as a standard feature on the series 50. It was also applied to many earlier DC-9s in the course of regular maintenance.[23]

Military and government

Operators

 

A total of 31 DC-9 series, freighter variant, were in service as of August 2022.[24] Operators include Aeronaves TSM (11), USA Jet Airlines (6), Everts Air Cargo (4), Ameristar Charters (4) and other operators with fewer aircraft.[25][26]

After acquiring Northwest Airlines, Delta Air Lines operated a fleet of DC-9 aircraft, most of which were over 30 years old at the time. With severe increases in fuel prices in the summer of 2008, Northwest Airlines began retiring its DC-9s, switching to Airbus A319s that are 27% more fuel efficient.[27][28] As the Northwest/Delta merger progressed, Delta returned several stored DC-9s to service. Delta Air Lines made its last DC-9 commercial flight from Minneapolis/St. Paul to Atlanta on January 6, 2014, with the flight number DL2014.[29][30]

With the existing DC-9 fleet shrinking, modifications do not appear to be likely to occur, especially since the wing design makes retrofitting difficult.[9] DC-9s are therefore likely to be further replaced in service by newer airliners such as Boeing 737, Airbus A320, Embraer E-Jets, and the Bombardier CSeries.[31]

One ex-SAS DC-9-21 is operated as a skydiving jump platform at Perris Valley Airport in Perris, California. With the steps on the ventral stairs removed, it is the only airline transport class jet certified to date by the FAA for skydiving operations as of 2016.[32]

Deliveries

Deliveries[33]
Type Total 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977 1976 1975 1974 1973 1972 1971 1970 1969 1968 1967 1966 1965
DC-9-10 113 10 29 69 5
DC-9-10C 24 4 20
DC-9-20 10 9 1
DC-9-30 585 8 10 13 24 - 1 12 16 21 21 17 42 41 97 161 101
DC-9-30C 30 1 - 6 - - - 4 1 3 5 7 3
DC-9-30F 6 4 2
DC-9-40 71 5 6 3 2 4 27 - 3 2 7 2 10
DC-9-50 96 5 5 10 15 18 28 15
C-9A 21 8 1 - 5 7
C-9B 17 2 1 - - - - 2 4 - 8
VC-9C 3 3
DC-9 series 976 10 16 18 39 22 22 50 42 48 29 32 46 51 122 202 153 69 5

Accidents and incidents

As of June 2022, the DC-9 family aircraft has been involved in 276 major aviation accidents and incidents, including 156 hull-losses, with 3,697 fatalities combined (all generations of family members) = (1st gen., DC-9 series): 107 hull-losses & 2,250 fatalities + (2nd gen., MD-80 series): 46 hull-losses & 1,446 fatalities + (3rd gen., MD-90 series including Boeing 717): 3 hull-losses & 1 fatality.[34][35]

Accidents with fatalities

 
Itavia DC-9 (I-TIGI) was destroyed in an accident at Ustica. Shown in the "Museo della Memoria" opened in Bologna in 2007.
  • On June 27, 1980, Itavia Flight 870, a DC-9-15, broke up mid-air and crashed into the sea near the Italian island of Ustica. All 81 people on board were killed. The cause has been the subject of a decades-long controversy, with either a terrorist bomb on board or an accidental shootdown during a military operation blamed for the accident.
  • On July 27, 1981, Aeroméxico Flight 230, a DC-9 ran off the runway in Chihuahua. Thirty passengers and two crew of the 66 on board were killed. Bad weather and pilot error were the causes of the accident.
  • On June 2, 1983, Air Canada Flight 797, a DC-9 experienced an electrical fire in the aft lavatory during flight, resulting in an emergency landing at Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport. During evacuation, the sudden influx of oxygen caused a flash fire throughout the cabin, resulting in the deaths of 23 of the 41 passengers, including Canadian folk singer Stan Rogers. All five crew members survived.
  • On December 7, 1983, the Madrid runway disaster took place where a departing Iberia Boeing 727 struck an Aviaco Douglas DC-9 causing the death of 93 passengers and crew. All 42 passengers and crew on board the DC-9 were killed.
  • On September 6, 1985, Midwest Express Airlines Flight 105, operated with a DC-9-14, crashed just after takeoff from General Mitchell International Airport in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The crash was caused by improper control inputs by the flight crew after the number 2 engine failed, and all 31 aboard were killed.
  • On August 31, 1986, Aeroméxico Flight 498 collided in mid-air with a Piper Cherokee over the city of Cerritos, California, then crashed into the city, killing all 64 aboard the aircraft, 15 people on the ground, and all three in the small plane.
  • On April 4, 1987, Garuda Indonesia Flight 035, a DC-9-32, hit a pylon and crashed on approach to Polonia International Airport in bad weather with 24 fatalities.[53]
  • On November 15, 1987, Continental Airlines Flight 1713, a DC-9-14, crashed on takeoff from Stapleton International Airport in bad weather with 28 fatalities. This accident was attributed to a combination of confusion at the ATC, exceeding allowed time-limit for takeoff after de-icing the wings, and inexperienced crew.
  • On November 14, 1990, Alitalia Flight 404, a DC-9-32, crashed into a hillside on approach to Zurich Airport, killing all 46 persons on board. The crash was caused by a short circuit, which led to a failure of the aircraft's NAV receiver and GPWS system.
  • On December 3, 1990, Northwest Airlines Flight 1482, a DC-9-14, taxied onto the wrong taxiway in dense fog at Detroit-Metropolitan Wayne County Airport, Michigan. It entered the active runway instead of the taxiway instructed by air traffic controllers. It was then struck by a departing Boeing 727. Nine people were killed.[54][55]
  • On March 5, 1991, Aeropostal Alas de Venezuela Flight 108, a DC-9-32, crashed into a mountainside in Trujillo State, Venezuela, killing all 40 passengers and five crew aboard.[56]
  • On July 2, 1994, USAir Flight 1016, DC-9-31 N954VJ crashed in Charlotte, North Carolina, while performing a go-around because of heavy storms and wind shear at the approach of runway 18R. There were 37 fatalities and 15 injured among the passengers and crew. Although the airplane came to rest in a residential area with the tail section striking a house, there were no fatalities or injuries on the ground.
  • On May 11, 1996, ValuJet Flight 592, DC-9-32 N904VJ crashed in the Florida Everglades due to a fire caused by the activation of chemical oxygen generators illegally stored in the hold. The fire damaged the plane's electrical system and eventually overcame the crew, resulting in the deaths of all 110 people on board.
  • On October 10, 1997 (1997-10-10), Austral Flight 2553, a DC-9-32 registration LV-WEG, en route from Posadas to Buenos Aires, crashed near Fray Bentos, Uruguay, killing all 69 passengers and five crew on board.[57]
  • On February 2, 1998, Cebu Pacific Flight 387, a DC-9-32 RP-C1507 crashed on the slopes of Mount Sumagaya in Misamis Oriental, Philippines, killing all 104 passengers and crew on board. Aviation investigators deemed the incident to be caused by pilot error when the plane made a non-regular stopover to Tacloban.
  • On November 9, 1999, TAESA Flight 725 crashed a few minutes after leaving Uruapan International Airport en route to Mexico City. 18 people were killed in the accident.[58]
  • On 10 December 2005, Sosoliso Airlines Flight 1145 from Abuja crash-landed at Port Harcourt International Airport, Nigeria. There were 108 fatalities and two survivors.[59]
  • On April 15, 2008, Hewa Bora Airways Flight 122 crashed into a residential neighborhood, in the Goma, Democratic Republic of the Congo,[60] resulting in the deaths of at least 44 people.[61]
  • On July 6, 2008, USA Jet Airlines Flight 199, a DC-9-15F, crashed on approach to Saltillo, Mexico, after a flight from Shreveport, Louisiana. The captain died and first officer was seriously injured.[62]

Hull losses

  • On November 27, 1973, Eastern Airlines Flight 300, a DC-9-31, landed too far down the runway at Akron-Canton Airport in light rain and fog and ran off the end of the runway over an embankment and the aircraft was severely damaged and written off. All 21 passengers and 5 crew survived with various injuries.[63]
  • On April 18, 1993, Japan Air System Flight 451, a DC-9-41 JA8448 crashed while landing at Hanamaki Airport in Japan. There were 19 injuries, though all 77 aboard survived. The aircraft was written off.[64]
  • On October 6, 2000, Aeroméxico Flight 250, a DC-9-31 en route from Mexico City to Reynosa, Mexico, could not stop at the end of the runway and crashed into houses and fell into a small canal. Four people on the ground were killed. None of 83 passengers and 5 crew members were killed. The DC-9 was heavily damaged and classified as a loss. The runway had seen heavy rainfall as a result of Hurricane Keith.[65]

Aircraft on display

 
President of Italy Sandro Pertini and members of the Italian national soccer team aboard MM62012 after their win at the 1982 World Cup
Canada
CF-TLL (cn 47021) – DC-9-32 on static display at the Canada Aviation and Space Museum in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.[66] It was previously operated by Air Canada.[67]
Indonesia
PK-GNC (cn 47481) – DC-9-32 painted in Garuda Indonesia's 1960s livery and put on display inside GMF hangar in Soekarno-Hatta Airport.[68][69]
PK-GNT (cn 47790) – DC-9-32 on static display at the Transportation Museum in Taman Mini Indonesia Indah in Jakarta, Indonesia.[70] It was relegated to display status after suffering heavy damage in a landing accident in 1993.[71] It was previously operated by Garuda Indonesia.[72]
Italy
MM62012 (cn 47595) – DC-9-32 on static display at Volandia in Somma Lombardo, Varese. This aircraft was operated by the Italian Air Force as a VIP transport, carrying the president of Italy among other duties.[73][74][75]
Netherlands
N292L (cn 47174) – DC-9-32 nose section displayed inside Schiphol International Airport. Painted in KLM livery although the plane never served with the airline. It was previously used by TWA and Delta Airlines.[76][77]
Mexico
XA-JEB – Ex Aeromexico DC-9-32 on display at a park in Cadereyta de Montes, Querétaro, Mexico. Formerly Hugh Hefner's private jet, the 'Big Bunny', XA-JEB was sold in 1975 to Venezuela Airlines, who later sold it to Aeromexico, where it was operated until 2004. It was sold and placed on display in 2008 for use as an educational tool.[78]
"N942ML" – with painted registration "XA-SFE" is found on the second floor of the Luxury shopping mall "Centro Comercial Santa Fe" in the business district of Mexico City. It is on on display with an Interjet livery for the Kidzania brand.[79]
"N606NW" – with painted registration "XA-MEX" can be found in Cuicuilo Plaza at the south of the city. Similar to "XA-SFE", it wears an Interjet Livery for the Kidzania brand.[80]
Spain
 
Preserved front section at Elder Museum, Canary Islands
EC-BQZ (cn 47456) – DC-9-32 on static display at Adolfo Suárez Madrid–Barajas Airport in Madrid.[81]
EC-DGB – DC-9-34 front section only preserved at Elder Museum of Science and Technology, Gran Canaria.[82]
United States
N675MC (cn 47651) – DC-9-51 on static display at the Delta Flight Museum at Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport in Atlanta, Georgia.[83] It arrived at the museum on 27 April 2014.[84] It was previously operated by Delta Air Lines.[85]
N779NC (cn 48101) – DC-9-51 was on static display at the Carolinas Aviation Museum at Charlotte Douglas International Airport in Charlotte, North Carolina, until it was scrapped in January 2017.[86][87] Its ferry flight to Charlotte was the last scheduled passenger DC-9 flight in the United States.[88] It was previously operated by Delta Air Lines.[89]

Specifications

DC-9 airplane characteristics[90]
Variant -15 -21 -32 -41 -51
Cockpit crew[91]: 66  Two
1-class seating: 15–18  90Y@31-32" 115Y@31-33" 125@31-34" 135@32-33"
Exit limit[91]: 80  109 127 128 139
Cargo: 4  600 ft³ / 17.0m³[a] 895 ft³ / 25.3m³[b] 1,019 ft³ / 28.9m³ 1,174 ft³ / 33.2m³
Length: 5–9  104 ft 4.8in / 31.82 m 119 ft 3.6 in / 36.36 m 125 ft 7.2 in / 38.28 m 133 ft 7 in / 40.72m
Wingspan: 10–14  89 ft 4.8 in / 27.25 m 93 ft 3.6 in / 28.44 m 93 ft 4.2 in / 28.45 m
Height: 10–14  27 ft 7 in / 8.4 m 27 ft 9 in / 8.5 m 28 ft 5 in / 8.7 m 28 ft 9 in / 8.8 m
Width 131.6 in / 334.3 cm Fuselage,: 23  122.4 in / 311 cm Cabin: 24 
Max. takeoff wt.: 4  90,700 lb / 41,141 kg 98,000 lb / 45,359 kg 108,000 lb / 48,988 kg 114,000 lb / 51,710 kg 121,000 lb / 54,885 kg
Empty: 4  49,162 lb / 22,300 kg[a] 52,644 lb / 23,879 kg 56,855 lb / 25,789 kg[b] 61,335 lb / 27,821 kg 64,675 lb / 29,336 kg
Fuel: 4  24,743 lb / 11,223 kg 24,649 lb / 11,181 kg
Engine (2×)[91] JT8D-1/5/7/9/11/15/17 -9/11 -1/5/7/9/11/15/17 -9/11/15/17 -15/17
Thrust (2×)[91] -1/7: 14,000 lbf (62 kN), -5/-9: 12,250 lbf (54.5 kN), -11: 15,000 lbf (67 kN), -15: 15,500 lbf (69 kN), -17: 16,000 lbf (71 kN)
Ceiling[91]: 67  35,000 ft (11,000 m)
MMo[91] Mach 0.84 (484 kn; 897 km/h)
Range: 36–45  1,300 nmi (2,400 km) 1,500 nmi (2,800 km) 1,500 nmi (2,800 km) 1,200 nmi (2,200 km) 1,300 nmi (2,400 km)
  1. ^ a b -15F Cargo: 2,762 ft³ / 78.2m³, Empty: 53,200 lb / 24,131 kg
  2. ^ a b -33F Cargo: 4,195 ft³ / 119.0m³, Empty: 56,430 lb / 25,596 kg
 
Comparison of McDonnell Douglas DC-9, Boeing 717, and different McDonnell Douglas MD-80 derivatives

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References

Citations

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Bibliography

  • Becher, Thomas. Douglas Twinjets, DC-9, MD-80, MD-90 and Boeing 717. Ramsbury, Marlborough, UK: The Crowood Press, 2002. ISBN 978-1-8612-6446-6.
  • "Super 80 For the Eighties". Air International, Vol 18 No 6, June 1980. pp. 267–272, 292–296. ISSN 0306-5634.
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  • Taylor, John W. R. Jane's All The World's Aircraft 1976–77. London: Jane's Yearbooks, 1976. ISBN 0-354-00538-3.

External links

  • Boeing: Historical Snapshot: DC-9/C-9 Transport
  • . Archived from the original on March 4, 2013. Retrieved March 22, 2007.
  • DC-9-10/20/30 on Airliners.net and DC-9-40/50 on Airliners.net

mcdonnell, douglas, american, five, abreast, single, aisle, aircraft, designed, douglas, aircraft, company, initially, produced, developer, company, douglas, until, august, 1967, then, mcdonnell, douglas, after, introducing, heavy, 1959, douglas, approved, sma. The McDonnell Douglas DC 9 is an American five abreast single aisle aircraft designed by the Douglas Aircraft Company It was initially produced by the developer company as the Douglas DC 9 until August 1967 and then by McDonnell Douglas After introducing its heavy DC 8 in 1959 Douglas approved the smaller all new DC 9 for shorter flights on April 8 1963 The DC 9 10 first flew on February 25 1965 and gained its type certificate on November 23 to enter service with Delta Air Lines on December 8 The aircraft has two rear mounted Pratt amp Whitney JT8D low bypass turbofans under a T tail for a cleaner wing aerodynamic a two person flight deck and built in airstairs DC 9A Northwest Airlines DC 9 31Role Narrow body jet airlinerNational origin United StatesManufacturer Douglas Aircraft CompanyMcDonnell Douglas from Aug 1967 First flight February 25 1965Introduction December 8 1965 with Delta Air LinesStatus In limited service for cargo transportPrimary users USA Jet AirlinesAeronaves TSM Everts Air Cargo Northwest Airlines historical Produced 1965 1982Number built 976Variants McDonnell Douglas C 9Developed into McDonnell Douglas MD 80 McDonnell Douglas MD 90 Boeing 717The Series 10s are 104 ft 32 m long for typically 90 coach seats The Series 30 stretched by 15 ft 4 5 m to seat 115 in economy has a larger wing and more powerful engines for a higher maximum takeoff weight MTOW it first flew in August 1966 and entered service in February 1967 The Series 20 has the Series 10 fuselage more powerful engines and the Series 30 s improved wings it first flew in September 1968 and entered service in January 1969 The Series 40 was further lengthened by 6 ft 2 m for 125 passengers and the final DC 9 50 series first flew in 1974 stretched again by 8 ft 2 5 m for 135 passengers When deliveries ended in October 1982 976 had been built Smaller variants competed with the BAC One Eleven Fokker F28 and Sud Aviation Caravelle and larger ones with the original Boeing 737 The original DC 9 was followed by the second generation in 1980 the MD 80 series a lengthened DC 9 50 with a larger wing and a higher MTOW This was further developed into the third generation the MD 90 in the early 1990s as the body was stretched again fitted with V2500 high bypass turbofans and an updated flight deck The shorter and final version the MD 95 was renamed the Boeing 717 after McDonnell Douglas s merger with Boeing in 1997 it is powered by Rolls Royce BR715 engines The DC 9 family was produced between 1965 and 2006 with a total delivery of 2441 units 976 DC 9s 1191 MD 80s 116 MD 90s and 155 Boeing 717s As of August 2022 250 aircraft remain in service 31 DC 9s freighter 116 MD 80s mainly freighter and 103 Boeing 717s passenger while the MD 90 was retired without freighter conversion Contents 1 Development 1 1 Origins 1 2 Entry into service 1 3 Production 1 4 Enhancement studies 1 5 Further developments DC 9 family 1 5 1 Second generation MD 80 series 1 5 2 Third generation MD 90 series 2 Design 3 Variants 3 1 Series 10 3 2 Series 20 3 3 Series 30 3 4 Series 40 3 5 Series 50 3 6 Military and government 4 Operators 4 1 Deliveries 5 Accidents and incidents 5 1 Accidents with fatalities 5 2 Hull losses 6 Aircraft on display 7 Specifications 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Bibliography 10 External linksDevelopment EditOrigins Edit During the 1950s Douglas Aircraft studied a short to medium range airliner to complement their high capacity long range DC 8 DC stands for Douglas Commercial 1 A medium range four engined Model 2067 was studied but it did not receive enough interest from airlines and it was abandoned In 1960 Douglas signed a two year contract with Sud Aviation for technical cooperation Douglas would market and support the Sud Aviation Caravelle and produce a licensed version if airlines ordered large numbers None were ordered and Douglas returned to its design studies after the co operation deal expired 2 In 1962 design studies were underway The first version seated 63 passengers and had a gross weight of 69 000 lb 31 300 kg This design was changed into what would be the initial DC 9 variant 2 Douglas gave approval to produce the DC 9 on April 8 1963 2 Unlike the competing but larger Boeing 727 trijet which used as many 707 components as possible the DC 9 was an all new design Entry into service Edit The DC 9 entered service with Delta Air Lines on December 8 1965 The first DC 9 a production model flew on February 25 1965 3 The second DC 9 flew a few weeks later 4 with a test fleet of five aircraft flying by July This allowed the initial Series 10 to gain airworthiness certification on November 23 1965 and to enter service with Delta Air Lines on December 8 3 The DC 9 was always intended to be available in multiple versions to suit customer requirements 5 the first stretched version the Series 30 with a longer fuselage and extended wing tips flew on August 1 1966 entering service with Eastern Air Lines in 1967 3 The initial Series 10 was followed by the improved 20 30 and 40 variants The final DC 9 series was the 50 which first flew in 1974 4 Production Edit The DC 9 series the first generation of the DC 9 family was a commercial success for the manufacturer It was produced on the final assembly line in Long Beach California beginning in 1965 and later was on a common line with the second generation of the DC 9 family the MD 80 with which it shares its line number sequence After the delivery of 976 DC 9s and 108 MD 80s McDonnell Douglas stopped DC 9 series production in December 1982 4 The DC 9 family is one of the longest lasting aircraft in production and operation Its last family member the Boeing 717 was produced until 2006 The DC 9 family was produced in total 2441 units 976 DC 9s first generation 1191 MD 80s second generation 116 MD 90s and 155 Boeing 717s third generation 6 This compared to 2 970 Airbus A320s and 5 270 Boeing 737s delivered as of 2006 7 8 Enhancement studies Edit Studies aimed at further improving DC 9 fuel efficiency by means of retrofitted wingtips of various types were undertaken by McDonnell Douglas but these did not demonstrate significant benefits especially with existing fleets shrinking The wing design makes retrofitting difficult 9 Between 1973 and 1975 McDonnell Douglas studied the possibility of replacing engines on the DC 9 with the JT8D 109 turbofan a quieter and more efficient variant of the JT8D This progressed to the flight test stage and tests achieved noise reduction between 8 and 9 decibels depending on the phase of flight 10 11 No further aircraft were modified and the test aircraft was re equipped with standard JT8D 9s prior to delivery to its airline customer Further developments DC 9 family Edit Two further developments of the original or first generation DC 9 series used the new designation with McDonnell Douglas initials MD prefix followed by the year of development The first derivative or second generation was the MD 80 series and the second derivative or third generation was the MD 90 series Together they formed the DC 9 family of 12 aircraft members variants and if the DC 9 designation were retained the family members would be First generation Series 10 Series 20 Series 30 Series 40 and Series 50 second generation Series 81 Series 82 Series 83 Series 87 and Series 88 and third generation Series 90 and Series 95 Second generation MD 80 series Edit The original DC 9 series was followed in 1980 by the introduction of the second generation of the DC 9 family the MD 80 series This was originally called the DC 9 80 short Series 80 and later stylized Super 80 It was a lengthened DC 9 50 with a higher maximum takeoff weight MTOW a larger wing new main landing gear and higher fuel capacity The MD 80 series features a number of variants of the Pratt amp Whitney JT8D turbofan engine having higher thrust ratings than those available on the original DC 9 series The MD 80 series includes the MD 81 MD 82 MD 83 MD 88 and shortest variant the MD 87 Third generation MD 90 series Edit MD 90The MD 80 series was further developed into the third generation the MD 90 series in the early 1990s It has yet another fuselage stretch an electronic flight instrument system first introduced on the MD 88 and completely new International Aero V2500 high bypass turbofan engines In comparison to the very successful MD 80 relatively few MD 90s were built Boeing 717 MD 95 The shorter and final variant the MD 95 was renamed the Boeing 717 after McDonnell Douglas s merger with Boeing in 1997 and before aircraft deliveries began The fuselage length and wing are very similar to those of the DC 9 30 but much use was made of lighter modern materials Power is supplied by two BMW Rolls Royce BR715 high bypass turbofan engines Comac ARJ21China s Comac ARJ21 is derived from the DC 9 family The ARJ21 is built with manufacturing tooling from the MD 90 Trunkliner program As a consequence it has the same fuselage cross section nose profile and tail 12 Design Edit A DC 9 s two person flight deck Five abreast seating economy class on a DC 9 The DC 9 has two rear mounted Pratt amp Whitney JT8D turbofan engines relatively small efficient wings and a T tail 4 The DC 9 s takeoff weight was limited to 80 000 lb 36 300 kg for a two person flight crew by the then Federal Aviation Agency regulations at the time 2 DC 9 aircraft have five seats across for economy seating The airplane seats 80 to 135 passengers depending on version and seating arrangement The DC 9 was designed for short to medium routes often to smaller airports with shorter runways and less ground infrastructure than the major airports being served by larger designs like the Boeing 707 and Douglas DC 8 Accessibility and short field characteristics were needed Turnarounds were simplified by built in airstairs including one in the tail which shortened boarding and deplaning times The tail mounted engine design facilitated a clean wing without engine pods which had numerous advantages For example flaps could be longer unimpeded by pods on the leading edge and engine blast concerns on the trailing edge This simplified design improved airflow at low speeds and enabled lower takeoff and approach speeds thus lowering field length requirements and keeping wing structure light The second advantage of the tail mounted engines was the reduction in foreign object damage from ingested debris from runways and aprons but with this position the engines could ingest ice streaming off the wing roots Third the absence of engines in underslung pods allowed a reduction in fuselage ground clearance making the aircraft more accessible to baggage handlers and passengers The problem of deep stalling revealed by the loss of the BAC One Eleven prototype in 1963 was overcome through various changes including the introduction of vortilons small surfaces beneath the wings leading edges used to control airflow and increase low speed lift 13 Variants EditThe DC 9 series the first generation of the DC 9 family includes five members or variants and 10 subvariants which are the production versions types Their designations use the Series DC 9 prefix followed by a two digit numbering with the same first digit and the second digit being a zero for variant names and a nonzero for version type designations The first variant Series 10 DC 9 10 has four versions Series 11 Series 12 Series 14 and Series 15 the second variant Series 20 has one version Series 21 the third variant Series 30 has four versions Series 31 Series 32 Series 33 and Series 34 the fourth variant Series 40 has one version Series 41 and the fifth or final variant Series 50 has one version Series 51 Series 10 Edit Republic Airlines DC 9 14 Subvariant Series 11 Series 12 Series 14 Series 15The original DC 9 later designated the Series 10 was the smallest DC 9 variant The 10 was 104 4 ft 31 8 m long and had a maximum weight of 82 000 lb 37 000 kg The Series 10 was similar in size and configuration to the BAC One Eleven and featured a T tail and rear mounted engines Power was provided by a pair of 12 500 lbf 56 kN Pratt amp Whitney JT8D 5 or 14 000 lbf 62 kN JT8D 7 engines A total of 137 were built Delta Air Lines was the initial operator The Series 10 was produced in two main subvariants the Series 14 and 15 although of the first four aircraft three were built as Series 11s and one as Series 12 These were later converted to Series 14 standard No Series 13 was produced A passenger cargo version of the aircraft with a 136 by 81 inch 3 5 by 2 1 m side cargo door forward of the wing and a reinforced cabin floor was certificated on March 1 1967 Cargo versions included the Series 15MC minimum change with folding seats that can be carried in the rear of the aircraft and the Series 15RC rapid change with seats removable on pallets These differences disappeared over the years as new interiors were installed 14 15 The Series 10 was unique in the DC 9 family in not having leading edge slats The Series 10 was designed to have short takeoff and landing distances without the use of leading edge high lift devices Therefore the wing design of the Series 10 featured airfoils with extremely high maximum lift capability to obtain the low stalling speeds necessary for short field performance 16 Series 10 featuresThe Series 10 has an overall length of 104 4 feet 31 82 m a fuselage length of 92 1 feet 28 07 m a passenger cabin length of 60 feet 18 29 m and a wingspan of 89 4 feet 27 25 m The Series 10 was offered with the 14 000 lbf 62 kN thrust JT8D 1 and JT8D 7 14 15 All versions of the DC 9 are equipped with an AlliedSignal Garrett GTCP85 APU located in the aft fuselage 14 15 The Series 10 as with all later versions of the DC 9 is equipped with a two crew analog flightdeck 14 15 The Series 14 was originally certificated with an MTOW of 85 700 lb 38 900 kg but subsequent options offered increases to 86 300 and 90 700 lb 41 100 kg The aircraft s MLW in all cases is 81 700 lb 37 100 kg The Series 14 has a fuel capacity of 3 693 US gallons with the 907 US gal centre section fuel The Series 15 certificated on January 21 1966 is physically identical to the Series 14 but has an increased MTOW of 90 700 lb 41 100 kg Typical range with 50 passengers and baggage is 950 nmi 1 760 km increasing to 1 278 nmi 2 367 km at long range cruise Range with maximum payload is 600 nmi 1 100 km increasing to 1 450 nmi 2 690 km with full fuel 14 15 The aircraft is fitted with a passenger door in the port forward fuselage and a service door emergency exit is installed opposite An airstair installed below the front passenger door was available as an option as was an airstair in the tailcone This also doubled as an emergency exit Available with either two or four overwing exits the DC 9 10 can seat up to a maximum certified exit limit of 109 passengers Typical all economy layout is 90 passengers and 72 passengers in a more typical mixed class layout with 12 first and 60 economy class passengers 14 15 All versions of the DC 9 are equipped with a tricycle undercarriage featuring a twin nose unit and twin main units 14 15 Series 20 Edit Scandinavian Airlines DC 9 21 Subvariant Series 21The Series 20 was designed to satisfy a Scandinavian Airlines request for improved short field performance by using the more powerful engines and improved wings of the 30 combined with the shorter fuselage used in the 10 Ten Series 20 aircraft were produced all as the Model 21 17 The 21 had slats and stairs at the rear of plane citation needed In 1969 a DC 9 Series 20 at Long Beach was fitted with an Elliott Flight Automation Head up display by McDonnell Douglas and used for successful three month long trials with pilots from various airlines the Federal Aviation Administration and the US Air Force 18 Series 20 featuresThe Series 20 has an overall length of 104 4 feet 31 82 m a fuselage length of 92 1 feet 28 07 m a passenger cabin length of 60 feet 18 29 m and a wingspan of 93 3 feet 28 44 m 14 15 The DC 9 Series 20 is powered by the 15 000 lbf 67 kN thrust JT8D 11 engine 14 15 The Series 20 was originally certificated at an MTOW of 94 500 lb 42 900 kg but this was increased to 98 000 lb 44 000 kg eight percent more than on the higher weight Series 14s and 15s The aircraft s MLW is 95 300 lb 43 200 kg and MZFW is 84 000 lb 38 000 kg Typical range with maximum payload is 1 000 nmi 1 900 km increasing to 1 450 nmi 2 690 km with maximum fuel The Series 20 using the same wing as the Series 30 40 and 50 has a slightly lower basic fuel capacity than the Series 10 3 679 US gallons 14 15 Series 20 milestonesFirst flight September 18 1968 FAA certification November 25 1968 First delivery December 11 1968 to Scandinavian Airlines System SAS Entry into service January 27 1969 with SAS Last delivery May 1 1969 to SAS Series 30 Edit USAir DC 9 31 Subvariant Series 31 Series 32 Series 33 Series 34The Series 30 was produced to counter Boeing s 737 twinjet 662 were built about 60 of the total The 30 entered service with Eastern Airlines in February 1967 with a 14 ft 9 in 4 50 m fuselage stretch wingspan increased by just over 3 ft 0 9 m and full span leading edge slats improving takeoff and landing performance Maximum takeoff weight was typically 110 000 lb 50 000 kg Engines for Models 31 32 33 and 34 included the P amp W JT8D 7 and JT8D 9 rated at 14 500 lbf 64 kN of thrust or JT8D 11 with 15 000 lbf 67 kN Unlike the Series 10 the Series 30 had leading edge devices to reduce the landing speeds at higher landing weights full span slats reduced approach speeds by six knots despite 5 000 lb greater weight The slats were lighter than slotted Krueger flaps since the structure associated with the slat is a more efficient torque box than the structure associated with the slotted Krueger The wing had a six percent increase in chord all ahead of the front spar allowing the 15 percent chord slat to be incorporated 19 Series 30 versionsThe Series 30 was built in four main sub variants 14 15 DC 9 31 Produced in passenger version only The first DC 9 Series 30 flew on August 1 1966 and the first delivery was to Eastern Airlines on February 27 1967 after certification on December 19 1966 Basic MTOW of 98 000 lb 44 000 kg and subsequently certificated at weights up to 108 000 lb 49 000 kg DC 9 32 Introduced in the first year 1967 Certificated March 1 1967 Basic MTOW of 108 000 lb 49 000 kg later increased to 110 000 lb 50 000 kg A number of cargo versions of the Series 32 were also produced 32LWF Light Weight Freight with modified cabin but no cargo door or reinforced floor intended for package freighter use 32CF Convertible Freighter with a reinforced floor but retaining passenger facilities 32AF All Freight a windowless all cargo aircraft DC 9 33 Following the Series 31 and 32 came the Series 33 for passenger cargo or all cargo use Certificated on April 15 1968 the aircraft s MTOW was 114 000 lb 52 000 kg MLW to 102 000 lb 46 000 kg and MZFW to 95 500 lb 43 300 kg JT8D 9 or 11 15 000 lbf 67 kN thrust engines were used Wing incidence was increased 1 25 degrees to reduce cruise drag 20 Only 22 were built as All Freight AF Convertible Freight CF and Rapid Change RC aircraft DC 9 34 The last variant was the Series 34 intended for longer range with an MTOW of 121 000 lb 55 000 kg an MLW of 110 000 lb 50 000 kg and an MZFW of 98 000 lb 44 000 kg The DC 9 34CF Convertible Freighter was certificated April 20 1976 while the passenger followed on November 3 1976 The aircraft has the more powerful JT8D 9s with the 15 and 17 engines as an option It had the wing incidence change introduced on the DC 9 33 Twelve were built five as convertible freighters Series 30 featuresThe DC 9 30 was offered with a selection of variants of JT8D including the 1 7 9 11 15 and 17 The most common on the Series 31 is the JT8D 7 14 000 lbf 62 kN thrust although it was also available with the 9 and 17 engines On the Series 32 the JT8D 9 14 500 lbf 64 kN thrust was standard with the 11 also offered The Series 33 was offered with the JT8D 9 or 11 15 000 lbf 67 kN thrust engines and the heavyweight 34 with the JT8D 9 15 15 000 lbf 67 kN thrust or 17 16 000 lbf 71 kN thrust engines 14 15 Series 40 Edit Northwest Airlines DC 9 40 Subvariant Series 41The DC 9 40 is a further lengthened version With a 6 ft 6 in 2 m longer fuselage accommodation was up to 125 passengers The Series 40 was fitted with Pratt amp Whitney engines with thrust of 14 500 to 16 000 lbf 64 to 71 kN A total of 71 were produced The variant first entered service with Scandinavian Airlines System SAS in March 1968 Its unit cost was US 5 2 million 1972 21 equivalent to US 25 92 million in 2021 22 Series 50 Edit DC 9 51 of Swissair Subvariant Series 51The Series 50 was the largest version of the DC 9 to enter airline service It features an 8 ft 2 in 2 49 m fuselage stretch and seats up to 139 passengers It entered revenue service in August 1975 with Eastern Airlines and included a number of detail improvements a new cabin interior and more powerful JT8D 15 or 17 engines in the 16 000 and 16 500 lbf 71 and 73 kN class McDonnell Douglas delivered 96 all as the Model 51 Some visual cues to distinguish this version from other DC 9 variants include side strakes or fins below the side cockpit windows spray deflectors on the nose gear and thrust reversers angled inward 17 degrees as compared to the original configuration The thrust reverser modification was developed by Air Canada for its earlier aircraft and adopted by McDonnell Douglas as a standard feature on the series 50 It was also applied to many earlier DC 9s in the course of regular maintenance 23 Military and government Edit Further information McDonnell Douglas C 9Operators Edit DC 9 33F USA Jet Airlines A total of 31 DC 9 series freighter variant were in service as of August 2022 24 Operators include Aeronaves TSM 11 USA Jet Airlines 6 Everts Air Cargo 4 Ameristar Charters 4 and other operators with fewer aircraft 25 26 After acquiring Northwest Airlines Delta Air Lines operated a fleet of DC 9 aircraft most of which were over 30 years old at the time With severe increases in fuel prices in the summer of 2008 Northwest Airlines began retiring its DC 9s switching to Airbus A319s that are 27 more fuel efficient 27 28 As the Northwest Delta merger progressed Delta returned several stored DC 9s to service Delta Air Lines made its last DC 9 commercial flight from Minneapolis St Paul to Atlanta on January 6 2014 with the flight number DL2014 29 30 With the existing DC 9 fleet shrinking modifications do not appear to be likely to occur especially since the wing design makes retrofitting difficult 9 DC 9s are therefore likely to be further replaced in service by newer airliners such as Boeing 737 Airbus A320 Embraer E Jets and the Bombardier CSeries 31 One ex SAS DC 9 21 is operated as a skydiving jump platform at Perris Valley Airport in Perris California With the steps on the ventral stairs removed it is the only airline transport class jet certified to date by the FAA for skydiving operations as of 2016 32 Deliveries Edit Deliveries 33 Type Total 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977 1976 1975 1974 1973 1972 1971 1970 1969 1968 1967 1966 1965DC 9 10 113 10 29 69 5DC 9 10C 24 4 20DC 9 20 10 9 1DC 9 30 585 8 10 13 24 1 12 16 21 21 17 42 41 97 161 101DC 9 30C 30 1 6 4 1 3 5 7 3DC 9 30F 6 4 2DC 9 40 71 5 6 3 2 4 27 3 2 7 2 10DC 9 50 96 5 5 10 15 18 28 15C 9A 21 8 1 5 7C 9B 17 2 1 2 4 8VC 9C 3 3DC 9 series 976 10 16 18 39 22 22 50 42 48 29 32 46 51 122 202 153 69 5Accidents and incidents EditAs of June 2022 update the DC 9 family aircraft has been involved in 276 major aviation accidents and incidents including 156 hull losses with 3 697 fatalities combined all generations of family members 1st gen DC 9 series 107 hull losses amp 2 250 fatalities 2nd gen MD 80 series 46 hull losses amp 1 446 fatalities 3rd gen MD 90 series including Boeing 717 3 hull losses amp 1 fatality 34 35 Accidents with fatalities Edit On October 1 1966 West Coast Airlines Flight 956 crashed with eighteen fatalities and no survivors This accident marked the first loss of a DC 9 36 On March 9 1967 TWA Flight 553 crashed in a field in Concord Township near Urbana Ohio following a mid air collision with a Beechcraft Baron an accident that triggered substantial changes in air traffic control procedures 37 All 25 people on board the DC 9 were killed On March 27 1968 Ozark Air Lines Flight 965 a DC 9 15 collided with a Cessna 150F while both aircraft were on approach to the same runway at Lambert Field in St Louis Missouri The Cessna crashed killing the two pilots aboard while the DC 9 landed safely with no injuries to the 49 passengers and crew 38 On March 16 1969 Viasa Flight 742 a DC 9 32 crashed into the La Trinidad neighborhood of Maracaibo Venezuela during a failed take off All 84 people on board the aircraft as well as 71 people on the ground were killed With 155 dead in all this was the deadliest crash involving a member of the original DC 9 family as well as the worst crash in aviation history at the time it took place 39 On September 9 1969 Allegheny Airlines Flight 853 a DC 9 30 collided in mid air with a Piper PA 28 Cherokee near Fairland Indiana The DC 9 carried 78 passengers and four crew members the Piper one pilot Both aircraft were destroyed and all occupants were killed 40 41 On February 15 1970 a Dominicana de Aviacion DC 9 32 crashed after taking off from Santo Domingo The crash possibly caused by contaminated fuel killed all 102 passengers and crew including champion boxer Teo Cruz 42 43 On May 2 1970 an Overseas National Airways DC 9 wet leased to ALM Dutch Antilles Airlines and operating as ALM Flight 980 ditched in the Caribbean Sea on a flight from New York s John F Kennedy International Airport to Princess Juliana International Airport on Saint Maarten After three landing attempts in poor weather at Saint Maarten the pilots began to divert to their alternate of Saint Croix U S Virgin Islands but ran out of fuel 30 mi 48 km short of the island After about ten minutes the aircraft sank in 5 000 ft 1 524 m of water and was never recovered 40 people survived the ditching 23 perished 44 On November 14 1970 Southern Airways Flight 932 a DC 9 crashed into a hill near Tri State Airport in Huntington West Virginia All 75 on board were killed including 37 members of the Marshall University Thundering Herd football team eight members of the coaching staff 25 boosters and others On June 6 1971 Hughes Airwest Flight 706 was involved in a midair collision with a U S Marine Corps F 4 Phantom fighter All 49 people on board the DC 9 died one of two aboard the USMC aircraft ejected and survived citation needed On January 21 1972 a Turkish Airlines DC 9 32 TC JAC diverted to Adana Turkey after pressurization problems The aircraft hit the ground during downwind on the 2nd approach and caught fire There was one fatality 45 On January 26 1972 JAT Flight 367 from Stockholm to Belgrade DC 9 32 registration YU AHT was destroyed in flight by a bomb placed on board The sole survivor was a flight attendant Vesna Vulovic who holds the record for the world s longest fall without a parachute when she fell some 33 000 ft 10 000 m inside a section of the airplane and survived On December 20 1972 North Central Airlines Flight 575 DC 9 31 registration N954N collided during its takeoff roll with Delta Air Lines Flight 954 a Convair CV 880 that was taxiing across the same runway at O Hare International Airport in Chicago Illinois The DC 9 was destroyed killing 10 and injuring 15 of the 45 people on board two people among the 93 aboard the Convair 880 suffered minor injuries 46 On 5 March 1973 an Iberia Flight 504 DC 9 flying from Palma de Mallorca to London collided in mid air with a Spantax Flight 400 Convair 990 flying from Madrid to London All 68 people on board the DC 9 were killed The CV 990 made a successful emergency landing at Cognac Chateaubernard Air Base 47 On July 31 1973 Delta Air Lines Flight 723 DC 9 31 registration N975NE crashed into a seawall at Logan International Airport in Boston Massachusetts killing all 83 passengers and 6 crew members on board One of the passengers initially survived the accident but later died in a hospital On September 11 1974 Eastern Air Lines Flight 212 a DC 9 30 crashed just short of the runway at Charlotte North Carolina killing 71 out of the 82 occupants On October 30 1975 Inex Adria Aviopromet Flight 450 a DC 9 32 hit high ground during an approach in fog near Prague Suchdol Czechoslovakia 75 of the 120 people were killed 48 On September 10 1976 an Inex Adria Aviopromet DC 9 31 collided with a British Airways Trident over the Croatian town of Vrbovec killing all 176 people aboard both aircraft and another person on the ground On April 4 1977 Southern Airways Flight 242 a DC 9 31 lost engine power while flying through a severe thunderstorm before crash landing onto a highway in New Hope Georgia striking roadside buildings The crash and fire resulted in the death of both flight crew and 61 passengers Nine people on the ground also died Both flight attendants and 20 passengers survived 49 50 On June 26 1978 Air Canada Flight 189 a DC 9 overran the runway in Toronto after a blown tire aborted the takeoff Two of the 107 passengers and crew were killed 51 On September 14 1979 Aero Trasporti Italiani Flight 12 a DC 9 32 crashed in the mountains near Cagliari Italy while approaching Cagliari Elmas Airport All 27 passengers and 4 crew members died in the crash and ensuing fire 52 Itavia DC 9 I TIGI was destroyed in an accident at Ustica Shown in the Museo della Memoria opened in Bologna in 2007 On June 27 1980 Itavia Flight 870 a DC 9 15 broke up mid air and crashed into the sea near the Italian island of Ustica All 81 people on board were killed The cause has been the subject of a decades long controversy with either a terrorist bomb on board or an accidental shootdown during a military operation blamed for the accident On July 27 1981 Aeromexico Flight 230 a DC 9 ran off the runway in Chihuahua Thirty passengers and two crew of the 66 on board were killed Bad weather and pilot error were the causes of the accident On June 2 1983 Air Canada Flight 797 a DC 9 experienced an electrical fire in the aft lavatory during flight resulting in an emergency landing at Cincinnati Northern Kentucky International Airport During evacuation the sudden influx of oxygen caused a flash fire throughout the cabin resulting in the deaths of 23 of the 41 passengers including Canadian folk singer Stan Rogers All five crew members survived On December 7 1983 the Madrid runway disaster took place where a departing Iberia Boeing 727 struck an Aviaco Douglas DC 9 causing the death of 93 passengers and crew All 42 passengers and crew on board the DC 9 were killed On September 6 1985 Midwest Express Airlines Flight 105 operated with a DC 9 14 crashed just after takeoff from General Mitchell International Airport in Milwaukee Wisconsin The crash was caused by improper control inputs by the flight crew after the number 2 engine failed and all 31 aboard were killed On August 31 1986 Aeromexico Flight 498 collided in mid air with a Piper Cherokee over the city of Cerritos California then crashed into the city killing all 64 aboard the aircraft 15 people on the ground and all three in the small plane On April 4 1987 Garuda Indonesia Flight 035 a DC 9 32 hit a pylon and crashed on approach to Polonia International Airport in bad weather with 24 fatalities 53 On November 15 1987 Continental Airlines Flight 1713 a DC 9 14 crashed on takeoff from Stapleton International Airport in bad weather with 28 fatalities This accident was attributed to a combination of confusion at the ATC exceeding allowed time limit for takeoff after de icing the wings and inexperienced crew On November 14 1990 Alitalia Flight 404 a DC 9 32 crashed into a hillside on approach to Zurich Airport killing all 46 persons on board The crash was caused by a short circuit which led to a failure of the aircraft s NAV receiver and GPWS system On December 3 1990 Northwest Airlines Flight 1482 a DC 9 14 taxied onto the wrong taxiway in dense fog at Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport Michigan It entered the active runway instead of the taxiway instructed by air traffic controllers It was then struck by a departing Boeing 727 Nine people were killed 54 55 On March 5 1991 Aeropostal Alas de Venezuela Flight 108 a DC 9 32 crashed into a mountainside in Trujillo State Venezuela killing all 40 passengers and five crew aboard 56 On July 2 1994 USAir Flight 1016 DC 9 31 N954VJ crashed in Charlotte North Carolina while performing a go around because of heavy storms and wind shear at the approach of runway 18R There were 37 fatalities and 15 injured among the passengers and crew Although the airplane came to rest in a residential area with the tail section striking a house there were no fatalities or injuries on the ground On May 11 1996 ValuJet Flight 592 DC 9 32 N904VJ crashed in the Florida Everglades due to a fire caused by the activation of chemical oxygen generators illegally stored in the hold The fire damaged the plane s electrical system and eventually overcame the crew resulting in the deaths of all 110 people on board On October 10 1997 1997 10 10 Austral Flight 2553 a DC 9 32 registration LV WEG en route from Posadas to Buenos Aires crashed near Fray Bentos Uruguay killing all 69 passengers and five crew on board 57 On February 2 1998 Cebu Pacific Flight 387 a DC 9 32 RP C1507 crashed on the slopes of Mount Sumagaya in Misamis Oriental Philippines killing all 104 passengers and crew on board Aviation investigators deemed the incident to be caused by pilot error when the plane made a non regular stopover to Tacloban On November 9 1999 TAESA Flight 725 crashed a few minutes after leaving Uruapan International Airport en route to Mexico City 18 people were killed in the accident 58 On 10 December 2005 Sosoliso Airlines Flight 1145 from Abuja crash landed at Port Harcourt International Airport Nigeria There were 108 fatalities and two survivors 59 On April 15 2008 Hewa Bora Airways Flight 122 crashed into a residential neighborhood in the Goma Democratic Republic of the Congo 60 resulting in the deaths of at least 44 people 61 On July 6 2008 USA Jet Airlines Flight 199 a DC 9 15F crashed on approach to Saltillo Mexico after a flight from Shreveport Louisiana The captain died and first officer was seriously injured 62 Hull losses Edit On November 27 1973 Eastern Airlines Flight 300 a DC 9 31 landed too far down the runway at Akron Canton Airport in light rain and fog and ran off the end of the runway over an embankment and the aircraft was severely damaged and written off All 21 passengers and 5 crew survived with various injuries 63 On April 18 1993 Japan Air System Flight 451 a DC 9 41 JA8448 crashed while landing at Hanamaki Airport in Japan There were 19 injuries though all 77 aboard survived The aircraft was written off 64 On October 6 2000 Aeromexico Flight 250 a DC 9 31 en route from Mexico City to Reynosa Mexico could not stop at the end of the runway and crashed into houses and fell into a small canal Four people on the ground were killed None of 83 passengers and 5 crew members were killed The DC 9 was heavily damaged and classified as a loss The runway had seen heavy rainfall as a result of Hurricane Keith 65 Aircraft on display Edit President of Italy Sandro Pertini and members of the Italian national soccer team aboard MM62012 after their win at the 1982 World Cup Canada CF TLL cn 47021 DC 9 32 on static display at the Canada Aviation and Space Museum in Ottawa Ontario Canada 66 It was previously operated by Air Canada 67 Indonesia PK GNC cn 47481 DC 9 32 painted in Garuda Indonesia s 1960s livery and put on display inside GMF hangar in Soekarno Hatta Airport 68 69 PK GNT cn 47790 DC 9 32 on static display at the Transportation Museum in Taman Mini Indonesia Indah in Jakarta Indonesia 70 It was relegated to display status after suffering heavy damage in a landing accident in 1993 71 It was previously operated by Garuda Indonesia 72 Italy MM62012 cn 47595 DC 9 32 on static display at Volandia in Somma Lombardo Varese This aircraft was operated by the Italian Air Force as a VIP transport carrying the president of Italy among other duties 73 74 75 Netherlands N292L cn 47174 DC 9 32 nose section displayed inside Schiphol International Airport Painted in KLM livery although the plane never served with the airline It was previously used by TWA and Delta Airlines 76 77 Mexico XA JEB Ex Aeromexico DC 9 32 on display at a park in Cadereyta de Montes Queretaro Mexico Formerly Hugh Hefner s private jet the Big Bunny XA JEB was sold in 1975 to Venezuela Airlines who later sold it to Aeromexico where it was operated until 2004 It was sold and placed on display in 2008 for use as an educational tool 78 N942ML with painted registration XA SFE is found on the second floor of the Luxury shopping mall Centro Comercial Santa Fe in the business district of Mexico City It is on on display with an Interjet livery for the Kidzania brand 79 N606NW with painted registration XA MEX can be found in Cuicuilo Plaza at the south of the city Similar to XA SFE it wears an Interjet Livery for the Kidzania brand 80 Spain Preserved front section at Elder Museum Canary Islands EC BQZ cn 47456 DC 9 32 on static display at Adolfo Suarez Madrid Barajas Airport in Madrid 81 EC DGB DC 9 34 front section only preserved at Elder Museum of Science and Technology Gran Canaria 82 United States N675MC cn 47651 DC 9 51 on static display at the Delta Flight Museum at Hartsfield Jackson Atlanta International Airport in Atlanta Georgia 83 It arrived at the museum on 27 April 2014 84 It was previously operated by Delta Air Lines 85 N779NC cn 48101 DC 9 51 was on static display at the Carolinas Aviation Museum at Charlotte Douglas International Airport in Charlotte North Carolina until it was scrapped in January 2017 86 87 Its ferry flight to Charlotte was the last scheduled passenger DC 9 flight in the United States 88 It was previously operated by Delta Air Lines 89 Specifications EditDC 9 airplane characteristics 90 Variant 15 21 32 41 51Cockpit crew 91 66 Two1 class seating 15 18 90Y 31 32 115Y 31 33 125 31 34 135 32 33 Exit limit 91 80 109 127 128 139Cargo 4 600 ft 17 0m a 895 ft 25 3m b 1 019 ft 28 9m 1 174 ft 33 2m Length 5 9 104 ft 4 8in 31 82 m 119 ft 3 6 in 36 36 m 125 ft 7 2 in 38 28 m 133 ft 7 in 40 72mWingspan 10 14 89 ft 4 8 in 27 25 m 93 ft 3 6 in 28 44 m 93 ft 4 2 in 28 45 mHeight 10 14 27 ft 7 in 8 4 m 27 ft 9 in 8 5 m 28 ft 5 in 8 7 m 28 ft 9 in 8 8 mWidth 131 6 in 334 3 cm Fuselage 23 122 4 in 311 cm Cabin 24 Max takeoff wt 4 90 700 lb 41 141 kg 98 000 lb 45 359 kg 108 000 lb 48 988 kg 114 000 lb 51 710 kg 121 000 lb 54 885 kgEmpty 4 49 162 lb 22 300 kg a 52 644 lb 23 879 kg 56 855 lb 25 789 kg b 61 335 lb 27 821 kg 64 675 lb 29 336 kgFuel 4 24 743 lb 11 223 kg 24 649 lb 11 181 kgEngine 2 91 JT8D 1 5 7 9 11 15 17 9 11 1 5 7 9 11 15 17 9 11 15 17 15 17Thrust 2 91 1 7 14 000 lbf 62 kN 5 9 12 250 lbf 54 5 kN 11 15 000 lbf 67 kN 15 15 500 lbf 69 kN 17 16 000 lbf 71 kN Ceiling 91 67 35 000 ft 11 000 m MMo 91 Mach 0 84 484 kn 897 km h Range 36 45 1 300 nmi 2 400 km 1 500 nmi 2 800 km 1 500 nmi 2 800 km 1 200 nmi 2 200 km 1 300 nmi 2 400 km a b 15F Cargo 2 762 ft 78 2m Empty 53 200 lb 24 131 kg a b 33F Cargo 4 195 ft 119 0m Empty 56 430 lb 25 596 kg Comparison of McDonnell Douglas DC 9 Boeing 717 and different McDonnell Douglas MD 80 derivativesSee also Edit Aviation portal2006 Mexico DC 9 drug bust AirstairRelated development Boeing 717 Comac ARJ21 McDonnell Douglas C 9 McDonnell Douglas MD 80 McDonnell Douglas MD 90Aircraft of comparable role configuration and era BAC One Eleven Boeing 737 Fokker F28 Fellowship Dassault Mercure Sud Aviation Caravelle Tupolev Tu 134Related lists List of civil aircraft List of jet airlinersReferences EditCitations Edit DC 1 Commercial Transport Boeing Archived from the original on 7 February 2010 Retrieved 27 March 2010 a b c d Endres Gunter McDonnell Douglas DC 9 MD 80 amp MD 90 London Ian Allan 1991 ISBN 0 7110 1958 4 a b c Air International June 1980 p 293 a b c d Norris Guy and Mark Wagner DC 9 Twinjet Workhorse Douglas Jetliners MBI Publishing 1999 ISBN 0 7603 0676 1 Air International June 1980 p 292 Orders amp Deliveries Boeing Airbus Orders and Deliveries XLS Airbus 30 June 2022 Archived from the original on 10 February 2019 Retrieved 8 July 2022 Boeing Orders and Deliveries updated monthly boeing com June 30 2022 Archived from the original on January 12 2021 Retrieved July 12 2022 a b Assessment of Wingtip Modifications to Increase the Fuel Efficiency of Air Force Aircraft The National Academies Press 2007 p 40 doi 10 17226 11839 ISBN 978 0 309 10497 5 Douglas Aircraft Company McDonnell Douglas Corporation 1973 11 01 DC 9 JT8D Refan Phase 1 Final Report PDF Report p 165 NASA CR 121252 Retrieved 2022 08 09 a href Template Cite report html title Template Cite report cite report a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Douglas Aircraft Company McDonnell Douglas Corporation 1973 07 01 DC 9 JT8D Refan Phase 1 Final Report PDF Report p 2 NASA CR 134860 Retrieved 2022 08 09 The noise reductions relative to the hardwall JT8D 9 were 8 2 EPNdB for takeoff with cutback and 8 7 EPNdB for landing approach a href Template Cite report html title Template Cite report cite report a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Burchell Bill Setting Up Support For Future Regional Jets dead link Aviation Week October 13 2010 The DC 9 and the Deep Stall Flight International 442 25 March 1965 Retrieved 2011 10 07 a b c d e f g h i j k l Airclaims Jet Programs 1995 a b c d e f g h i j k l Jane s Civil and Military Aircraft Upgrades 1995 Shevell Richard S and Schaufele Roger D Aerodynamic Design Features of the DC 9 AIAA paper 65 738 presented at the AIAA RAeS JSASS Aircraft Design and Technology Meeting Los Angeles California November 1965 Reprinted in the AIAA Journal of Aircraft Vol 3 No 6 November December 1966 pp 515 523 Boeing Commercial active boeing com Air Transport Head Up Demonstration Flight International Volume 95 No 3125 30 January 1969 p 159 Schaufele Roger D and Ebeling Ann W Aerodynamic Design of the DC 9 Wing and High Lift System SAE paper 670846 presented at the Aeronautic amp Space Engineering and Manufacturing Meeting Los Angeles California October 1967 Waddington Terry McDonnell Douglas DC 9 Great Airliners Series Volume Four World Transport Press Inc 1998 p 126 ISBN 978 0 9626730 9 2 Airliner price index Flight International 10 August 1972 p 183 Johnston Louis Williamson Samuel H 2023 What Was the U S GDP Then MeasuringWorth Retrieved January 1 2023 United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the Measuring Worth series http www airlinercafe com page php id 396 unreliable source McDonnell Douglas DC 9 Production List www planespotters net Retrieved September 1 2022 Aircraft Quick Search ch aviation ch Retrieved 9 Aug 2013 World Airline Census 2018 Flightglobal com Retrieved 2018 08 26 To Save Fuel Airlines Find No Speck Too Small New York Times June 11 2008 Soaring Fuel Prices Pinch Airlines Harder Wall Street Journal June 18 2008 p B1 Trejos Nancy January 7 2014 Delta DC 9 aircraft makes final flight USA Today Retrieved January 16 2014 Delta retires last DC 9 CNN com CNN January 7 2014 Bombardier Launches CSeries Jet New York Times July 13 2008 Perris Valley Skydiving DC 9 Video Order and Deliveries User Defined Reports Boeing Accident summary hull losses Douglas DC 9 Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 19 July 2022 fatality statistics Douglas DC 9 Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 19 July 2022 National Transportation Safety Board 1967 12 11 Aircraft Accident Report West Coast Airlines Inc DC 9 N9101 Near Wemme Oregon PDF Retrieved 2009 03 22 National Transportation Safety Board 1968 06 19 Aircraft Accident Report Trans World Airlines Inc Douglas DC 9 Tann Company Beechcraft Baron B 55 In flight Collision near Urbana Ohio March 9 1967 PDF AirDisaster Com Archived from the original on December 18 2008 Retrieved 2008 11 23 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Aviation Accident Report PDF Report Washington D C National Transportation Safety Board June 30 1969 1 0012 Retrieved August 8 2022 a href Template Cite report html title Template Cite report cite report a CS1 maint url status link DISASTERS The Worst Ever Time 9 August 1971 via content time com NTSB Report PDF Archived 2008 12 18 at the Wayback Machine McGlaun Dan Allegheny 853 Crash Site Pictures www mcglaun com Retrieved 2008 01 27 D Gero 2005 05 21 ASN Aircraft accident McDonnell Douglas DC 9 32 HI 177 Santo Domingo Aviation Safety Network Flight Safety Foundation Retrieved 2008 11 23 Former Champ Teo Cruz Dies in Plane Crash Modesto Bee Modesto California Associated Press 1970 02 16 p A 6 Retrieved 2008 11 23 National Transportation Safety Board 1971 03 31 Aircraft Accident Report Overseas National Airways Inc operating as Antilliaanse Luchtvaart Maatschappij Flight 980 near St Croix VirginIslands May 2 1970 DC 9 N935F PDF AirDisaster Com Archived from the original on 2014 03 22 Retrieved 2008 11 23 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Accident description for TC JAC at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on November 29 2020 National Transportation Safety Board Report Number NTSB AAR 73 15 Aircraft Accident Report North Central Airlines Inc McDonnell Douglas DC 9 31 N954N and Delta Air Lines Inc Convair CV 880 N8807E O Hare International Airport Chicago Illinois December 20 1972 adopted July 5 1973 PDF Accident description for EC BII at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on November 29 2020 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident McDonnell Douglas DC 9 32 YU AJO Praha Ruzyne International Airport PRG aviation safety net National Transportation Safety Board 1978 01 26 Aircraft Accident Report Southern Airways Inc DC 9 31 N1335U New Hope Georgia April 4 1977 PDF AirDisaster Com Archived from the original on December 18 2008 Retrieved 2008 11 23 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Vanderbilt Tom 2010 03 12 When Planes Land on Highways The ins and outs of a surprisingly frequent phenomenon Slate Priest Lisa Rick Cash 2005 03 08 Takeoffs and landings always pose risk of calamity as history shows Fee required The Globe and Mail Toronto Ontario Canada Retrieved 2008 11 23 The last time an aircraft skidded off the runway in Toronto seriously injuring passengers was more than a quarter century ago On June 26 1978 an Air Canada DC 9 skidded off a taxi strip at Toronto International Airport what is today Pearson International Airport during an aborted takeoff then belly flopped into a swampy ravine killing two passengers and injuring more than a hundred others dead link ASN Aircraft Accident description of the 14 SEP 1979 accident of a McDonnell Douglas DC 9 32 I ATJC at Sarroch Aviation Safety Network Flight Safety Foundation February 21 2006 Retrieved 2008 11 23 Accident description at the Aviation Safety Network ASN Aircraft accident Douglas DC 9 14 N3313L Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport Michigan DTW Aviation Safety Network Flight Safety Foundation 2008 11 23 Retrieved 2008 11 23 National Transportation Safety Board 1991 06 25 Aircraft Accident Report Northwest Airlines Inc Flights 1482 amp 299 Runway Incursion and Collision Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport Romulus Michigan December 3 1990 PDF AirDisaster Com Archived from the original on December 18 2008 Retrieved 2008 11 23 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Accident description for YV 23C at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on November 29 2020 ASN Aircraft accident McDonnell Douglas DC 9 32 LV WEG Nuevo Berlin Aviation Safety Network 24 February 2008 Retrieved 27 May 2011 ASN Aircraft accident McDonnell Douglas DC 9 31F XA TKN Uruapan Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on July 4 2010 Accident description for 5N BFD at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on November 29 2020 Plane crashes into African marketplace Archived April 20 2008 at the Wayback Machine CNN April 15 2008 Toll from Congo plane crash rises to 44 Associated Press 2008 04 17 USA Jet Flight 199 aviation safety net Accident description for N8967E at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on October 29 2020 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident McDonnell Douglas DC 9 41 JA8448 Morioka Hanamaki Airport HNA aviation safety net 06 Oct 2000 accident entry Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on March 23 2011 MCDONNELL DOUGLAS DC 9 32 Canada Aviation and Space Museum Canada Science and Technology Museums Corporation Retrieved 13 October 2016 C FTLL Air Canada McDonnell Douglas DC 9 32 cn 47021 133 Planespotters net Planespotters net Retrieved 14 October 2016 PK GNC McDonnell Douglas DC 9 32 Garuda Indonesia Firat Cimenli JetPhotos Retrieved 2019 12 26 Nurhalim Rendy 2017 10 27 Ada DC 9 Berlivery Klasik di Hanggar Garuda Maintenance Facility Buat Apa Ya KabarPenumpang com Retrieved 2019 12 26 Museum Transportasi tmii in Indonesian Taman Mini Indonesia Indah Retrieved 14 October 2016 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 14 October 2016 PK GNT Garuda Indonesia McDonnell Douglas DC 9 32 cn 47790 907 Planespotters net Planespotters net Retrieved 14 October 2016 IL DC9 PRESIDENZIALE A PORTATA DI MANO Volandia in Italian 29 October 2016 Archived from the original on 7 November 2016 Retrieved 10 December 2016 Portion of Historic DC 9 Donated to Volandia Museum Warbirds News Warbirds News 5 April 2016 Retrieved 10 December 2016 MM62012 Aeronautica Militare Italian Air Force McDonnell Douglas DC 9 32 cn 47595 709 Planespotters net Planespotters net Archived from the original on 11 May 2017 Retrieved 10 December 2016 Irish251 2013 03 10 N929L DC 9 32 City of Schiphol retrieved 2019 12 26 N3333L McDonnell Douglas DC 9 32 Delta Air Lines George W Hamlin JetPhotos Retrieved 2019 12 26 Svetkey Benjamin 3 October 2017 The Rise and Fall of the Big Bunny What Happened to Hugh Hefner s Private Jet The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 2 June 2019 N942ML McDonnell Douglas DC 9 32 Interjet Santiago MN JetPhotos Retrieved 2022 06 02 N606NW McDonnell Douglas DC 9 32 Interjet Santiago MN JetPhotos Retrieved 2022 06 02 EC BQZ Iberia McDonnell Douglas DC 9 32 cn 47456 580 Planespotters net Planespotters net Retrieved 10 December 2016 EC DGB Iberia McDonnell Douglas DC 9 30 www planespotters net Retrieved 11 July 2022 McDonnell Douglas DC 9 Ship 9880 Delta Flight Museum Retrieved 14 October 2016 Meng Tiffany 28 April 2014 Two new planes Delta Flight Museum Retrieved 14 October 2016 N675MC Delta Air Lines McDonnell Douglas DC 9 51 cn 47651 780 Planespotters net Planespotters net Archived from the original on 19 October 2016 Retrieved 14 October 2016 Delta Air Lines last DC 9 N779NC Carolinas Aviation Museum Archived from the original on 6 October 2014 Retrieved 14 October 2016 N779NC Delta Air Lines McDonnell Douglas DC 9 50 Planespotters net Retrieved April 10 2019 Washburn Mark 23 January 2014 Delta s last DC 9 retires at Charlotte museum CharlotteObserver com The McClatchy Company Archived from the original on 21 February 2014 Retrieved 14 October 2016 N779NC Delta Air Lines McDonnell Douglas DC 9 51 cn 48101 931 Planespotters net Planespotters net Archived from the original on 19 October 2016 Retrieved 14 October 2016 DC 9 airplane characteristics for airport planning PDF Douglas aircraft company June 1984 a b c d e f Type Certificate Data Sheet no A6WE PDF FAA March 25 2014 Bibliography Edit Becher Thomas Douglas Twinjets DC 9 MD 80 MD 90 and Boeing 717 Ramsbury Marlborough UK The Crowood Press 2002 ISBN 978 1 8612 6446 6 Super 80 For the Eighties Air International Vol 18 No 6 June 1980 pp 267 272 292 296 ISSN 0306 5634 Taylor John W R Jane s All The World s Aircraft 1966 67 London Sampson Low Marston amp Company 1966 Taylor John W R Jane s All The World s Aircraft 1976 77 London Jane s Yearbooks 1976 ISBN 0 354 00538 3 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to McDonnell Douglas DC 9 category Boeing Historical Snapshot DC 9 C 9 Transport DC 9 history page on Boeing com Archived from the original on March 4 2013 Retrieved March 22 2007 McDonnell Douglas commercial history page for DC 9 series DC 9 10 20 30 on Airliners net and DC 9 40 50 on Airliners net DC 9 History on AviationHistoryOnline com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title McDonnell Douglas DC 9 amp oldid 1133197009, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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