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McDonnell Douglas DC-10

The McDonnell Douglas DC-10 is an American trijet wide-body aircraft manufactured by McDonnell Douglas. The DC-10 was intended to succeed the DC-8 for long-range flights. It first flew on August 29, 1970; it was introduced on August 5, 1971, by American Airlines.

DC-10 / MD-10
A DC-10-30 of Continental Airlines
Role Wide-body airliner
National origin United States
Manufacturer McDonnell Douglas
First flight August 29, 1970; 53 years ago (1970-08-29)
Introduction August 5, 1971, with American Airlines
Retired 2014 (Passenger service)
Status In limited service
Primary users FedEx Express (historical)
Produced 1968–1989
Number built
Variants
Developed into McDonnell Douglas MD-11

The trijet has two turbofans on underwing pylons and a third one at the base of the vertical stabilizer. The twin-aisle layout has a typical seating for 270 in two classes. The initial DC-10-10 had a 3,500 nmi (6,500 km) range for transcontinental flights. The DC-10-15 had more powerful engines for hot and high airports. The DC-10-30 and −40 models (with a third main landing gear leg to support higher weights) each had intercontinental ranges of up to 5,200 nmi (9,600 km). The KC-10 Extender (based on the DC-10-30) is a tanker aircraft operated primarily by the United States Air Force.

Early operations of the DC-10 were afflicted by its poor safety record, which was partially attributable to a design flaw in the original cargo doors that caused multiple incidents, including fatalities. Following the American Airlines Flight 191 crash (the deadliest aviation accident in US history), the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) temporarily banned all DC-10s from U.S. airspace in June 1979. In August 1983, McDonnell Douglas announced that production would end due to a lack of orders, as it had a widespread public apprehension after the 1979 crash and a poor fuel economy reputation.[2] As design flaws were rectified and fleet hours increased, the DC-10 achieved a long-term safety record comparable to those of similar-era passenger jets.

Production ended in 1989, with 386 delivered to airlines along with 60 KC-10 tankers. The DC-10 had outsold the similar Lockheed L-1011 TriStar. It was succeeded by the lengthened, heavier McDonnell Douglas MD-11. After merging with McDonnell Douglas in 1997, Boeing upgraded many in-service DC-10s as the MD-10 with a glass cockpit that eliminated the need for a flight engineer. In February 2014, the DC-10 made its last commercial passenger flight. Cargo airlines continue to operate a small number as freighters. The Orbis Flying Eye Hospital is a DC-10 adapted for eye surgery. A few DC-10s have been converted for aerial firefighting use. Some DC-10s are on display, while other retired aircraft are in storage.

Development Edit

Background Edit

 
 
The 3-4-3 (left) and 2-5-2 (right) seating configuration

Following an unsuccessful proposal for the United States Air Force's CX-HLS (Heavy Logistics System) in 1965, Douglas Aircraft began design studies based on its CX-HLS submission. The aviation author John H. Fielder notes that the company was under competitive pressure to produce a widebody aircraft, having been somewhat slow in the previous decade to introduce its first jetliners.[3][4] In 1966, American Airlines offered a specification to manufacturers for a widebody aircraft that was smaller than the Boeing 747 yet capable of flying similar long-range routes from airports with shorter runways; this specification would be highly influential in the design of what would become the DC-10.[5] It would become McDonnell Douglas's first commercial airliner after the merger between McDonnell Aircraft Corporation and Douglas Aircraft Company in 1967.[6][7]

An early DC-10 design proposal was for a four-engine double-deck wide-body jet airliner with a maximum seating capacity of 550 passengers and similar in length to a DC-8. The proposal was shelved in favor of a trijet single-deck wide-body airliner with a maximum seating capacity of 399 passengers, and similar in length to the DC-8 Super 60.[8] Large portions of the detailed design work, particularly that of the fuselage, was subcontracted to external companies, such as the American aerospace company Convair.[9] The legal relationship between McDonnell Douglas, Convair, and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) would later serve to complicate matters; specifically, Convair was forbidden from contacting the regulator no matter the severity of any safety concerns it had in the DC-10's design.[10]

On February 19, 1968, in what was supposed to be a knockout blow to the competing Lockheed L-1011, George A. Spater, President of American Airlines, and James S. McDonnell of McDonnell Douglas announced American Airlines' intention to acquire the DC-10. This was a shock to Lockheed and there was general agreement within the U.S. aviation industry that American Airlines had left its competitors at the starting gate. According to Fielder, McDonnell Douglas had been urgently pursuing the DC-10's completion in light of the prospective competition and the high financial stakes involved.[11] Together with American Airlines' announcement of the DC-10 order, it was also reported that American Airlines had declared its intention to have the British Rolls-Royce RB211 turbofan engine on its DC-10 airliners.[12] The DC-10 was first ordered by launch customers American Airlines with 25 orders, and United Airlines with 30 orders and 30 options in 1968.[13][14][15] The DC-10's similarity to the Lockheed L-1011 in design, passenger capacity, and launch date resulted in a sales competition that affected profitability of both aircraft.[16]

Into flight Edit

 
A prototype during flight testing, the DC-10 made its first flight on August 29, 1970.

On August 29, 1970, the first DC-10, a series 10, conducted its maiden flight.[17] An extensive flight test program was carried out, totaling 929 flights and 1,551 flight hours; the test programme was not incident-free: during one ground test in 1970, the outwardly-opening cargo door blew out and the resulting rapid pressurization changes caused the main cabin's floor to collapse.[18][19] This discovery and first effort at rectification led to a contract dispute between McDonnell Douglas and Convair over what changes were necessary and financial liability. Fielder alleges that McDonnell Douglas consistently sought to minimize and postpone any design changes to the DC-10, although this attitude was not an explicit policy.[20] In July 1971, Convair outlined the situation in a formal memo; almost a year later, it internally expressed concerns that the inadequate resolution would lead to the loss of aircraft.[21] Tragically, the initial rectification work would prove to be inadequate.[22]

On July 29, 1971, the FAA issued the type certificate for the DC-10, permitting its entry into revenue service.[19] It entered commercial service with American Airlines on August 5, 1971, the initial flight being a round trip flight between Los Angeles and Chicago; United Airlines also commenced DC-10 flights later that same month.[23] American's DC-10s were configured to seat a maximum of 206 passenger while United's seated 222; both had six-across seating in first-class and eight-across (four pairs) in coach.[24] They operated the first version of the DC-10, referred to as the "domestic" series 10, which had a range of 3,800 miles (3,300 nmi, 6,110 km) with a typical passenger load and a range of 2,710 miles (2,350 nmi, 4,360 km) with maximum payload.

Further development Edit

 
Continental Airlines six-abreast interior in 1973

Various models of the DC-10 promptly followed, such as the series 15, which had a typical load range of 4,350 miles (3,780 nmi, 7,000 km).[25][26] The series 20 was powered by Pratt & Whitney JT9D turbofan engines, whereas the series 10 and 30 engines were General Electric CF6. Prior to taking delivery of its aircraft, Northwest's president asked that the "series 20" aircraft be redesignated "series 40" because the airliner was much improved over the original design. The FAA issued the certification for the series 40 on October 27, 1972.[27][7] In 1972, the DC-10's listed unit cost was reportedly US$20M[28] ($140 million in 2022 prices).

The series 30 and 40 were the longer-range "international" versions. The main visible difference between the models is that the series 10 has three sets of landing gear (one front and two main) while the series 30 and 40 have an additional centerline main gear. The center main two-wheel landing gear (which extends from the center of the fuselage) was added to distribute the extra weight and for additional braking. The series 30 had a typical load range of 6,220 mi (10,010 km) and a maximum payload range of 4,604 mi (7,410 km). The series 40 had a typical load range of 5,750 miles (9,265 km) and a maximum payload range of 4,030 miles (3,500 nmi, 6,490 km).[25][29]

The DC-10 had two engine options and introduced longer-range variants a few years after entering service; these allowed it to distinguish itself from its main competitor, the L-1011. Further models and derivatives of the DC-10 had been considered; perhaps the most radical of these being an unpursued twin-engined model akin to the Airbus A300.[30][31] However, following spate of fatal accidents, particularly the American Airlines Flight 191 crash (the deadliest aviation accident in US history) orders for the DC-10 had nosedived by 1980, the type having garnered a poor reputation that was widespread amongst the travelling public as well as prospective operators.[2][32] Competitive pressure had also played a role, Boeing in particular had developed the 747SP variant specifically to better compete with the DC-10 and L-1011.[33]

During December 1988, the 446th and final DC-10 rolled off the Long Beach, California Products Division production line and was delivered to Nigeria Airways in July 1989.[34][35] The production run had exceeded the 1971 estimate of 438 deliveries needed to break even on the program;[36] however, according to Fielder, the DC-10 had not reached the breakeven point by the end of production.[11] As the final DC-10s were delivered, McDonnell Douglas started production of its successor, the MD-11, which was essentially a stretched derivative of the DC-10-30.[37][38]

In the late 1980s, as international travel was growing due to lower oil prices and more economic freedom, demand for widebody airliners could not be fully met by the delayed Boeing 747-400, MD-11 and the Airbus A330/A340 while the 747-200/300 and DC-10 production had already ended; accordingly, the value of secondhand DC-10-30s nearly doubled from less than $20 million to nearly $40 million.[39]

Design Edit

 
The DC-10 has a three-crew cockpit including a flight engineer.

The McDonnell Douglas DC-10 is a low-wing wide-body aircraft. It is sized to conduct medium to long-range flights, offering similar endurance to the larger Boeing 747 yet being able to use shorter runways and thus access airports that it could not.[40] Dependent upon configuration, the main cabin is able to accommodate between 250 and 380 passengers across its main deck. The fuselage is split into two levels, the upper deck is the only one where passenger seating would be present as the smaller lower level is typically used for storage for baggage and food preparation; elevators are usually present to carry people and carts between the two levels.[41][40] As originally designed, the floor of the main cabin was not strong enough to withstand full pressure differential,[42] yet key control lines are routed through this floor, an approach that proved to be a key vulnerability.[20]

The DC-10 is a trijet, being powered by three turbofan engines. Two of these engines are mounted on pylons that attach to the bottom of the wings, while the third engine is encased in a protective banjo-shaped structure that is mounted on the top of the rear fuselage.[40] In comparison to the first generation of jetliners, these engines generated less noise and were usually smoke-free.[43] The engines are equipped with thrust reversers which reduce the distance required when landing.[44] Despite being considerably larger, the landing speed of the DC-10 was comparable to that of the contemporary Boeing 727.[45]

The primary flight controls of the DC-10 consist of inboard and outboard ailerons, two-section elevators, and a two-section rudder; the secondary flight controls comprise leading edge slats, spoilers, and a dual-rate movable horizontal stabilizer.[46] The vertical stabilizer with the rudder is mounted on top of the tail engine banjo while the horizontal stabilizer with its four-segment elevator is attached to the sides of the rear fuselage in the conventional manner. The DC-10 is equipped with retractable tricycle landing gear. To enable higher gross weights, the later −30 and −40 series have an additional two-wheel main landing gear, which retracts into the center of the fuselage.[47]

The DC-10 is capable of performing all-weather operations, a function that many preceding jetliners had been incapable of.[44] From the onset, it could perform takeoffs and landings completely under autopilot. Cassette tapes were used to load preprogrammed flight plans into the flight computer.[48] As originally built, the cockpit was operated by a flight crew of three;[44] numerous DC-10s have received a retrofitted glass cockpit and the Advanced Common Flightdeck shared with the MD-11, thus eliminating the flight engineer and permitted the aircraft, re-designated MD-10, to be flown by a flight crew of two.[49][50] A total of four independent hydraulic systems are present, the flight controls actuate many of the flight control surfaces across the airliner via these hydraulic circuits;[43] the critical nature of these circuits and their vulnerability to damage in the tail area led to the addition of hydraulic fuses to prevent the total loss of fluid.[51] Power for the hydraulics was derived from primary and reserve engine-driven pumps equipped on each of the three engines. Hydraulic power was required for flight control, there was no provision for reverting to manual flight control inputs.[52]

Variants Edit

Original variants Edit

 
The initial DC-10-10, powered by three GE CF6s, has two main landing gears.
DC-10-10
The DC-10-10 is the initial passenger version introduced in 1971, produced from 1970 to 1981. The DC-10-10 was equipped with GE CF6-6 engines, which was the first civil engine version from the CF6 family. A total of 122 were built.[53]
DC-10-10CF
The −10CF is a convertible passenger and cargo transport version of the −10. Eight were delivered to Continental Airlines and one to United Airlines.[53]
DC-10-15
The −15 variant was designed for use at hot and high airports. The series 15 is basically a −10 fitted with higher-thrust GE CF6-50C2F (derated DC-10-30 engines) powerplants.[54] The −15 was first ordered in 1979 by Mexicana and Aeroméxico. Seven were completed between 1981 and 1983.[55]

Long-range variants Edit

 
The heavier DC-10-30 has an additional center landing gear.
 
The heavy DC-10-40 is powered by three Pratt & Whitney JT9Ds.
DC-10-30
A long-range model and the most common model produced. It was built with General Electric CF6-50 turbofan engines, with larger fuel tanks and a larger wingspan to increase range and fuel efficiency, and with a set of rear center landing gear to support the increased weight. It was very popular with European flag carriers. A total of 163 were built from 1972 to 1988 and delivered to 38 different customers.[56] The model was first delivered to KLM and Swissair on November 21, 1972, and first introduced in service on December 15, 1972, by the latter.[citation needed]
DC-10-30CF
The convertible cargo/passenger transport version of the DC-10-30. The first deliveries were to Overseas National Airways (ONA) and Trans International Airlines in 1973. A total of 27 were built.[57]
DC-10-30ER
The extended-range version of the DC-10-30. The −30ER aircraft has a higher maximum takeoff weight of 590,000 lb (267,600 kg); is powered by three GE CF6-50C2B engines each producing 54,000 lbf (240 kN) of thrust; and is equipped with an additional fuel tank in the rear cargo hold.[58][59] It has an additional 700 mi of range to 6,600 mi (5,730 nmi, 10,620 km). The first of this variant was delivered to Finnair in 1981. A total of six were built and five −30s were later converted to −30ERs.
DC-10-30AF
Also known as the DC-10-30F. This was the all freight version of the −30. Production was to start in 1979, but Alitalia did not confirm its order then. Production began in May 1984 after the first aircraft order from FedEx. A total of 10 were built.[60]
DC-10-40
The first long-range version fitted with Pratt & Whitney JT9D engines. Originally designated DC-10-20, this model was renamed DC-10-40 after a special request from Northwest Orient Airlines: the aircraft was much improved compared to its original design, with a higher MTOW (on par with the Series 30) and with more powerful engines, and retains the increased wingspan from the DC-10-30. The airline's president wanted to advertise that he had the latest version.[61][62] The company also wanted its aircraft to be equipped with the same engines as its Boeing 747s for fleet commonality.[63]
Northwest Orient Airlines and Japan Airlines were the only airlines to order the Series 40, respectively ordering 22 and 20 aircraft. The Northwest DC-10-40s were delivered with improved engines, Pratt & Whitney JT9D-20 engines producing 50,000 lbf (222 kN) of thrust and a MTOW of 555,000 lb (251,815 kg). The DC-10-40s delivered to Japan Airlines were equipped with P&W JT9D-59A engines that produced a thrust of 53,000 lbf (235.8 kN) and a MTOW of 565,000 lb (256,350 kg).[64]
Forty-two DC-10-40s were built from 1973 to 1983.[65] Externally, the DC-10-40 can be distinguished from the DC-10-30 by a slight bulge near the front of the nacelle for the #2 (tail) engine.

Proposed variants Edit

 
The DC-10 Twin concept
DC-10-20
A proposed version of the DC-10-10 with extra fuel tanks, 3-ft (0.9 m) extensions on each wingtip and a rear center landing gear. It was to use Pratt & Whitney JT9D-15 turbofan engines, each producing 45,500 lbf (203 kN) of thrust, with a maximum takeoff weight of 530,000 lb (240,400 kg). But engine improvements led to increased thrust and increased takeoff weight.[64] Northwest Orient Airlines, one of the launch customers for this longer-range DC-10 requested the name change to DC-10-40.[61]
DC-10-50
A proposed version with Rolls-Royce RB211-524 engines for British Airways. The order never came and the plans for the DC-10-50 were abandoned after British Airways ordered the Lockheed L-1011-500 instead.[66]
DC-10 Twin
Beginning in 1966, two-engine designs were studied for the DC-10 before the design settled on the three-engine configuration. Later, a big twin based on the DC-10 cross-section was proposed to Airbus as a 50/50 venture but rejected, and in 1971, a shortened DC-10 version with two engines was proposed as a competitor to the Airbus A300. McDonnell Douglas even held a major presentation of the proposed DC-10 Twin at Long Beach, and several European airlines were willing to place orders. On July 30, 1973, however, the company's board decided not to give the proposed twin the go ahead, as no US airline had ordered it. Later still, further DC-10 Twin proposals were made, either as a collaboration with a European manufacturer or as a solely McDonnell Douglas product, but none of them proceeded beyond design studies.[67][68]

Tanker versions Edit

 
The KC-10 Extender, a USAF aerial tanker

The KC-10 Extender is a military version of the DC-10-30CF for aerial refueling. The aircraft was ordered by the U.S. Air Force and delivered from 1981 to 1988. A total of 60 were built.[69] These aircraft are powered exclusively by General Electric CF6 turbofan engines.

The KDC-10 was an aerial refueling tanker for the Royal Netherlands Air Force. These were converted from civil airliners (DC-10-30CF) to a similar standard as the KC-10. Also, commercial refueling companies Omega Aerial Refueling Services[70][71] and Global Airtanker Service[72][73] operate two KDC-10 tankers for lease. Four have been built.

The DC-10 Air Tanker is a DC-10-based firefighting tanker aircraft, using modified water tanks from Erickson Air-Crane.

MD-10 upgrade Edit

 
The MD-10 has an MD-11-inspired two-crew glass cockpit.

The MD-10 is an upgrade to add a glass cockpit to the DC-10 with the re-designation to MD-10. The upgrade included an Advanced Common Flightdeck used on the MD-11 and was launched in September 1996.[49] The program was continued by Boeing after its merger with McDonnell Douglas in 1997, and the first MD-10 flew on April 14, 1999.[74] The new cockpit eliminated the need for the flight engineer position and allowed common type rating with the MD-11. This allows companies such as FedEx Express, which operate both the MD-10 and MD-11, to have a common pilot pool for both aircraft. The MD-10 conversion now falls under the Boeing Converted Freighter program where Boeing's international affiliate companies perform the conversions.[75]

Operators Edit

As of January 2023, one MD-10 is in commercial service with TAB Airlines.[76]

On January 8, 2007, Northwest Airlines retired its last remaining DC-10 from scheduled passenger service,[77] thus ending the aircraft's operations with major airlines. Regarding the retirement of Northwest's DC-10 fleet, Wade Blaufuss, spokesman for the Northwest chapter of the Air Line Pilots Association said, "The DC-10 is a reliable airplane, fun to fly, roomy and quiet, kind of like flying an old Cadillac Fleetwood. We're sad to see an old friend go."[78] Biman Bangladesh Airlines was the last commercial carrier to operate the DC-10 in passenger service.[79][80][81] The airline flew the DC-10 on a regular passenger flight for the last time on February 20, 2014, from Dhaka, Bangladesh to Birmingham, UK.[80][82] Local charter flights were flown in the UK until February 24, 2014.[83]

 
Biman Bangladesh Airlines was the last operator of the DC-10 in passenger service.

Non-airline operators included the Royal Netherlands Air Force with two DC-10-30CF-based KDC-10 tanker aircraft until their retirement in 2019 and 2021 respectively, the USAF with its 59 KC-10s, and the 10 Tanker Air Carrier with its modified DC-10-10 used for fighting wildfires.[84] Orbis International has used a DC-10 as a flying eye hospital. Surgery is performed on the ground and the operating room is located between the wings for maximum stability. In 2008, Orbis chose to replace its aging DC-10-10 with a DC-10-30 jointly donated by FedEx and United Airlines.[85][86] The newer DC-10 was converted into MD-10 configuration, and began flying as an eye hospital in 2010.[86][87][88] A modified DC-10 is operated by the Missile Defense Agency as the Widebody Airborne Sensor Platform (WASP).[89] Tanker 10 Air Carrier, an aerial firefighting company, currently operates four DC-10-30 aircraft converted for aerial fire suppression retardant drops.[90]

Accidents and incidents Edit

As of September 2015, the DC-10 had been involved in 55 accidents and incidents,[91] including 32 hull-loss accidents,[92] with 1,261 occupant fatalities.[93] Of these accidents and incidents, it has been involved in nine hijackings resulting in one death and a bombing resulting in 170 occupant fatalities.[93] Despite its poor safety record in the 1970s, which gave it an unfavorable reputation,[94] the DC-10 has proved to be a reliable aircraft with a low overall accident rate as of 1998.[95] The DC-10's initially poor safety record has continuously improved as design flaws were rectified and fleet hours increased.[95] The DC-10's lifetime safety record is comparable to similar second-generation passenger jets as of 2008.[96]

Cargo door problem Edit

The DC-10 has cargo doors that open outward; this allows the cargo area to be completely filled, as the doors do not occupy otherwise usable interior space when open. To overcome the outward force from pressurization of the fuselage at high altitudes, outward-opening doors must use heavy locking mechanisms. In the event of a door lock malfunction, there is greater potential for explosive decompression.[97]

On June 12, 1972, American Airlines Flight 96 lost its aft cargo door above Windsor, Ontario. Before takeoff, the door appeared secure, but the internal locking mechanism was not fully engaged. When the aircraft reached approximately 11,750 feet (3,580 m) in altitude, the door blew out, and the resulting explosive decompression collapsed the cabin floor.[98] Many control cables to the empennage were cut, leaving the pilots with very limited control of the aircraft.[99][100] Despite this, the crew performed a safe emergency landing.[101] U.S. National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) investigators found the cargo door design to be dangerously flawed, as the door could be closed without the locking mechanism fully engaged, and this condition was not apparent from visual inspection of the door nor from the cargo-door indicator in the cockpit. The NTSB recommended modifications to make it readily apparent to baggage handlers when the door was not secured, and also recommended adding vents to the cabin floor, so that the pressure difference between the cabin and cargo bay during decompression could quickly equalize without causing further damage.[98][102] Although many carriers voluntarily modified the cargo doors, no airworthiness directive was issued, due to a gentlemen's agreement between the head of the FAA, John H. Shaffer, and the head of McDonnell Douglas's aircraft division, Jackson McGowen. McDonnell Douglas made some modifications to the cargo door, but the basic design remained unchanged, and problems persisted.[98][103]

On March 3, 1974, in an accident circumstantially similar to American Airlines Flight 96, a cargo-door blowout caused Turkish Airlines Flight 981 to crash near Ermenonville, France,[98][104] in the deadliest air crash in history at the time — 346 passengers and crew died.[105] The cargo door of Flight 981 had not been fully locked, though it appeared so to both cockpit crew and ground personnel. The Turkish aircraft had a seating configuration that exacerbated the effects of decompression, and as the cabin floor collapsed into the cargo bay, control cables were severed and the aircraft became uncontrollable.[98] Investigators found that the DC-10's relief vents were not large enough to equalize the pressure between the passenger and cargo compartments during explosive decompression.[106] Following this crash, a special subcommittee of the United States House of Representatives investigated the cargo-door issue and the certification by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) of the original design.[107] An airworthiness directive was issued, and all DC-10s underwent mandatory door modifications.[107] The DC-10 experienced no more major incidents related to its cargo door after FAA-approved changes were made.[98]

Other major accidents Edit

On May 25, 1979, American Airlines Flight 191 crashed immediately after takeoff from Chicago O'Hare Airport.[108] Its left engine and pylon assembly swung upward over the top of the wing, severing the leading edge slat actuator hydraulic lines. The slats retracted under the aerodynamic forces, causing the left wing to stall. This, combined with asymmetric thrust due to the missing engine, caused the aircraft to rapidly roll to the left, descend, and crash, killing all 271 people on board and two on the ground.[109] Following the crash, the FAA withdrew the DC-10's type certificate on June 6, 1979, grounding all U.S.-registered DC-10s and those from nations with agreements with the United States, and banning all DC-10s from U.S. airspace.[110][111] These measures were rescinded five weeks later on July 13, 1979, after the slat actuation and position systems were modified, along with stall warning and power supply changes.[112][113] In November 1979, the FAA fined American Airlines for removing the engine and its pylon as a single unit in its maintenance procedure, thus damaging the structure and causing the engine separation, rather than removing the engine from the pylon before removing the pylon from the wing as advised by McDonnell Douglas.[112][108]

On July 19, 1989, United Airlines Flight 232 crashed at Sioux City, Iowa, after an uncontained engine failure of the tail engine earlier in the flight disabled all hydraulic systems and rendered most flight controls inoperable. The flight crew, assisted by a deadheading DC-10 flight instructor, performed a partially controlled emergency landing by constantly adjusting the thrust of the remaining two engines; 185 people on board survived, but 111 others died, and the aircraft was destroyed.[114] The DC-10 was designed without backup flight controls because it was considered extremely improbable that all hydraulic systems would fail. However, due to their close proximity under the tail engine, the engine failure ruptured all three, resulting in total loss of control to the elevators, ailerons, spoilers, horizontal stabilizer, rudder, flaps and slats.[114][51] Following the accident, hydraulic fuses were installed in the #3 hydraulic system below the tail engine on all DC-10 aircraft to ensure that sufficient control remains if all three hydraulic systems are damaged in this area.[115][116]

Other accidents with fatalities Edit

  • November 3, 1973: National Airlines Flight 27, a DC-10-10 cruising at 39,000 feet (12,000 m), experienced an uncontained failure of the right engine. One cabin window separated from the fuselage after it was struck by debris flung from the exploding engine. The passenger sitting next to that window was killed and ejected from the aircraft. The crew initiated an emergency descent and landed the aircraft safely.[117]
  • March 1, 1978: Continental Airlines Flight 603, a DC-10-10, commenced a takeoff from Los Angeles International Airport when the recapped tread of a tire on the left main landing gear separated, causing the blowout of two adjacent tires, which ruptured a fuel tank. This, combined with excessive heat from the rejected takeoff, resulted in a massive fire. Two passengers were killed in the ensuing evacuation and two died later from injuries sustained in the accident.[118]
  • October 31, 1979: Western Airlines Flight 2605, a DC-10-10, collided with construction equipment after landing on a closed runway at Mexico City International Airport, killing 72 of the 88 people on board and one person on the ground. The crash was caused by failure to follow proper landing guidelines in consideration of the fog on the runway.[119]
  • November 28, 1979: Air New Zealand Flight 901, DC-10-30 ZK-NZP, crashed into Mount Erebus on Ross Island, Antarctica during a sightseeing flight over the continent, killing all 257 on board. The accident was caused by the flight coordinates being altered without the flight crew's knowledge, combined with unique Antarctic weather conditions.[120]
  • January 23, 1982: World Airways Flight 30, DC-10-30CF registration N113WA, overran the runway at Boston Logan International Airport. All 12 crew survived, but two of the 200 passengers were never found.[121]
  • September 13, 1982: Spantax Flight 995, DC-10-30CF EC-DEG, was destroyed by fire after an aborted take-off at Málaga, Spain. A total of 50 passengers were killed and 110 injured due to the flames.[122]
  • July 27, 1989: Korean Air Flight 803, DC-10-30 HL7328, crashed short of the runway in bad weather while trying to land at Tripoli, Libya. Seventy-five of the 199 on board plus another four people on the ground were killed in the accident.[123]
  • September 19, 1989: UTA Flight 772, DC-10-30 N54629, crashed in the Ténéré Desert in Niger following an in-flight bomb explosion, claiming the lives of all 170 on board.[124]
  • December 21, 1992: Martinair Flight 495, DC-10-30CF PH-MBN, crashed while landing in bad weather at Faro, Portugal, killing 54 passengers and crew.[125][126]
  • June 13, 1996: Garuda Indonesia Flight 865, DC-10-30 PK-GIE, had just taken off from Fukuoka Airport, Japan, when a high-pressure blade from the right engine separated. The aircraft was just a few feet above the runway, and the pilot decided to abort the takeoff. Consequently, the DC-10 skidded off the runway and came to a halt 1,600 ft (490 m) past it, losing one of its engines and its landing gear. Three passengers perished in the accident.[127]
  • December 21, 1999: Cubana de Aviación Flight 1216, DC-10-30 F-GTDI, overran the runway at La Aurora International Airport, Guatemala City. Eight passengers and eight crew members on board were killed, as were two people on the ground.[128]

Other hull losses Edit

  • December 17, 1973: Iberia Airlines Flight 933 crashed and struck the ALS system at Boston Logan International Airport which collapsed the front landing gear. All 168 passengers and crew survived. This is the first hull loss of a DC-10 aircraft.[129]
  • November 12, 1975: Overseas National Airways (ONA) Flight 032, DC-10-30CF N1032F, accelerated through a flock of seagulls during its takeoff roll from John F. Kennedy International Airport on a ferry flight. The captain initiated a rejected takeoff, but the right-hand engine exploded, causing a partial braking failure. The pilots steered off the runway to avoid plowing into a blast fence, causing the landing gear to collapse and rupturing a fuel tank; the ensuing fire destroyed the aircraft. All 139 on board—all ONA employees—survived with 32 suffering injuries.[130]
  • January 2, 1976: Saudi Arabian Airlines Flight 5130, DC-10-30CF N1031F leased from ONA, landed short of the runway at Istanbul-Yesilköy Airport, tearing off the left-hand engine and the left and center main landing gear. All 362 passengers evacuated safely while one of thirteen crew members was injured. The accident was attributed to an excessively low approach, possibly caused by the first officer using the radar altimeter for altitude reference over irregular terrain.[131][132]
  • December 3, 1983: Korean Air Lines Flight 084, DC-10-30 freighter HL7339, collided head-on during the takeoff roll with SouthCentral Air Flight 59, Piper PA-31 N35206, which was taking off from Anchorage International Airport. The Piper struck the DC-10's left and center main landing gear and three passengers sustained minor injuries; the DC-10 overran the runway and the three crew suffered serious injuries. Investigators determined that the Korean Air Lines pilot became disoriented taxiing in fog, failed to follow correct procedures and confirm his position, and accidentally initiated takeoff from the wrong runway.[133]
  • May 21, 1988: American Airlines Flight 70, DC-10-30 N136AA, overran Runway 35L at Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport (DFW) after the flight crew attempted a rejected takeoff. Two crew were seriously injured and the remaining 12 crew and 240 passengers escaped safely. The accident was attributed to a shortcoming in the original design standards; no requirement had existed to test whether partially worn brake pads could stop the aircraft during a rejected takeoff, and 8 of the 10 worn pad sets had failed.[134][135]
  • April 14, 1993: American Airlines Flight 102, DC-10-30 N139AA, skidded off the runway on landing at DFW in a rainstorm, collapsing the nose and left main landing gear and badly damaging the left-hand engine and wing. Two passengers suffered serious injuries during the emergency evacuation, while the remaining 187 passengers and 13 crew escaped safely. The NTSB attributed the crash to poor directional control technique by the captain.[136][137][138]
  • September 5, 1996: FedEx Express Flight 1406, DC-10-10F N68055, suffered an in-flight cargo fire while flying from Memphis, Tennessee to Boston, Massachusetts. The aircraft made a successful emergency landing at Stewart International Airport in Newburgh, New York, however after evacuating all 5 crew members the aircraft was consumed by fire and destroyed.
  • December 18, 2003: FedEx Express Flight 647, MD-10-10F N364FE, was destroyed by fire after the right main landing gear collapsed due to a hard landing at Memphis International Airport. One of the two pilots and one of the five passengers—all deadheading FedEx employees—suffered minor injuries in the emergency evacuation.
  • July 28, 2006: FedEx Express Flight 630, MD-10-10F N391FE, departed runway 18R and burned out at Memphis International Airport following the collapse of the left main landing gear. The two pilots and single passenger suffered minor injuries during the emergency evacuation. The accident was attributed to improper landing gear maintenance.
  • October 28, 2016: FedEx Express Flight 910, MD-10-10F N370FE, partially exited the runway at Ft. Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport following the collapse of the left main landing gear. The accident was attributed to improper landing gear maintenance.

Other notable incidents Edit

  • April 7, 1994: The flight crew of Federal Express Flight 705, DC-10-30 N306FE, was attacked by a deadheading FedEx employee in an attempted murder-suicide intended to cause the aircraft to crash. The seriously injured crew returned to Memphis International Airport after subduing the hijacker, using aerobatic maneuvers and damaging the aircraft in the process. The aircraft was repaired and placed back in service.[139]
  • July 25, 2000: The right-hand thrust reverser cowl door of Continental Airlines Flight 55, DC-10-30 N13067, shed a strip of metal which landed on the runway at Charles de Gaulle Airport upon takeoff. Minutes later, Air France Flight 4590, operated by a Concorde, ran over the metal strip at high speed, bursting a tire and causing a fuel tank to rupture and burst into flames. The Concorde's pilots attempted to keep control of the aircraft, but it stalled and crashed. The strip of metal was traced to third-party replacement parts not approved by the FAA.[140]
  • January 31, 2001: Japan Airlines Flight 958, DC-10-40 JA8546, was involved in a midair near collision with a Japan Airlines Boeing 747-400 near Yaizu. Both flight crews performed evasive maneuvers; all 677 aboard both aircraft survived, but nine aboard the 747-400 were seriously injured.

Aircraft on display Edit

Specifications Edit

 
The schematic of the McDonnell Douglas DC-10-30 (side, top, front, cross-section)
DC-10 Airplane Characteristics[147]
Variant -10 -30 -40
Cockpit crew Three
Std. seating 270 (222Y 8-abreast @ 34" + 48J 6-abreast @ 38")
Max. seating 399Y (10-abreast @ 29–34" pitch) layout, FAA exit limit: 380[148]
Cargo 26 LD3 layout, main deck: 22 88×125″ or 30 88×108″ pallets
Length 182 ft 3.1 in / 55.55 m 181 ft 7.2 in / 55.35 m 182 ft 2.6 in / 55.54 m
Height 57 ft 6 in / 17.53 m 57 ft 7 in / 17.55 m
Wingspan 155 ft 4 in / 47.35 m 165 ft 4 in / 50.39 m
Wing area[149] 3,550 sq ft (330 m2) 3,647 sq ft (338.8 m2)
Width 19 ft 9 in (6.02 m) fuselage, 224 in (569 cm) interior
OEW (pax) 240,171 lb / 108,940 kg 266,191 lb / 120,742 kg 270,213 lb / 122,567 kg
MTOW 430,000 lb / 195,045 kg 555,000 lb / 251,744 kg
Max. payload 94,829 lb / 43,014 kg 101,809 lb / 46,180 kg 97,787 lb 44,356 kg
Fuel capacity 21,762 US gal / 82,376 L 36,652 US gal / 137,509 L
Engines ×3 GE CF6-6D GE CF6-50C PW JT9D-20 / -59A
Thrust ×3[149] 40,000 lbf / 177.92 kN 51,000 lbf / 226.85 kN 53,000 lbf / 235.74 kN
Cruise Mach 0.82 (473 kn; 876 km/h) typical, Mach 0.88 (507 kn; 940 km/h) MMo[148]
Range[a] 3,500 nmi (6,500 km) 5,200 nmi (9,600 km) 5,100 nmi (9,400 km)
Takeoff[b] 9,000 ft (2,700 m) 10,500 ft (3,200 m) 9,500 ft (2,900 m)
Ceiling 42,000 ft (12,800 m)[148]
  1. ^ M0.82, 270 pax @ 205 lb or 93 kg each
  2. ^ MTOW, SL, ISA

Deliveries Edit

Deliveries by year[citation needed]
1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 Total
13 52 57 48 42 19 14 18 36 40 25 11 12 10 11 17 10 10 1 446

See also Edit

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References Edit

Citations Edit

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Bibliography Edit

  • Eden, Paul E. (2016). The World's Most Powerful Civilian Aircraft. Rosen Publishing. ISBN 9781499465891.
  • Endres, Günter. McDonnell Douglas DC-10. St. Paul, Minnesota: MBI Publishing Company, 1998. ISBN 0-7603-0617-6.
  • Fielder, J.H. and D. Birsch. The DC-10 Case: A Study in Applied Ethics, Technology, and Society. Albany, New York: SUNY Press, 1992. ISBN 0-7914-1087-0.
  • Kocivar, Ben. "Giant Tri-Jets Are Coming". Popular Science, December 1970, pp. 50–52, 116. ISSN 0161-7370.
  • Norris, Guy; Wagner, Mark (1999). Douglas Jetliners. Zenith Imprint. ISBN 9781610607162.
  • Porter, Andrew. "Transatlantic Betrayal " The RB211 and the Demise of Rolls-Royce LTD. Stroud. UK. Amberley, 2013. ISBN 978-1-4456-0649-1
  • Steffen, Arthur, A. C. McDonnell Douglas DC-10 and KC-10 Extender. Hinckley, Leicester, UK: Aerofax, 1998. ISBN 1-85780-051-6.
  • Waddington, Terry. McDonnell Douglas DC-10. Miami, Florida: World Transport Press, 2000. ISBN 1-892437-04-X.
  • "World Airliner Census". Flight International, Volume 184, Number 5403, August 13–19, 2013, pp. 40–58.

External links Edit

  • DC-10/KC-10 history on Boeing.com
  • "DC-10 Passenger" (PDF). Boeing. 2007.
  • Robert R. Ropelewski (August 30, 1971). (PDF). Aviation Week. 'Simple sophistication' of aircraft, with improvements in training, credited with reducing flight time for type rating. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 17, 2017. Retrieved September 17, 2017.

mcdonnell, douglas, dc10, redirects, here, other, uses, dc10, disambiguation, confused, with, mcdonnell, douglas, vickers, vc10, american, trijet, wide, body, aircraft, manufactured, mcdonnell, douglas, intended, succeed, long, range, flights, first, flew, aug. DC10 redirects here For other uses see DC10 disambiguation Not to be confused with McDonnell Douglas DC X or Vickers VC10 The McDonnell Douglas DC 10 is an American trijet wide body aircraft manufactured by McDonnell Douglas The DC 10 was intended to succeed the DC 8 for long range flights It first flew on August 29 1970 it was introduced on August 5 1971 by American Airlines DC 10 MD 10A DC 10 30 of Continental AirlinesRole Wide body airlinerNational origin United StatesManufacturer McDonnell DouglasFirst flight August 29 1970 53 years ago 1970 08 29 Introduction August 5 1971 with American AirlinesRetired 2014 Passenger service Status In limited servicePrimary users FedEx Express historical American Airlines historical United Airlines historical Northwest Airlines historical Produced 1968 1989Number built DC 10 386 1 KC 10 60 1 Variants McDonnell Douglas KC 10 Extender DC 10 Air TankerDeveloped into McDonnell Douglas MD 11The trijet has two turbofans on underwing pylons and a third one at the base of the vertical stabilizer The twin aisle layout has a typical seating for 270 in two classes The initial DC 10 10 had a 3 500 nmi 6 500 km range for transcontinental flights The DC 10 15 had more powerful engines for hot and high airports The DC 10 30 and 40 models with a third main landing gear leg to support higher weights each had intercontinental ranges of up to 5 200 nmi 9 600 km The KC 10 Extender based on the DC 10 30 is a tanker aircraft operated primarily by the United States Air Force Early operations of the DC 10 were afflicted by its poor safety record which was partially attributable to a design flaw in the original cargo doors that caused multiple incidents including fatalities Following the American Airlines Flight 191 crash the deadliest aviation accident in US history the US Federal Aviation Administration FAA temporarily banned all DC 10s from U S airspace in June 1979 In August 1983 McDonnell Douglas announced that production would end due to a lack of orders as it had a widespread public apprehension after the 1979 crash and a poor fuel economy reputation 2 As design flaws were rectified and fleet hours increased the DC 10 achieved a long term safety record comparable to those of similar era passenger jets Production ended in 1989 with 386 delivered to airlines along with 60 KC 10 tankers The DC 10 had outsold the similar Lockheed L 1011 TriStar It was succeeded by the lengthened heavier McDonnell Douglas MD 11 After merging with McDonnell Douglas in 1997 Boeing upgraded many in service DC 10s as the MD 10 with a glass cockpit that eliminated the need for a flight engineer In February 2014 the DC 10 made its last commercial passenger flight Cargo airlines continue to operate a small number as freighters The Orbis Flying Eye Hospital is a DC 10 adapted for eye surgery A few DC 10s have been converted for aerial firefighting use Some DC 10s are on display while other retired aircraft are in storage Contents 1 Development 1 1 Background 1 2 Into flight 1 3 Further development 2 Design 3 Variants 3 1 Original variants 3 2 Long range variants 3 3 Proposed variants 3 4 Tanker versions 3 5 MD 10 upgrade 4 Operators 5 Accidents and incidents 5 1 Cargo door problem 5 2 Other major accidents 5 3 Other accidents with fatalities 5 4 Other hull losses 5 5 Other notable incidents 6 Aircraft on display 7 Specifications 8 Deliveries 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Bibliography 11 External linksDevelopment EditBackground Edit nbsp nbsp The 3 4 3 left and 2 5 2 right seating configuration Following an unsuccessful proposal for the United States Air Force s CX HLS Heavy Logistics System in 1965 Douglas Aircraft began design studies based on its CX HLS submission The aviation author John H Fielder notes that the company was under competitive pressure to produce a widebody aircraft having been somewhat slow in the previous decade to introduce its first jetliners 3 4 In 1966 American Airlines offered a specification to manufacturers for a widebody aircraft that was smaller than the Boeing 747 yet capable of flying similar long range routes from airports with shorter runways this specification would be highly influential in the design of what would become the DC 10 5 It would become McDonnell Douglas s first commercial airliner after the merger between McDonnell Aircraft Corporation and Douglas Aircraft Company in 1967 6 7 An early DC 10 design proposal was for a four engine double deck wide body jet airliner with a maximum seating capacity of 550 passengers and similar in length to a DC 8 The proposal was shelved in favor of a trijet single deck wide body airliner with a maximum seating capacity of 399 passengers and similar in length to the DC 8 Super 60 8 Large portions of the detailed design work particularly that of the fuselage was subcontracted to external companies such as the American aerospace company Convair 9 The legal relationship between McDonnell Douglas Convair and the Federal Aviation Administration FAA would later serve to complicate matters specifically Convair was forbidden from contacting the regulator no matter the severity of any safety concerns it had in the DC 10 s design 10 On February 19 1968 in what was supposed to be a knockout blow to the competing Lockheed L 1011 George A Spater President of American Airlines and James S McDonnell of McDonnell Douglas announced American Airlines intention to acquire the DC 10 This was a shock to Lockheed and there was general agreement within the U S aviation industry that American Airlines had left its competitors at the starting gate According to Fielder McDonnell Douglas had been urgently pursuing the DC 10 s completion in light of the prospective competition and the high financial stakes involved 11 Together with American Airlines announcement of the DC 10 order it was also reported that American Airlines had declared its intention to have the British Rolls Royce RB211 turbofan engine on its DC 10 airliners 12 The DC 10 was first ordered by launch customers American Airlines with 25 orders and United Airlines with 30 orders and 30 options in 1968 13 14 15 The DC 10 s similarity to the Lockheed L 1011 in design passenger capacity and launch date resulted in a sales competition that affected profitability of both aircraft 16 Into flight Edit nbsp A prototype during flight testing the DC 10 made its first flight on August 29 1970 On August 29 1970 the first DC 10 a series 10 conducted its maiden flight 17 An extensive flight test program was carried out totaling 929 flights and 1 551 flight hours the test programme was not incident free during one ground test in 1970 the outwardly opening cargo door blew out and the resulting rapid pressurization changes caused the main cabin s floor to collapse 18 19 This discovery and first effort at rectification led to a contract dispute between McDonnell Douglas and Convair over what changes were necessary and financial liability Fielder alleges that McDonnell Douglas consistently sought to minimize and postpone any design changes to the DC 10 although this attitude was not an explicit policy 20 In July 1971 Convair outlined the situation in a formal memo almost a year later it internally expressed concerns that the inadequate resolution would lead to the loss of aircraft 21 Tragically the initial rectification work would prove to be inadequate 22 On July 29 1971 the FAA issued the type certificate for the DC 10 permitting its entry into revenue service 19 It entered commercial service with American Airlines on August 5 1971 the initial flight being a round trip flight between Los Angeles and Chicago United Airlines also commenced DC 10 flights later that same month 23 American s DC 10s were configured to seat a maximum of 206 passenger while United s seated 222 both had six across seating in first class and eight across four pairs in coach 24 They operated the first version of the DC 10 referred to as the domestic series 10 which had a range of 3 800 miles 3 300 nmi 6 110 km with a typical passenger load and a range of 2 710 miles 2 350 nmi 4 360 km with maximum payload Further development Edit nbsp Continental Airlines six abreast interior in 1973Various models of the DC 10 promptly followed such as the series 15 which had a typical load range of 4 350 miles 3 780 nmi 7 000 km 25 26 The series 20 was powered by Pratt amp Whitney JT9D turbofan engines whereas the series 10 and 30 engines were General Electric CF6 Prior to taking delivery of its aircraft Northwest s president asked that the series 20 aircraft be redesignated series 40 because the airliner was much improved over the original design The FAA issued the certification for the series 40 on October 27 1972 27 7 In 1972 the DC 10 s listed unit cost was reportedly US 20M 28 140 million in 2022 prices The series 30 and 40 were the longer range international versions The main visible difference between the models is that the series 10 has three sets of landing gear one front and two main while the series 30 and 40 have an additional centerline main gear The center main two wheel landing gear which extends from the center of the fuselage was added to distribute the extra weight and for additional braking The series 30 had a typical load range of 6 220 mi 10 010 km and a maximum payload range of 4 604 mi 7 410 km The series 40 had a typical load range of 5 750 miles 9 265 km and a maximum payload range of 4 030 miles 3 500 nmi 6 490 km 25 29 The DC 10 had two engine options and introduced longer range variants a few years after entering service these allowed it to distinguish itself from its main competitor the L 1011 Further models and derivatives of the DC 10 had been considered perhaps the most radical of these being an unpursued twin engined model akin to the Airbus A300 30 31 However following spate of fatal accidents particularly the American Airlines Flight 191 crash the deadliest aviation accident in US history orders for the DC 10 had nosedived by 1980 the type having garnered a poor reputation that was widespread amongst the travelling public as well as prospective operators 2 32 Competitive pressure had also played a role Boeing in particular had developed the 747SP variant specifically to better compete with the DC 10 and L 1011 33 During December 1988 the 446th and final DC 10 rolled off the Long Beach California Products Division production line and was delivered to Nigeria Airways in July 1989 34 35 The production run had exceeded the 1971 estimate of 438 deliveries needed to break even on the program 36 however according to Fielder the DC 10 had not reached the breakeven point by the end of production 11 As the final DC 10s were delivered McDonnell Douglas started production of its successor the MD 11 which was essentially a stretched derivative of the DC 10 30 37 38 In the late 1980s as international travel was growing due to lower oil prices and more economic freedom demand for widebody airliners could not be fully met by the delayed Boeing 747 400 MD 11 and the Airbus A330 A340 while the 747 200 300 and DC 10 production had already ended accordingly the value of secondhand DC 10 30s nearly doubled from less than 20 million to nearly 40 million 39 Design Edit nbsp The DC 10 has a three crew cockpit including a flight engineer The McDonnell Douglas DC 10 is a low wing wide body aircraft It is sized to conduct medium to long range flights offering similar endurance to the larger Boeing 747 yet being able to use shorter runways and thus access airports that it could not 40 Dependent upon configuration the main cabin is able to accommodate between 250 and 380 passengers across its main deck The fuselage is split into two levels the upper deck is the only one where passenger seating would be present as the smaller lower level is typically used for storage for baggage and food preparation elevators are usually present to carry people and carts between the two levels 41 40 As originally designed the floor of the main cabin was not strong enough to withstand full pressure differential 42 yet key control lines are routed through this floor an approach that proved to be a key vulnerability 20 The DC 10 is a trijet being powered by three turbofan engines Two of these engines are mounted on pylons that attach to the bottom of the wings while the third engine is encased in a protective banjo shaped structure that is mounted on the top of the rear fuselage 40 In comparison to the first generation of jetliners these engines generated less noise and were usually smoke free 43 The engines are equipped with thrust reversers which reduce the distance required when landing 44 Despite being considerably larger the landing speed of the DC 10 was comparable to that of the contemporary Boeing 727 45 The primary flight controls of the DC 10 consist of inboard and outboard ailerons two section elevators and a two section rudder the secondary flight controls comprise leading edge slats spoilers and a dual rate movable horizontal stabilizer 46 The vertical stabilizer with the rudder is mounted on top of the tail engine banjo while the horizontal stabilizer with its four segment elevator is attached to the sides of the rear fuselage in the conventional manner The DC 10 is equipped with retractable tricycle landing gear To enable higher gross weights the later 30 and 40 series have an additional two wheel main landing gear which retracts into the center of the fuselage 47 The DC 10 is capable of performing all weather operations a function that many preceding jetliners had been incapable of 44 From the onset it could perform takeoffs and landings completely under autopilot Cassette tapes were used to load preprogrammed flight plans into the flight computer 48 As originally built the cockpit was operated by a flight crew of three 44 numerous DC 10s have received a retrofitted glass cockpit and the Advanced Common Flightdeck shared with the MD 11 thus eliminating the flight engineer and permitted the aircraft re designated MD 10 to be flown by a flight crew of two 49 50 A total of four independent hydraulic systems are present the flight controls actuate many of the flight control surfaces across the airliner via these hydraulic circuits 43 the critical nature of these circuits and their vulnerability to damage in the tail area led to the addition of hydraulic fuses to prevent the total loss of fluid 51 Power for the hydraulics was derived from primary and reserve engine driven pumps equipped on each of the three engines Hydraulic power was required for flight control there was no provision for reverting to manual flight control inputs 52 Variants EditOriginal variants Edit nbsp The initial DC 10 10 powered by three GE CF6s has two main landing gears DC 10 10 The DC 10 10 is the initial passenger version introduced in 1971 produced from 1970 to 1981 The DC 10 10 was equipped with GE CF6 6 engines which was the first civil engine version from the CF6 family A total of 122 were built 53 DC 10 10CF The 10CF is a convertible passenger and cargo transport version of the 10 Eight were delivered to Continental Airlines and one to United Airlines 53 DC 10 15 The 15 variant was designed for use at hot and high airports The series 15 is basically a 10 fitted with higher thrust GE CF6 50C2F derated DC 10 30 engines powerplants 54 The 15 was first ordered in 1979 by Mexicana and Aeromexico Seven were completed between 1981 and 1983 55 Long range variants Edit nbsp The heavier DC 10 30 has an additional center landing gear nbsp The heavy DC 10 40 is powered by three Pratt amp Whitney JT9Ds DC 10 30 A long range model and the most common model produced It was built with General Electric CF6 50 turbofan engines with larger fuel tanks and a larger wingspan to increase range and fuel efficiency and with a set of rear center landing gear to support the increased weight It was very popular with European flag carriers A total of 163 were built from 1972 to 1988 and delivered to 38 different customers 56 The model was first delivered to KLM and Swissair on November 21 1972 and first introduced in service on December 15 1972 by the latter citation needed DC 10 30CF The convertible cargo passenger transport version of the DC 10 30 The first deliveries were to Overseas National Airways ONA and Trans International Airlines in 1973 A total of 27 were built 57 DC 10 30ER The extended range version of the DC 10 30 The 30ER aircraft has a higher maximum takeoff weight of 590 000 lb 267 600 kg is powered by three GE CF6 50C2B engines each producing 54 000 lbf 240 kN of thrust and is equipped with an additional fuel tank in the rear cargo hold 58 59 It has an additional 700 mi of range to 6 600 mi 5 730 nmi 10 620 km The first of this variant was delivered to Finnair in 1981 A total of six were built and five 30s were later converted to 30ERs DC 10 30AF Also known as the DC 10 30F This was the all freight version of the 30 Production was to start in 1979 but Alitalia did not confirm its order then Production began in May 1984 after the first aircraft order from FedEx A total of 10 were built 60 DC 10 40 The first long range version fitted with Pratt amp Whitney JT9D engines Originally designated DC 10 20 this model was renamed DC 10 40 after a special request from Northwest Orient Airlines the aircraft was much improved compared to its original design with a higher MTOW on par with the Series 30 and with more powerful engines and retains the increased wingspan from the DC 10 30 The airline s president wanted to advertise that he had the latest version 61 62 The company also wanted its aircraft to be equipped with the same engines as its Boeing 747s for fleet commonality 63 Northwest Orient Airlines and Japan Airlines were the only airlines to order the Series 40 respectively ordering 22 and 20 aircraft The Northwest DC 10 40s were delivered with improved engines Pratt amp Whitney JT9D 20 engines producing 50 000 lbf 222 kN of thrust and a MTOW of 555 000 lb 251 815 kg The DC 10 40s delivered to Japan Airlines were equipped with P amp W JT9D 59A engines that produced a thrust of 53 000 lbf 235 8 kN and a MTOW of 565 000 lb 256 350 kg 64 Forty two DC 10 40s were built from 1973 to 1983 65 Externally the DC 10 40 can be distinguished from the DC 10 30 by a slight bulge near the front of the nacelle for the 2 tail engine Proposed variants Edit nbsp The DC 10 Twin conceptDC 10 20 A proposed version of the DC 10 10 with extra fuel tanks 3 ft 0 9 m extensions on each wingtip and a rear center landing gear It was to use Pratt amp Whitney JT9D 15 turbofan engines each producing 45 500 lbf 203 kN of thrust with a maximum takeoff weight of 530 000 lb 240 400 kg But engine improvements led to increased thrust and increased takeoff weight 64 Northwest Orient Airlines one of the launch customers for this longer range DC 10 requested the name change to DC 10 40 61 DC 10 50 A proposed version with Rolls Royce RB211 524 engines for British Airways The order never came and the plans for the DC 10 50 were abandoned after British Airways ordered the Lockheed L 1011 500 instead 66 DC 10 Twin Beginning in 1966 two engine designs were studied for the DC 10 before the design settled on the three engine configuration Later a big twin based on the DC 10 cross section was proposed to Airbus as a 50 50 venture but rejected and in 1971 a shortened DC 10 version with two engines was proposed as a competitor to the Airbus A300 McDonnell Douglas even held a major presentation of the proposed DC 10 Twin at Long Beach and several European airlines were willing to place orders On July 30 1973 however the company s board decided not to give the proposed twin the go ahead as no US airline had ordered it Later still further DC 10 Twin proposals were made either as a collaboration with a European manufacturer or as a solely McDonnell Douglas product but none of them proceeded beyond design studies 67 68 Tanker versions Edit nbsp The KC 10 Extender a USAF aerial tankerThe KC 10 Extender is a military version of the DC 10 30CF for aerial refueling The aircraft was ordered by the U S Air Force and delivered from 1981 to 1988 A total of 60 were built 69 These aircraft are powered exclusively by General Electric CF6 turbofan engines The KDC 10 was an aerial refueling tanker for the Royal Netherlands Air Force These were converted from civil airliners DC 10 30CF to a similar standard as the KC 10 Also commercial refueling companies Omega Aerial Refueling Services 70 71 and Global Airtanker Service 72 73 operate two KDC 10 tankers for lease Four have been built The DC 10 Air Tanker is a DC 10 based firefighting tanker aircraft using modified water tanks from Erickson Air Crane MD 10 upgrade Edit MD 10 redirects here For the Maryland state highway see MD 10 nbsp The MD 10 has an MD 11 inspired two crew glass cockpit The MD 10 is an upgrade to add a glass cockpit to the DC 10 with the re designation to MD 10 The upgrade included an Advanced Common Flightdeck used on the MD 11 and was launched in September 1996 49 The program was continued by Boeing after its merger with McDonnell Douglas in 1997 and the first MD 10 flew on April 14 1999 74 The new cockpit eliminated the need for the flight engineer position and allowed common type rating with the MD 11 This allows companies such as FedEx Express which operate both the MD 10 and MD 11 to have a common pilot pool for both aircraft The MD 10 conversion now falls under the Boeing Converted Freighter program where Boeing s international affiliate companies perform the conversions 75 Operators EditSee also List of McDonnell Douglas DC 10 operators As of January 2023 one MD 10 is in commercial service with TAB Airlines 76 On January 8 2007 Northwest Airlines retired its last remaining DC 10 from scheduled passenger service 77 thus ending the aircraft s operations with major airlines Regarding the retirement of Northwest s DC 10 fleet Wade Blaufuss spokesman for the Northwest chapter of the Air Line Pilots Association said The DC 10 is a reliable airplane fun to fly roomy and quiet kind of like flying an old Cadillac Fleetwood We re sad to see an old friend go 78 Biman Bangladesh Airlines was the last commercial carrier to operate the DC 10 in passenger service 79 80 81 The airline flew the DC 10 on a regular passenger flight for the last time on February 20 2014 from Dhaka Bangladesh to Birmingham UK 80 82 Local charter flights were flown in the UK until February 24 2014 83 nbsp Biman Bangladesh Airlines was the last operator of the DC 10 in passenger service Non airline operators included the Royal Netherlands Air Force with two DC 10 30CF based KDC 10 tanker aircraft until their retirement in 2019 and 2021 respectively the USAF with its 59 KC 10s and the 10 Tanker Air Carrier with its modified DC 10 10 used for fighting wildfires 84 Orbis International has used a DC 10 as a flying eye hospital Surgery is performed on the ground and the operating room is located between the wings for maximum stability In 2008 Orbis chose to replace its aging DC 10 10 with a DC 10 30 jointly donated by FedEx and United Airlines 85 86 The newer DC 10 was converted into MD 10 configuration and began flying as an eye hospital in 2010 86 87 88 A modified DC 10 is operated by the Missile Defense Agency as the Widebody Airborne Sensor Platform WASP 89 Tanker 10 Air Carrier an aerial firefighting company currently operates four DC 10 30 aircraft converted for aerial fire suppression retardant drops 90 Accidents and incidents EditAs of September 2015 the DC 10 had been involved in 55 accidents and incidents 91 including 32 hull loss accidents 92 with 1 261 occupant fatalities 93 Of these accidents and incidents it has been involved in nine hijackings resulting in one death and a bombing resulting in 170 occupant fatalities 93 Despite its poor safety record in the 1970s which gave it an unfavorable reputation 94 the DC 10 has proved to be a reliable aircraft with a low overall accident rate as of 1998 95 The DC 10 s initially poor safety record has continuously improved as design flaws were rectified and fleet hours increased 95 The DC 10 s lifetime safety record is comparable to similar second generation passenger jets as of 2008 96 Cargo door problem Edit Main articles American Airlines Flight 96 and Turkish Airlines Flight 981 The DC 10 has cargo doors that open outward this allows the cargo area to be completely filled as the doors do not occupy otherwise usable interior space when open To overcome the outward force from pressurization of the fuselage at high altitudes outward opening doors must use heavy locking mechanisms In the event of a door lock malfunction there is greater potential for explosive decompression 97 On June 12 1972 American Airlines Flight 96 lost its aft cargo door above Windsor Ontario Before takeoff the door appeared secure but the internal locking mechanism was not fully engaged When the aircraft reached approximately 11 750 feet 3 580 m in altitude the door blew out and the resulting explosive decompression collapsed the cabin floor 98 Many control cables to the empennage were cut leaving the pilots with very limited control of the aircraft 99 100 Despite this the crew performed a safe emergency landing 101 U S National Transportation Safety Board NTSB investigators found the cargo door design to be dangerously flawed as the door could be closed without the locking mechanism fully engaged and this condition was not apparent from visual inspection of the door nor from the cargo door indicator in the cockpit The NTSB recommended modifications to make it readily apparent to baggage handlers when the door was not secured and also recommended adding vents to the cabin floor so that the pressure difference between the cabin and cargo bay during decompression could quickly equalize without causing further damage 98 102 Although many carriers voluntarily modified the cargo doors no airworthiness directive was issued due to a gentlemen s agreement between the head of the FAA John H Shaffer and the head of McDonnell Douglas s aircraft division Jackson McGowen McDonnell Douglas made some modifications to the cargo door but the basic design remained unchanged and problems persisted 98 103 On March 3 1974 in an accident circumstantially similar to American Airlines Flight 96 a cargo door blowout caused Turkish Airlines Flight 981 to crash near Ermenonville France 98 104 in the deadliest air crash in history at the time 346 passengers and crew died 105 The cargo door of Flight 981 had not been fully locked though it appeared so to both cockpit crew and ground personnel The Turkish aircraft had a seating configuration that exacerbated the effects of decompression and as the cabin floor collapsed into the cargo bay control cables were severed and the aircraft became uncontrollable 98 Investigators found that the DC 10 s relief vents were not large enough to equalize the pressure between the passenger and cargo compartments during explosive decompression 106 Following this crash a special subcommittee of the United States House of Representatives investigated the cargo door issue and the certification by the Federal Aviation Administration FAA of the original design 107 An airworthiness directive was issued and all DC 10s underwent mandatory door modifications 107 The DC 10 experienced no more major incidents related to its cargo door after FAA approved changes were made 98 Other major accidents Edit Main articles American Airlines Flight 191 and United Airlines Flight 232 On May 25 1979 American Airlines Flight 191 crashed immediately after takeoff from Chicago O Hare Airport 108 Its left engine and pylon assembly swung upward over the top of the wing severing the leading edge slat actuator hydraulic lines The slats retracted under the aerodynamic forces causing the left wing to stall This combined with asymmetric thrust due to the missing engine caused the aircraft to rapidly roll to the left descend and crash killing all 271 people on board and two on the ground 109 Following the crash the FAA withdrew the DC 10 s type certificate on June 6 1979 grounding all U S registered DC 10s and those from nations with agreements with the United States and banning all DC 10s from U S airspace 110 111 These measures were rescinded five weeks later on July 13 1979 after the slat actuation and position systems were modified along with stall warning and power supply changes 112 113 In November 1979 the FAA fined American Airlines for removing the engine and its pylon as a single unit in its maintenance procedure thus damaging the structure and causing the engine separation rather than removing the engine from the pylon before removing the pylon from the wing as advised by McDonnell Douglas 112 108 On July 19 1989 United Airlines Flight 232 crashed at Sioux City Iowa after an uncontained engine failure of the tail engine earlier in the flight disabled all hydraulic systems and rendered most flight controls inoperable The flight crew assisted by a deadheading DC 10 flight instructor performed a partially controlled emergency landing by constantly adjusting the thrust of the remaining two engines 185 people on board survived but 111 others died and the aircraft was destroyed 114 The DC 10 was designed without backup flight controls because it was considered extremely improbable that all hydraulic systems would fail However due to their close proximity under the tail engine the engine failure ruptured all three resulting in total loss of control to the elevators ailerons spoilers horizontal stabilizer rudder flaps and slats 114 51 Following the accident hydraulic fuses were installed in the 3 hydraulic system below the tail engine on all DC 10 aircraft to ensure that sufficient control remains if all three hydraulic systems are damaged in this area 115 116 Other accidents with fatalities Edit November 3 1973 National Airlines Flight 27 a DC 10 10 cruising at 39 000 feet 12 000 m experienced an uncontained failure of the right engine One cabin window separated from the fuselage after it was struck by debris flung from the exploding engine The passenger sitting next to that window was killed and ejected from the aircraft The crew initiated an emergency descent and landed the aircraft safely 117 March 1 1978 Continental Airlines Flight 603 a DC 10 10 commenced a takeoff from Los Angeles International Airport when the recapped tread of a tire on the left main landing gear separated causing the blowout of two adjacent tires which ruptured a fuel tank This combined with excessive heat from the rejected takeoff resulted in a massive fire Two passengers were killed in the ensuing evacuation and two died later from injuries sustained in the accident 118 October 31 1979 Western Airlines Flight 2605 a DC 10 10 collided with construction equipment after landing on a closed runway at Mexico City International Airport killing 72 of the 88 people on board and one person on the ground The crash was caused by failure to follow proper landing guidelines in consideration of the fog on the runway 119 November 28 1979 Air New Zealand Flight 901 DC 10 30 ZK NZP crashed into Mount Erebus on Ross Island Antarctica during a sightseeing flight over the continent killing all 257 on board The accident was caused by the flight coordinates being altered without the flight crew s knowledge combined with unique Antarctic weather conditions 120 January 23 1982 World Airways Flight 30 DC 10 30CF registration N113WA overran the runway at Boston Logan International Airport All 12 crew survived but two of the 200 passengers were never found 121 September 13 1982 Spantax Flight 995 DC 10 30CF EC DEG was destroyed by fire after an aborted take off at Malaga Spain A total of 50 passengers were killed and 110 injured due to the flames 122 July 27 1989 Korean Air Flight 803 DC 10 30 HL7328 crashed short of the runway in bad weather while trying to land at Tripoli Libya Seventy five of the 199 on board plus another four people on the ground were killed in the accident 123 September 19 1989 UTA Flight 772 DC 10 30 N54629 crashed in the Tenere Desert in Niger following an in flight bomb explosion claiming the lives of all 170 on board 124 December 21 1992 Martinair Flight 495 DC 10 30CF PH MBN crashed while landing in bad weather at Faro Portugal killing 54 passengers and crew 125 126 June 13 1996 Garuda Indonesia Flight 865 DC 10 30 PK GIE had just taken off from Fukuoka Airport Japan when a high pressure blade from the right engine separated The aircraft was just a few feet above the runway and the pilot decided to abort the takeoff Consequently the DC 10 skidded off the runway and came to a halt 1 600 ft 490 m past it losing one of its engines and its landing gear Three passengers perished in the accident 127 December 21 1999 Cubana de Aviacion Flight 1216 DC 10 30 F GTDI overran the runway at La Aurora International Airport Guatemala City Eight passengers and eight crew members on board were killed as were two people on the ground 128 Other hull losses Edit December 17 1973 Iberia Airlines Flight 933 crashed and struck the ALS system at Boston Logan International Airport which collapsed the front landing gear All 168 passengers and crew survived This is the first hull loss of a DC 10 aircraft 129 November 12 1975 Overseas National Airways ONA Flight 032 DC 10 30CF N1032F accelerated through a flock of seagulls during its takeoff roll from John F Kennedy International Airport on a ferry flight The captain initiated a rejected takeoff but the right hand engine exploded causing a partial braking failure The pilots steered off the runway to avoid plowing into a blast fence causing the landing gear to collapse and rupturing a fuel tank the ensuing fire destroyed the aircraft All 139 on board all ONA employees survived with 32 suffering injuries 130 January 2 1976 Saudi Arabian Airlines Flight 5130 DC 10 30CF N1031F leased from ONA landed short of the runway at Istanbul Yesilkoy Airport tearing off the left hand engine and the left and center main landing gear All 362 passengers evacuated safely while one of thirteen crew members was injured The accident was attributed to an excessively low approach possibly caused by the first officer using the radar altimeter for altitude reference over irregular terrain 131 132 December 3 1983 Korean Air Lines Flight 084 DC 10 30 freighter HL7339 collided head on during the takeoff roll with SouthCentral Air Flight 59 Piper PA 31 N35206 which was taking off from Anchorage International Airport The Piper struck the DC 10 s left and center main landing gear and three passengers sustained minor injuries the DC 10 overran the runway and the three crew suffered serious injuries Investigators determined that the Korean Air Lines pilot became disoriented taxiing in fog failed to follow correct procedures and confirm his position and accidentally initiated takeoff from the wrong runway 133 May 21 1988 American Airlines Flight 70 DC 10 30 N136AA overran Runway 35L at Dallas Fort Worth International Airport DFW after the flight crew attempted a rejected takeoff Two crew were seriously injured and the remaining 12 crew and 240 passengers escaped safely The accident was attributed to a shortcoming in the original design standards no requirement had existed to test whether partially worn brake pads could stop the aircraft during a rejected takeoff and 8 of the 10 worn pad sets had failed 134 135 April 14 1993 American Airlines Flight 102 DC 10 30 N139AA skidded off the runway on landing at DFW in a rainstorm collapsing the nose and left main landing gear and badly damaging the left hand engine and wing Two passengers suffered serious injuries during the emergency evacuation while the remaining 187 passengers and 13 crew escaped safely The NTSB attributed the crash to poor directional control technique by the captain 136 137 138 September 5 1996 FedEx Express Flight 1406 DC 10 10F N68055 suffered an in flight cargo fire while flying from Memphis Tennessee to Boston Massachusetts The aircraft made a successful emergency landing at Stewart International Airport in Newburgh New York however after evacuating all 5 crew members the aircraft was consumed by fire and destroyed December 18 2003 FedEx Express Flight 647 MD 10 10F N364FE was destroyed by fire after the right main landing gear collapsed due to a hard landing at Memphis International Airport One of the two pilots and one of the five passengers all deadheading FedEx employees suffered minor injuries in the emergency evacuation July 28 2006 FedEx Express Flight 630 MD 10 10F N391FE departed runway 18R and burned out at Memphis International Airport following the collapse of the left main landing gear The two pilots and single passenger suffered minor injuries during the emergency evacuation The accident was attributed to improper landing gear maintenance October 28 2016 FedEx Express Flight 910 MD 10 10F N370FE partially exited the runway at Ft Lauderdale Hollywood International Airport following the collapse of the left main landing gear The accident was attributed to improper landing gear maintenance Other notable incidents Edit April 7 1994 The flight crew of Federal Express Flight 705 DC 10 30 N306FE was attacked by a deadheading FedEx employee in an attempted murder suicide intended to cause the aircraft to crash The seriously injured crew returned to Memphis International Airport after subduing the hijacker using aerobatic maneuvers and damaging the aircraft in the process The aircraft was repaired and placed back in service 139 July 25 2000 The right hand thrust reverser cowl door of Continental Airlines Flight 55 DC 10 30 N13067 shed a strip of metal which landed on the runway at Charles de Gaulle Airport upon takeoff Minutes later Air France Flight 4590 operated by a Concorde ran over the metal strip at high speed bursting a tire and causing a fuel tank to rupture and burst into flames The Concorde s pilots attempted to keep control of the aircraft but it stalled and crashed The strip of metal was traced to third party replacement parts not approved by the FAA 140 January 31 2001 Japan Airlines Flight 958 DC 10 40 JA8546 was involved in a midair near collision with a Japan Airlines Boeing 747 400 near Yaizu Both flight crews performed evasive maneuvers all 677 aboard both aircraft survived but nine aboard the 747 400 were seriously injured Aircraft on display EditThe preserved forward fuselage segment of Monarch Airlines DC 10 30 G DMCA 141 better source needed is on display at Manchester Airport Aviation Viewing Park where it is used for teaching and school visits DC 10 30 9G ANB which previously belonged to Ghana Airways is on display and in use as the La Tante DC10 Restaurant in Accra Ghana 142 DC 10 10 N220AU Flying Eye Hospital previously owned by Orbis International was retired in 2016 and is on display at the Pima Air amp Space Museum in Tucson Arizona 143 144 DC 10 30 Z AVT Victor Trimble previously owned by British Caledonian Airways is preserved as a night club in Bali The tail end of the aircraft featuring the third engine is mounted on a rooftop in Bali 145 146 Specifications Edit nbsp The schematic of the McDonnell Douglas DC 10 30 side top front cross section DC 10 Airplane Characteristics 147 Variant 10 30 40Cockpit crew ThreeStd seating 270 222Y 8 abreast 34 48J 6 abreast 38 Max seating 399Y 10 abreast 29 34 pitch layout FAA exit limit 380 148 Cargo 26 LD3 layout main deck 22 88 125 or 30 88 108 palletsLength 182 ft 3 1 in 55 55 m 181 ft 7 2 in 55 35 m 182 ft 2 6 in 55 54 mHeight 57 ft 6 in 17 53 m 57 ft 7 in 17 55 mWingspan 155 ft 4 in 47 35 m 165 ft 4 in 50 39 mWing area 149 3 550 sq ft 330 m2 3 647 sq ft 338 8 m2 Width 19 ft 9 in 6 02 m fuselage 224 in 569 cm interiorOEW pax 240 171 lb 108 940 kg 266 191 lb 120 742 kg 270 213 lb 122 567 kgMTOW 430 000 lb 195 045 kg 555 000 lb 251 744 kgMax payload 94 829 lb 43 014 kg 101 809 lb 46 180 kg 97 787 lb 44 356 kgFuel capacity 21 762 US gal 82 376 L 36 652 US gal 137 509 LEngines 3 GE CF6 6D GE CF6 50C PW JT9D 20 59AThrust 3 149 40 000 lbf 177 92 kN 51 000 lbf 226 85 kN 53 000 lbf 235 74 kNCruise Mach 0 82 473 kn 876 km h typical Mach 0 88 507 kn 940 km h MMo 148 Range a 3 500 nmi 6 500 km 5 200 nmi 9 600 km 5 100 nmi 9 400 km Takeoff b 9 000 ft 2 700 m 10 500 ft 3 200 m 9 500 ft 2 900 m Ceiling 42 000 ft 12 800 m 148 M0 82 270 pax 205 lb or 93 kg each MTOW SL ISADeliveries EditDeliveries by year citation needed 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 Total13 52 57 48 42 19 14 18 36 40 25 11 12 10 11 17 10 10 1 446See also Edit nbsp Aviation portal nbsp United States portalRelated development McDonnell Douglas KC 10 Extender McDonnell Douglas MD 11Aircraft of comparable role configuration and era Boeing 747SP Boeing 767 Lockheed L 1011 TriStar Airbus A300 Ilyushin Il 86Related lists List of jet airlinersReferences EditCitations Edit a b Commercial Airplanes DC 10 Family boeing com Archived from the original on December 13 2010 Retrieved January 4 2011 a b Bradsher Keith July 20 1989 Troubled History of the DC 10 Includes Four Major Crashes The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Fielder 1992 pp 1 2 Norris and Wagner 1999 pp 9 10 Norris and Wagner 1999 p 34 Waddington 2000 pp 6 18 a b Norris and Wagner 1999 p 36 Endres 1998 p 13 Fielder 1992 pp 4 165 Fielder 1992 pp 3 4 a b Fielder 1992 p 2 Porter 2013 page needed Endres 1998 p 16 American Orders 25 Airbus Jets St Petersburg Times February 20 1968 Accessed May 7 2022 Norris and Wagner 1999 p 38 Norris and Wagner 1999 pp 36 39 Endres 1998 pp 25 26 Fielder 1992 pp 2 3 a b Endres 1998 p 28 a b Fielder 1992 pp 23 90 Fielder 1992 pp 90 91 165 Fielder 1992 p 4 Endres 1998 p 52 Aviation Daily July 29 1971 a b DC 10 Technical Specifications Archived February 4 2007 at the Wayback Machine Boeing Retrieved March 12 2011 Endres 1998 pp 32 33 Waddington 2000 p 70 Airliner price index Flight International August 10 1972 p 183 Endres 1998 pp 34 35 Norris and Wagner 1999 p 71 Eden 2016 p 147 Eden 2016 pp 144 147 Eden Paul Ed Civil Aircraft Today 2008 Amber Books pp 96 97 McDonnell Douglas DC 10 KC 10 Transport boeing com Archived from the original on March 12 2006 Retrieved February 28 2006 Roach John and Anthony Eastwood Jet Airliner Production List Volume 2 The Aviation Hobby Shop online July 2006 Retrieved September 19 2010 Air Progress Air Progress 16 September 1971 Steffen 1998 p 120 Norris and Wagner 1999 p 64 Aircraft Value News November 12 2018 Transitioning Product Line Impacts Values of Outgoing Models a b c Kocivar 1970 pp 50 51 Endres 1998 pp 36 46 47 Fielder 1992 pp 89 91 a b Kocivar 1970 p 51 a b c Kocivar 1970 p 50 Kocivar 1970 pp 52 116 Fielder 1992 p 255 Endres 1998 pp 36 37 45 Kocivar 1970 pp 51 52 a b McDonnell Douglas and Federal Express to Launch MD 10 Program Archived November 6 2011 at the Wayback Machine McDonnell Douglas September 16 1996 Retrieved August 6 2011 Norris and Wagner 1999 p 45 a b Fielder 1992 pp 9 10 Fielder 1992 pp 255 256 a b Steffen 1998 pp 12 14 16 Steffen 1998 pp 12 118 Endres 1998 pp 62 123 124 Endres 1998 pp 57 112 124 Steffen 1998 pp 12 13 Endres 1998 pp 34 37 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on June 30 2017 Retrieved June 23 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Steffen 1998 p 13 a b Waddington 2000 pp 70 71 Endres 1998 pp 56 57 Endres 1998 p 21 a b Endres 1998 p 21 35 56 Waddington 2000 pp 137 144 Waddington 2000 p 89 DC 10 Twin briefing PDF Flight International June 7 1973 Archived from the original PDF on April 11 2018 Thomas Geoffrey February 8 2023 How McDonnell Douglas missed the Big Twin and disappeared Airline Ratings Retrieved June 2 2023 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Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to McDonnell Douglas DC 10 DC 10 KC 10 history on Boeing com DC 10 Passenger PDF Boeing 2007 Robert R Ropelewski August 30 1971 DC 10 Minimizes Crew Workload PDF Aviation Week Simple sophistication of aircraft with improvements in training credited with reducing flight time for type rating Archived from the original PDF on September 17 2017 Retrieved September 17 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title McDonnell Douglas DC 10 amp oldid 1179023267, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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