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McDonnell Douglas MD-80

The McDonnell Douglas MD-80 is a series of five-abreast single-aisle airliners developed by McDonnell Douglas. It was produced by the developer company until August 1997 and then by Boeing Commercial Airplanes. The MD-80 was the second generation of the DC-9 family, originally designated as the DC-9-80 (DC-9 Series 80) and later stylized as the DC-9 Super 80 (short Super 80). Stretched, enlarged wing and powered by higher bypass Pratt & Whitney JT8D-200 engines, the aircraft program was launched in October 1977. The MD-80 made its first flight on October 18, 1979 as the Super 80 and was certified on August 25, 1980. The first airliner was delivered to launch customer Swissair on September 13, 1980, which introduced it into commercial service on October 10, 1980.

MD-80 series
An Iberia MD-88 in 2002
Role Narrow-body jet airliner
National origin United States
Manufacturer McDonnell Douglas
Boeing Commercial Airplanes (from Aug. 1997)
First flight October 18, 1979
Introduction October 10, 1980 with Swissair
Status In service; mostly for cargo transport
Primary users Aeronaves TSM
World Atlantic Airlines
LASER Airlines
European Air Charter[1]
Produced 1979–1999
Number built 1,191
Developed from McDonnell Douglas DC-9
Developed into McDonnell Douglas MD-90
Boeing 717
Comac ARJ21

Keeping the fuselage cross-section, longer variants are stretched by 14 ft (4.3 m) from the DC-9-50 and have a 28% larger wing. The larger variants (MD-81/82/83/88) are 148 ft (45.1 m) long to seat 155 passengers in coach and, with varying weights, can cover up to 2,550 nmi (4,720 km). The later MD-88 has a modern cockpit with EFIS displays. The MD-87 is 17 ft (5.3 m) shorter for 130 passengers in economy and has a range up to 2,900 nmi (5,400 km).

The MD-80 series competed with the Boeing 737 Classic and the Airbus A320ceo family. Its successor, introduced in 1995, the MD-90, was a further stretch powered by IAE V2500 high-bypass turbofans, while the shorter MD-95, later known as the Boeing 717, was powered by Rolls-Royce BR715 engines. Production ended in 1999 after 1,191 MD-80s were delivered, of which 116 aircraft remain in service as of August 2022.

Development

The DC-9 series, the first generation of the DC-9 family, entered service in late 1965 and became a commercial success with 976 units built when production ended in 1982.[2] The all-new designed aircraft family includes five members or variants (DC-9-10 / DC-9 Series 10, Series 20, Series 30, Series 40, and Series 50) with ten sub-variants or versions (Series 11, Series 12, Series 14, Series 15, Series 21, Series 31, Series 32, Series 33, Series 34, Series 41, and Series 51) and features two rear fuselage-mounted turbofan engines, a T-tail configuration,[3] a narrow-body fuselage with five-abreast seating for 80 to 135 passengers.[4] The success prompted the manufacturer to further develop the aircraft family with the last member, Series 50, as the reference aircraft.

Feasibility study

In the 1970s, McDonnell Douglas began development of the first derivative or second generation of the DC-9 family, a lengthened version of the Series 50, with a higher maximum take-off weight (MTOW), larger wing, new main landing gear, and higher fuel capacity. Availability of newer versions of the Pratt & Whitney JT8D turbofan engine with higher bypass ratios and thrust ratings drove early studies including designs known as Series 55, Series 50 (refanned Super Stretch), and Series 60. In August 1977, the design effort focused on the Series 55.

Program launch

With entry into service projected in 1980, the improved aircraft design was initially designated as the Series 80, which would be the sixth variant of the first generation.[5] In October 1977 Swissair became the launch customer for the Series 80 with an order for 15 plus an option for five.[3] The launch of the next aircraft models followed in October 1977 for the Series 81 (MD-81), on April 16, 1979 for the Series 82 (MD-82), on January 31, 1983 for the Series 83 ( MD-83). January 1985 for Series 87 (MD-87) and January 23, 1986 for Series 88 (MD-88).[6]

Certification

Type designation

Similar to the first generation of the DC-9 family, the second generation uses second-digit notation, with zero for variant names (Series 80) and non-zero for subvariant or version names (Series 81 through Series 88). Because there was only one variant within the second generation, the Series 80 became the family name and the Series 81 through Series 88 became variant or version names. The first Series 80, DC-9 line number 909, made its first flight on October 18, 1979 as the Super 80,[7] which then became the preferred designation for the newly developed aircraft family.[note 1] Although two aircraft were substantially damaged in accidents, flight testing was completed on August 25, 1980, when the first variant and respectively production model, the JT8D-209-powered Series 81, was certified under an amendment to the FAA type certificate for the DC-9. The flight-testing leading up to certification had involved three aircraft accumulating a total of 1,085 flying hours on 795 flights. After production of the first generation ended in late 1982, a new designation with McDonnell Douglas initials, MD-80, was proposed as the type designation for the second generation and in July 1983, McDonnell Douglas decided that the Super 80 would be officially designated the MD-80.[8] However, the type designation according to the type certificate (TC) is still the original (DC-9 prefix) to save on certification costs, but could also be provided with the new (MD prefix) written in parentheses, e.g. DC-9-81 (MD-81), DC-9-82 (MD-82), DC-9-83 (MD-83) and DC-9-87 (MD-87). Only the last variant, the MD-88, was officially certified under the MD designation.[9]

Type certification (TC)

 
An MD-81 of the type's launch operator, Swissair It was certified by FAA in August 1980

Following the MD-81's first flight on October 18, 1979, the MD-82 and MD-83 made their maiden flights on January 8, 1981 and December 17, 1984, respectively.[10] They were then certified by the FAA on August 25, 1980, July 29, 1981, and October 17, 1985, respectively. The first airliner, an MD-81, was delivered to launch operator Swissair on September 13, 1980.[11][6] Instead of merely using the MD- prefix as a marketing symbol, an application was made to again amend the type certificate to include the MD-81, MD-82, and MD-83. This change was dated March 10, 1986, and the type certificate declared that although the MD designator could be used in parentheses, it must be accompanied by the official designation, for example: DC-9-81 (MD-81). All Long Beach aircraft in the MD-80 series thereafter had MD-81, MD-82, or MD-83 stamped on the aircraft nameplate.[note 2]

 
An MD-87 operated by Scandinavian Airlines. The shortest variant, certified in October 1987
 
An MD-88 operated by Aviaco. The last and only variant certified with MD- prefix in December 1987[9]

The MD-87 and MD-88 made their first flight on December 4, 1986 and August 15, 1987, respectively.[10] Although not certified until October 21, 1987, McDonnell Douglas had already applied for models DC-9-87 and DC-9-87F on February 14, 1985. The third derivative was similarly officially designated DC-9-87 (MD-87), although no nameplates were stamped DC-9-87. For the MD-88, an application for a type certificate model amendment was made after the earlier changes, so there was not a DC-9-88, which was certified on December 8, 1987.[12] The FAA's online aircraft registry database shows the DC-9-88 and DC-9-80 designations in existence but unused.[13]

Type conversion (STC)

Type conversions were programs started in 2010 by third parties with support from the TC holder (Boeing, as this was only happening after the merger with McDonnel Douglas in 1997) to convert used MD-80 passenger airliners and provide the required supplemental type certificate (STC) from FAA or EASA.

AEI MD-80SF (freighter)

The MD-80SF was a freighter conversion program for the MD-80 series launched in February 2010, where the suffix SF stands for special freighter.[14] The conversion company, the Aeronautical Engineers Inc. (AEI) based in Miami, Florida, had noticed that pre-owned MD-80s could be bought for under $1M, and at $2.5M for the freighter conversion, an MD-80FS could offer a narrowbody freighter for half the price of a Boeing 737-400SF.[15] The first conversion was undertaken on an ex-American Airlines MD-82 aircraft (FSN 49470 built in 1987), which was used as a test-bed for the supplemental type certificate.[16] The MD-80SF made its inaugural flight on 28 September 2012. AEI was the first and solely firm authorized by Boeing to receive the STC, ST02434LA, for the longer variants of the MD-80 series from the FAA in February 2013. [17] The converted freighter with the designation AEI MD-80SF would have a payload of 21.1 tonnes and the ability to take 12 pallets measuring 88 x 108 inches, which would be a good replacement for the Boeing 727 freighter[15] The first converted freighter, an AEI MD-82SF (the prototype), was delivered to the launch customer, Everts Air Cargo, in February 2013.[14]

In 2013, after the first delivery, AEI had orders for 20 MD-80SF freighters,[18] expecting more than 100 conversions over ten years. Despite the initial lively interest, the uptake had been sluggish.[15] AEI had six MD-80s converted by 2015, and three more were on the books for that year. Demand for the MD-80SF was disappointing due to two factors. First, the MD-80's cross section does not match the narrowbody freighter types used by the integrators, severely limiting the market for the freighter. Second, the values of the 737-400SF fell faster than expected, closing the gap with the MD-80SF, which burns 12 percent more fuel.[15] In October 2015, the MD-80SF was approved by the EASA with Doc. No. 10055029.[17] In 2021, after the COVID-19 pandemic, demand for cargo aircraft increased and the initial cost of an MD-80SF was around $5M, half the cost of a 737-400SF, which made it attractive again. In March, USA Jet Airlines had signed a contract with AEI to convert three MD-88s into freighter, which they purchased from Delta Air Lines, and planned to have seven AEI MD-88SF in its fleet. AEI itself had delivered 21 AEI MD-80SF freighters, two were in progress and six had been ordered.[19]

EAT MD-87 (firefighter)
 
An EAT MD-87 for aerial firefighting was certified by FAA in 2014.

The FAA issued the Doc. No. STC ST02507LA, for Erickson Aero Tanker, LLC, located in Hillsboro, Oregon (referred to as "EAT") in 2014 to certify their EAT MD-87 firefighters.[20] In the said STC, EAT MD-87 air tankers are required to drop retardant with landing gear down to prevent stalling. The dedicated test pilot said that during a test with the external tank, the FAA representative was not satisfied with the aircraft's response after being placed deep in the stall (beyond the stall warnings, stick shaker, and stick pusher). In early 2017, EAT petitioned the FAA for an exemption from this requirement, 14 CFR 25.201(b)(1), and requested a "Flaps 40/Landing Gear Up" configuration while dropping, but on June 28, 2017 that exemption was denied with the reason given by the FAA that it would have allowed aerial firefighting retardant drops in a configuration that does not fully meet the stall characteristics requirements on the modified DC-9-87 (MD-87) aircraft. EAT was then working on an additional layer of status display to complement the existing system.[20][21]

Entry into service

The launch operator Swissair put the MD-81 into service on October 10, 1980 with a flight from Zurich Airport to London Heathrow.[6] The MD-82, MD-83, MD-87, and MD-88 entered service later with Republic Airlines in August 1981, Alaska Airlines in February 1985, Austrian Airlines in November 1987, and Delta Air Lines in January 1988, respectively.[10][6]

Production

 
One of the final MD-80s built, an MD-83 for TWA, operating for American Airlines after the two companies merged

The second generation (later named MD-80s) was produced on a common line with the first generation DC-9s, with which it shares its line number sequence. After the delivery of 976 DC-9s and 108 MD-80s, McDonnell Douglas stopped DC-9 production. Hence, commencing with the 1,085th DC-9/MD-80 delivery, an MD-82 for VIASA in December 1982, only second generation or MD-80s were produced.

In 1985, McDonnell Douglas, after years of negotiating attributed to Gareth C.C. Chang,[22] president of a McDonnell Douglas subsidiary, signed an agreement for joint production of MD-80s and MD-90s in the People's Republic of China. The agreement was for 26 aircraft, of which 20 were eventually produced along with two MD-90 aircraft.[23] Upon cancellation of the co-production program, China refused to return the tooling used to McDonnell Douglas, and subsequently used it and the fuselage cross-section design in what became the Comac ARJ21 regional jet.[24]

During 1991, MD-80 production had reached a peak of 12 per month, having been running at approximately 10 per month since 1987 and was expected to continue at this rate in the near term (140 MD-80s were delivered in 1991). As a result of the decline in the air traffic and a slow market response to the MD-90, MD-80 production was reduced, and 84 aircraft were handed over in 1992. A further production rate cut resulted in 42 MD-80s delivered during 1993 (3.5 per month) and 22 aircraft were handed over.[11][page needed] MD-80 production ended in 1999, with the final MD-80, an MD-83 registered as N984TW, being delivered to TWA.[25]

Other proposals

MD-89

In 1984–1985, McDonnell Douglas proposed a 173-passenger, 152 in (390 cm; 12.7 ft; 3.9 m) stretch of the MD-80 called the MD-89, which would use the International Aero Engines V2500 engine instead of the regular JT8D-200 series engines.[26] The MD-89 was intended to have two 57 in (140 cm; 4.8 ft; 1.4 m) fuselage plugs forward of the wing and one 38 in (97 cm; 3.2 ft; 0.97 m) fuselage plug aft of the wing.[27] IAE and McDonnell Douglas announced an agreement to jointly market this 160 ft 6 in (48.9 m) derivative on February 1, 1985, but the concept was subsequently deprioritized in favor of the proposed MD-91 and MD-92 derivatives using ultra-high bypass (UHB) propfan engines. By 1989, however, lack of airline orders for the UHB derivatives caused McDonnell Douglas to return to the IAE V2500 engines to launch its MD-90 series aircraft.[3]

MD-80 Advanced

In order to better manage the transition from the second generation, MD-80, to the third generation, MD-90, McDonnell Douglas revealed at the end of 1990 that it would be developing an MD-80 "improvement package" with the intent to offer beginning in early 1991 for delivery from mid-1993. The aircraft concept became known as the MD-80 Advanced. The "main improvement" was the installation of Pratt & Whitney JT8D-290 engines (never built) with a 1.5 in larger diameter fan that would allow for a 6 dB reduction in exterior noise.[28] The MD-80 Advanced was to incorporate the advanced flight deck of the MD-88, including a choice of reference systems, with an inertial reference system as standard fitting and optional attitude-heading equipment. It was to be equipped with an electronic flight instrument system (EFIS), an optional second flight management system (FMS), and light-emitting diode (LED) dot-matrix electronic engine and system displays. A Honeywell wind-shear computer and provision for an optional traffic-alert and collision avoidance system (TCAS) were also to be included. A completely new passenger compartment design would have a 12% increase in overhead baggage space and stowage compartment lights that come on when the doors open, as well as new video system featuring drop-down LCD monitors above.[12] These changes would be also available by retrofit to existing MD-80s.[12] Due to lack of market interest, McDonnell Douglas dropped its plans to offer the MD-80 Advanced during 1991.[28]

In the course of 1993, a "mark 2" MD-80 Advanced version reappeared with the modified JT8D-290 engines as previously proposed.[12] In late 1993, Pratt & Whitney launched a modified version of the JT8D-200 series, the -218B, which was being offered for the DC-9X re-engining program, and was also evaluating the possibility of developing a new JT8D for possible retrofit on the MD-80. The 18,000 lbf (80 kN) to 19,000 lbf (85 kN) thrust -218B engine version shares a 98% commonality with the existing engine, with changes designed to reduce NOx, improve durability, and reduce noise levels by 3 dB. The 218B could be certified in early to mid-1996. The new engine, dubbed the "8000", was to feature a new fan of increased diameter (by 1.7 in), extended exhaust cone, a larger LP compressor, a new annular burner, and a new LP turbine and mixer. The initial thrust rating would be around 21,700 lbf (97 kN). A launch decision on the new engine was expected by mid-1994, but never occurred. The engine would also be available on new build MD-80s. McDonnell Douglas also evaluated the addition of winglets on the MD-80.[12]

Further developments

 
An MD-90 of Delta Air Lines, both its launch customer and last operator[29]

MD-90

The MD-90 was developed from the MD-80 series and is a 5-foot-longer (1.5 m), updated version of the MD-88 with a similar electronic flight instrument system (EFIS) (glass cockpit), and improved, and quieter IAE V2500 high-bypass turbofan engines. The MD-90 program began in 1989, first flew in 1993, and entered commercial service in 1995. The MD-90ER extended range version was also offered. Delta Air Lines flew the final MD-90 passenger flight on June 2, 2020, marking the retirement of the type.[29]

MD-95

The MD-95 was developed to replace early DC-9 models, which were approaching 30 years of age. The project completely overhauled the original DC-9 into a modern airliner. It is slightly longer than the DC-9-30 and is powered by new Rolls-Royce BR715 engines. The MD-95 was renamed "Boeing 717" after the McDonnell Douglas-Boeing merger in 1997.

Design

 
MD-83 Flight deck
 
Five-abreast coach seating and four-abreast premium seating of the MD-80

The MD-80 series is a mid-size, medium-range airliner, featuring a fuselage 14 ft 3 in (4.34 m) longer than the DC-9-50. The small, highly efficient wing design of the baseline aircraft was enlarged by adding sections at the wing root and tip for a 28% larger wing. The aircraft derivative retains the configuration of two rear fuselage-mounted turbofan engines, a T-tail, and has cockpit, avionics and aerodynamic upgrades. The airliner is designed for frequent, short-haul flights for up to 172 passengers depending on airplane version and seating arrangement.[30]

Performance

The maximum and cruise speed of the aircraft are 925km/h and 811km/h, respectively. It has a maximum range of 2,897km and a fuel capacity of 22,106l. The aircraft weighs around 35,300kg. The maximum take-off weight is 63,500kg.[31]

Engines

The MD-80 is powered by two more powerful, more efficient and quieter Pratt & Whitney JT8D-209 turbofan engines, which are a significant upgrade over the smaller JT8D-15, -17, -11, and -9 series. Each engine can produce 82–93kN of thrust. The JT8D-209 is an advanced engine operated by 350 operators to power around 4,500 aircraft. The engine provides high reliability and low maintenance costs. The engine operates at 77–84°F flat rated temperature.[clarification needed][31]

Avionics

The MD-80 features an advanced avionics suite which includes two autonomous digital flight guidance computers. It is also equipped with a glareshield-mounted flight guidance control panel, flight director, autothrottle, thrust mode selection system, and an autoland system.[31]

Flight deck

The flight deck of the MD-80 aircraft was manufactured by Eaglesoft and Payne Aviation Software. It is equipped with a multi-panel electronic flight instrument system, a full flight management system, an air data computer, a traffic alert and collision avoidance system, a state-of-the-art inertial reference system, and LED dot-matrix displays for engine and system monitoring.[31]

Cabin

The left side of the main cabin features aisle seats. It comprises three to six rows in the first class section, seven to 32 in the main cabin and around 21 in the exit row. It features five-abreast seating in the coach class.[31]

Operational history

 
A Super 80 (MD-80) of American Airlines being deiced at Syracuse Hancock International Airport.
 
A Mad Dog (MD-88) of Delta Air Lines being serviced for a flight to Atlanta International Airport.
 
An MD-82SF freighter of the conversion launch operator, USA Jet Airlines, at Tucson International Airport
 
An EAT MD-87 air tanker with landing gear down during the retardant drop onto the Boxcar Fire in Central Oregon in June 2018.

Passenger

The second-generation, MD-80 series, passenger airliners have longer fuselages as well as longer range than their earlier counterparts, the first-generation of the DC-9 family. Some customers, such as American Airlines, still refer to the airplanes in fleet documentation as the Super 80, their former designation.. Comparable airliners to the MD-80 series include the Boeing 737-400 and Airbus A319. It was the most delivered MD- series and often nicknamed as the Mad Dog[32] by the operators,[33][34][35] has been used by airlines around the world.[36][37] Major customers have included Aerolíneas Argentinas, Aeroméxico, Aeropostal Aerorepublica, Alaska Airlines, Alitalia, Allegiant Air, American Airlines, Aserca, Austral Líneas Aéreas, Austrian Airlines, Avianca, China Eastern Airlines, China Northern Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Finnair, Iberia, Insel Air, Japan Air System (JAS), Korean Air, Lion Air, Martinair Holland, Pacific Southwest Airlines (PSA), Reno Air, Scandinavian Airlines System (SAS), Spanair, Spirit Airlines, Swissair, Trans World Airlines and Meridiana.[38]

American Airlines was the first US major carrier to order the MD-80 when it leased twenty 142-seat aircraft from McDonnell Douglas in October 1982 to replace its Boeing 727-100s. It committed to 67 firm orders plus 100 options in March 1984, and in 2002 its fleet peaked at more than 360 aircraft, 30 % of the 1,191 produced. The MD-80 was the workhorse of the airline’s fleet throughout the 1980s and beyond.[39]

Due to the use of the aging JT8D engines, the MD-80 is not fuel efficient compared to the A320 or newer 737 models; it burns 1,050 US gal (4,000 L) of jet fuel per hour on a typical flight, while the larger Boeing 737-800 burns 850 US gal (3,200 L) per hour (19% reduction). In the 2000s many airlines began to retire the type. Alaska Airlines' tipping point in using the 737-800 was the $4 per gallon price of jet fuel the airline was paying by the summer of 2008; the airline stated that a typical Los Angeles-Seattle flight would cost $2,000 less, using a Boeing 737-800, than the same flight using an MD-80.[40]

In late March 2008 and again in early April 2008, an FAA safety audit of American Airlines forced the airline to ground all its MD-80 series aircraft (approximately 300) to inspect the wiring for one of the aircraft's hydraulic systems. This led to American canceling nearly 2,500 flights in March and over 3,200 in April. In addition, Delta Air Lines voluntarily inspected its own MD-80 fleet to ensure its 117 MD-80s were also operating within regulation. This resulted in Delta canceling 275 flights.[41][42]

Midwest Airlines announced on July 14, 2008, that it would retire all 12 of its MD-80s (used primarily on routes to the West Coast) by the fall.[43] The JT8D's comparatively lower maintenance costs due to simpler design help narrow the fuel cost gap.[44]

American Airlines announced that it would remove all of its MD-80s by 2019, replacing them with 737-800s.[45] The airline flew its final MD-80 revenue flights on September 3 and 4, 2019 before retiring its 26 remaining aircraft.[46] The final MD-80 flight on September 4, 2019, Flight 80, flew from Dallas/Fort Worth to Chicago–O'Hare.[47] The retired planes were flown later to the New Mexico desert to be mothballed.[39]

Delta Air Lines was expected to retire its MD-80 series jetliners at the end of 2020, but instead the airline began accelerating the fleet retirement in March 2020 when the COVID-19 pandemic saw passenger levels drop critically low for airlines. On June 2, 2020, the final flights arrived Delta's home base and hub Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International in Atlanta from Dulles International Airport in Washington D.C. and George Bush International Airport in Houston.[48] This was the last scheduled passenger service in the US of any McDonnell Douglas airliner.[49] Delta's MD-80 fleet was put into storage.[50]

Freighter

In February 2013, Commercial Jet Inc. (CJI) delivered the first AEI MD-80SF, an MD-82SF (the prototype), to Everts Air Cargo, the launch customer of the MD-80SF passenger-to-freighter conversion program by the Aeronautical Engineers Inc. (AEI).[18] In August 2013, USA Jet Airlines became the launch operator of the MD-80SF freighter conversion program with an MD-88SF. The cargo airline purchased 15 MD-88 aircraft from Delta, six of which would be converted and the other nine used as spares.[51] USA Jet Airlines specialized in on demand cargo transport within North America.[19]

In 2021, most operators used the AEI MD-80SF freighter to carry Ford Motor Co. and General Motors automotive parts from Mexico to the U.S., but it was also used in Alaska for general freight and fish. The MD-80SF has a low deck height that allows it to load cargo from a pickup truck when needed, which is not possible on a Boeing 757 freighter. However, its cross section is too narrow to transport standard "A" type containers and instead a dozen non-standard 88 x 108 inch containers or pallets, which is the main disadvantage in cargo operations.[19]

In late July 2022, Everts Air Cargo (EAC) selected Universal Avionics, an Elbit Systems company, to deliver cockpit upgrades (avionics, FMS with LPV capability, and integrated GPS) for its MD-80SF aircraft to improve safety and operational efficiency. EAC specializes in transporting freight and mail in Alaska and uses its MD-80SF fleet to supply on demand charter service operations throughout the United States, Canada, Mexico, and Caribbean Islands.[52]

Firefighter

As of July 2022, Erickson Aero Tanker operates six MD-87 aircraft converted for use as aerial firefighting air tankers for the U.S. Forest Service, California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection and other government agencies.[53][54] The MD-87 air tanker's capacity is 4,000 gallons or 1,920 gallons more than the capacity of the Lockheed P-2 Neptune tankers and 1,000 gallons more than Bae-146 tankers. That is well short of the 19,000+ gallon capacity of the 747 Global Super Tanker, but the MD-87 is much more cost-effective to operate and can utilize more austere fields with shorter runways.[55] Another interesting feature of the MD-87 tanker, as well as Douglas DC-7s and some other large tanker-modified aircraft, is that the plane can be flown with the landing gear down during the retardant drop, which reduces airspeed while allowing higher engine RPMs, reducing lag on post-drop climb out- similar to a speed break.[55]

Variants

 
Douglas MD-80 Family, top to bottom: MD-81/82, MD-83/88, MD-87, MD-90

References: Flight International's Commercial Aircraft of the World 1981,[56] 1982,[57] 1983,[58] Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1994–1995,[59] and 2004–2005.[60]

Dimensions
The basic "long-body" MD-80 versions (MD-81, MD-82, MD-83, and MD-88) have an overall length of 147 ft 10 in (45.06 m), and a fuselage length of 136 feet 5 inches (41.58 m) that is 4.62 m longer than the DC-9-50 and 13.5 m longer than the initial DC-9, the Series 10. Wingspan was also increased by 4.4 m in comparison with earlier DC-9s at 107 feet 10.2 inches (32.873 m). The aircraft's passenger cabin, from cockpit door to aft bulkhead, is 101 feet 0 inches (30.78 m) long and, as with all versions of the DC-9, has a maximum cabin width (trim-to-trim) of 123.7 inches (3.14 m).[citation needed]
Powerplant
The initial production version of the MD-80 was the Pratt and Whitney JT8D-209 18,500 lbf (82 kN) thrust-powered MD-81. Later build MD-81s have been delivered with more powerful JT8D-217 and -219 engines.
APU
All versions of the MD-80 are equipped with an AlliedSignal (Garrett) GTCP85-98D APU as standard, which is located in the aft fuselage.
Flight deck
The MD-80 is equipped with a two crew flightdeck similar to that on the DC-9 from which it evolved. Later models could be equipped to a higher specification with EFIS displays in place of the traditional analogue instruments, TCAS, windshear detection, etc. An EFIS retrofit to non-EFIS-equipped aircraft is possible.
Cabin
Typical passenger-cabin seating arrangements include:[11][page needed]
A mixed-class, with aft full-service galley, configuration for a total of 135 passengers with 12 first class, four-abreast 36-inch seat pitch.
123 economy-class passengers, five-abreast, 32-inch pitch.
All-economy layout for 155 passengers, five-abreast, 32- and 33-inch pitch.
A typical high-density layout is for 167 in one class (i.e., Airtours).
Undercarriage
All versions of the MD-80 are equipped with a tricycle undercarriage, featuring a twin nose unit with spray deflector and twin main units with rock deflectors. The MD-80T, developed for the Chinese, differs in that the main units are each fitted with a four-wheel double-main-bogey undercarriage to reduce pavement loading.[11][page needed][58]
Aerodynamic improvements
From mid-1987, new MD-87-style low-drag "beaver" tail cones were introduced on all series of MD-80s, reducing drag and improving fuel burn. Some operators have been modifying the old DC-9-style cones on earlier-build MD-80s to the new low-drag style. Scandinavian Airlines System has done this, citing the improved economics and cosmetics from the modification.[11][page needed]

MD-81

 
Scandinavian Airlines MD-81 taking off

The MD-81 (originally known as the DC-9 Super 81 or DC-9-81) was the first production model of the MD-80, and apart from the MD-87, the differences between the various long-body MD-80 variants are relatively minor. The four long-body models (MD-81, MD-82, MD-83, and MD-88) only differ from each other in having different engine variants, fuel capacities, and weights. The MD-88 and later-build versions of the other models have more up-to-date flight decks featuring for example EFIS.

Performance
Standard maximum take-off weight (MTOW) on the MD-81 is 140,000 lb (63,500 kg) with the option to increase to 142,000 lb (64,400 kg). Fuel capacity is 5,840 US gallons (22,100 L), and typical range, with 155 passengers, is 1,565 nmi.[11][page needed]
MD-81 timeline
  • Formal launch: October 1977
  • First flight: October 18, 1979
  • FAA certification: August 25, 1980
  • First delivery: September 13, 1980 to Swissair
  • Entry into service: October 10, 1980 with Swissair on a flight from Zurich to Heathrow.
  • Last delivery: June 24, 1994 to JAL Domestic

MD-82

 
Alitalia MD-82

Announced on April 16, 1979, the MD-82 (DC-9-82) was a new MD-80 variant with similar dimensions to those of the MD-81 but equipped with more powerful engines. The MD-82 was intended for operation from 'hot and high' airports but also offered greater payload/range when in use at 'standard' airfields.[61] American Airlines was the world's largest operator of the MD-82, with at one point over 300 MD-82s in the fleet.

Originally certified with 20,000 lbf (89 kN) thrust JT8D-217s, a -217A-powered MD-82 was certified in mid-1982 and became available that year. The new version featured a higher MTOW (149,500 lb (67,800 kg)), while the JT8D-217As had a guaranteed take-off thrust at temperatures up to 29 °C (84 °F) or 5,000 ft (1,500 m) altitude. The JT8D-217C engines were also offered on the MD-82, giving improved Thrust specific fuel consumption (TSFC). Several operators took delivery of the -219-powered MD-82s, while Balair ordered its MD-82s powered by the lower-thrust -209 engine.[11][page needed][58]

The MD-82 features an increased standard MTOW initially to 147,000 lb (66,700 kg), and this was later increased to 149,500 lb (67,800 kg). Standard fuel capacity is the same as that of the MD-81, 5,840 US gal (22,100 L), and typical range with 155 passengers is 2,050 nmi (3,800 km).[11][page needed][58]

MD-82 timeline
  • Announced/go-ahead: April 16, 1979
  • First flight: January 8, 1981
  • FAA certification: July 29, 1981
  • First delivery: August 5, 1981 to Republic Airlines
  • Entry into service: August, 1981 with Republic Airlines
  • Last delivery: November 17, 1997 to U-Land Airlines of Taiwan

The MD-82 was assembled under license in Shanghai by the Shanghai Aviation Industrial Corporation (SAIC, today's COMAC) beginning in November 1986; the sub-assemblies were delivered by McDonnell Douglas in kit form.[11][page needed] China had begun design on a cargo version, designated Y-13, but the project was subsequently canceled with the conclusion of the licensed assembly of the MD-82 and MD-90 in China.[62][63] In 2012, Aeronautical Engineers Inc. performed the first commercial-freighter conversion of an MD-82.[14]

MD-83

 
Spanair MD-83

The MD-83 (DC-9-83) is a longer-range version of the basic MD-81/82 with higher weights, more powerful engines, and increased fuel capacity.

Powerplant
Compared to earlier models, the MD-83 is equipped with slightly more powerful 21,000 lbf (93 kN)-thrust Pratt and Whitney JT8D-219s as standard.
Performance
The MD-83 features increased fuel capacity as standard (to 6,970 US gal (26,400 L)), which is carried in two 565 US gal (2,140 L) auxiliary tanks located fore and aft of the center section. The aircraft also has higher operating weights, with MTOW increased to 160,000 lb (73,000 kg) and MLW to 139,500 lb (63,300 kg). Typical range for the MD-83 with 155 passengers is around 2,504 nautical miles (4,637 km). To cope with the higher operating weights, the MD-83 incorporates strengthened landing gear including new wheels, tires, and brakes, changes to the wing skins, front spar web and elevator spar cap, and strengthened floor beams and panels to carry the auxiliary fuel tanks. From MD-80 line number 1194, an MD-81 delivered in September 1985, it is understood that all MD-80s have the same basic wing structure and in theory could be converted to MD-83 standard.[11][page needed]
MD-83 timeline
  • Announced/go-ahead: January 31, 1983
  • First flight: December 17, 1984
  • FAA certification: October 17, 1985 (MTOW 149,500 lb (67,800 kg)). MTOW of 160,000 lb (73,000 kg) certified November 4, 1985.
  • First delivery: February, 1985 to Alaska Airlines – initially as -82 powered by -217A engines and certified as MD-82s. Alaska Airlines' first four aircraft were subsequently re-engined and re-certified as MD-83s.
  • Entry into service: February, 1985 with Alaska Airlines
  • Last delivery: December 28, 1999 to TWA

MD-87

 
An Iberia MD-87

In January 1985, McDonnell Douglas announced it would produce a shorter-fuselage MD-80 variant, designated MD-87 (DC-9-87), which would seat between 109 and 130 passengers depending upon configuration. The designation was intended to indicate its planned date of entry into service, 1987.

Dimensions
With an overall length of 130 ft 5 in (39.75 m), the MD-87 is 17 ft 4 in (5.28 m) shorter than the other MD-80s but is otherwise generally similar to them, employing the same engines, systems and flight deck. The MD-87 features modifications to its tail, with a fin extension above the tailplane. It also introduced a new low-drag "beaver" tail cone, which became standard on all MD-80s.
Powerplant
The MD-87 was offered with either the 20,000 lbf (89 kN) thrust JT8D-217C or the 21,000 lbf (93 kN) thrust -219.
Performance
Two basic versions of the MD-87 were made available with either an MTOW of 140,000 lb (64,000 kg) and MLW of 128,000 lb (58,000 kg) or an MTOW of 149,000 lb (68,000 kg) and an MLW of 130,000 lb (59,000 kg). Fuel capacity is 5,840 US gal (22,100 L), increasing to 6,970 US gal (26,400 L) with the incorporation of two auxiliary fuel tanks. Typical range with 130 passengers, is 2,370 nmi (4,390 km) increasing to 2,900 nmi (5,400 km) with two auxiliary fuel tanks.
Cabin
The MD-87 provides typical mixed-class seating for 114 passengers or 130 in an all-economy layout (five-abreast 31 in and 32 in seat pitch). The maximum seating, exit-limited, is for 139 passengers.
MD-87 timeline
  • Announced/go-ahead: January 1985
  • First flight: December 4, 1986
  • FAA certification: October 21, 1987
  • First delivery: November 27, 1987 to Austrian Airlines[64]
  • Last delivery: March 27, 1992 to Scandinavian Airlines (SAS)

MD-88

 
An Iberia MD-88 from behind

The MD-88 was the last variant of the MD-80, which was launched on January 23, 1986, on the back of orders and options from Delta Air Lines for a total of 80 aircraft.

The MD-88 is, depending on specification, basically similar to the MD-82 or MD-83 except it incorporates an EFIS cockpit instead of the more traditional analog flight deck of the other MD-80s. Other changes incorporated into the MD-88 include a wind-shear warning system and general updating of the cabin interior/trim. These detail changes are relatively minor and were written back as standard on the MD-82/83. The wind-shear warning system was offered as a standard option on all other MD-80s and has been made available for retrofitting on earlier aircraft including the DC-9.

Delta's initial eight aircraft were manufactured as MD-82s and upgraded to MD-88 specifications. MD-88 deliveries began in December 1987, and it entered service with Delta in January 1988. The final commercial passenger flight of an MD-88 within the United States took place on June 2, 2020, by a Delta flight from Washington Dulles to Atlanta.[65] In 2021, Michigan's USA Jet Airlines added MD-88s to their ad-hoc operations' freighter fleet.[66]

Performance
The MD-88 has the same weight, range, and airfield performance as the other long-body aircraft (MD-82 and MD-83) and is powered by the same engines. MDC quotes a typical range for the MD-88 as 2,050 nmi (3,800 km) with 155 passengers. Adding two additional auxiliary fuel tanks increases its 155-passenger range to 2,504 nmi (4,637 km) (similar to the MD-83). A Wall Street Journal article about the crash of Delta Air Lines Flight 1086 at New York City's LaGuardia Airport in March 2015 stated that "pilots and other safety experts have long known that when the MD-88's reversers are deployed, its rudder... sometimes may not be powerful enough to control deviations to the left or right from the center of a runway...safety board investigators, among other things, are looking to see if this tendency played any role in the crash..".[67]
MD-88 timeline
  • Announced/go-ahead: January 23, 1986
  • First flight: August 15, 1987
  • FAA certification: December 8, 1987
  • First delivery: December 19, 1987, to Delta Air Lines
  • Entry into service: January 5, 1988, with Delta Air Lines
  • Last delivery: June 25, 1997, to Onur Air
  • Final commercial flight in the U.S.: June 2, 2020, by Delta Air Lines[65]

Others (conversions)

The freighter conversion is available for the longer variants of MD-80 series (the MD-81, MD-82, MD-83 and MD-88), while the firefighter conversion is for the shortest variant, the MD-87.

AEI MD-80SF (freighter)

 
An MD-83SF of the launch customer of the freighter conversion program, Everts Air Cargo

In February 2010, the Aeronautical Engineers Inc. (AEI) announced it was beginning a freighter conversion program for the MD-80 series.[14] The converted aircraft use the MD-80SF (MD-80 special freghter) designation. AEI is solely certified by FAA and EASA to perform conversions on the longer variants of MD-80 series (the MD-81, MD-82, MD-83 and MD-88). The AEI MD-80SF freighter conversion consists of the installation of a 85"×136" large cargo door on the left side of the fuselage and modification of main deck to a Class E cargo compartment, with independent smoke detection system. Cabin windows replaced with lightweight aluminum window plugs. After conversion the freighter can carry twelve 88"×108" or eight 125"×88" ULDs or eight 125"×96" ULDs. The cargo door is hydraulically operated and actuated from the inside of the aircraft by an independent system. Hydraulic pressure is available from two sources; an electrically operated hydraulic pump or a manual hand pump. The door control and manual pump are located on the 9 g barrier, allowing a single person to operate the door manually.[51] The installation of cargo doors and other structural changes are performed by Commercial Jet Inc. (CJI), which is licensed to install the AEI-designed conversion kit at its Dothan, Alabama facility.[19]

EAT MD-87 (firefighter)

In 2013, five MD-87 aircraft formerly operated by Scandinavian Airlines (SAS) were converted for aerial firefighting use by Aero Air/Erickson Aero Tanker (EAT).[68][69] The external tank (pod) is installed below the retardant tank doors, lowering the release point by 46 inches and thus reducing the possibility of retardant spreading over the wing that could be further ingested into the engines.[70] On May 30, 2019, AerSale, a global supplier of mid-life aircraft, engines, and maintenance, repair, and overhaul (MRO) services, announced that it had signed a contract with Aero Air/ Erickson Aero Tanker to build the sixth MD-87 firefighting air tanker, beginning conversion on April 1, 2019 at AerSale's MRO facility in Goodyear, Arizona. The new air tanker will cruise at 450 knots, carry 3,000 gallons of fire retardant in all environments up to 40 degrees Celsius, boast a 900-mile loaded strike range, require only a 5,200-foot runway loaded, and both take off and land fully loaded.[54]

Operators

 
LASER Airlines is currently the largest scheduled passenger operator.
 
Aeronaves TSM is currently the largest MD-80SF freighter operator.

Current operators

There were 116 MD-80 series aircraft in service as of August 2022 with operators including Aeronaves TSM (15), World Atlantic Airlines (9), LASER Airlines (9), European Air Charter (8), Everts Air (5), USA Jet Airlines (5), and other carriers with smaller fleets.[71][better source needed]

Former operators

Major airlines that operated the MD-80 series:

  • Alaska Airlines retired its MD-80 series aircraft after making its last commercial flight on August 25, 2008.[72]
  • American Airlines retired its MD-80 series aircraft after making its last commercial flight on September 4, 2019.[73]
  • Delta Air Lines retired its MD-88 and MD-90 aircraft on June 2, 2020.[74]

Deliveries

Deliveries[75]
Type Total 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980
MD-81 132 3 3 5 15 5 8 6 4 9 8 1 1 11 48 5
MD-82 539 2 2 13 8 14 18 48 48 37 51 50 64 55 43 50 23 13
MD-82T 30 1 1 2 6 8 6 4 2
MD-83 265 26 8 9 10 5 11 12 25 26 30 26 26 31 12 8
MD-87 75 5 13 25 15 14 3
MD-88 150 5 13 29 32 23 25 19 4
MD-80 series 1,191 26 8 16 12 18 23 43 84 140 139 117 120 94 85 71 44 51 34 61 5

Accidents and incidents

As of June 2022, the MD-80 series has been involved in 89 major aviation accidents and incidents, including 46 hull-losses, with 1,446 fatalities of occupants.[76][77]

Accidents with fatalities

  • On December 1, 1981, Inex-Adria Aviopromet Flight 1308, MD-81 (YU-ANA), crashed into Corsica's Mt. San Pietro during a holding pattern for landing at Campo dell'Oro Airport, Ajaccio, France. All 180 passengers and crew were killed. This was the first-ever fatal incident involving the MD-80 series and also the deadliest.[78]
  • On August 16, 1987, Northwest Airlines Flight 255, an MD-82, crashed shortly after takeoff from Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport because the flight crew failed to use the taxi checklist to ensure that flaps and slats were extended for takeoff, according to the US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). All crew and passengers were killed, with the exception of a four-year-old girl, Cecelia Cichan. Two people on the ground were also killed.[79][80][81]
  • On June 12, 1988, Austral Líneas Aéreas Flight 46, MD-81 (N1003G), crashed short of the runway at Libertador General José de San Martín Airport, in Posadas, Misiones. All 22 passengers and crew were killed.[82]
  • On October 26, 1993, China Eastern Airlines Flight 5398, MD-82 (B-2103), overran the runway on landing at Fuzhou Yixu Airport in poor visibility due to pilot error, killing two of 80 on board.
  • On November 13, 1993, China Northern Airlines Flight 6901, MD-82 (B-2141) crashed before landing at Ürümqi Diwopu International Airport in Xinjiang, China, killing twelve of the 102 passengers and crew on board.[83]
  • On July 6, 1996, Delta Air Lines Flight 1288, an MD-88, attempting to take off from Pensacola Regional Airport experienced an uncontained, catastrophic turbine engine failure that caused debris from the front compressor hub of the number one left engine to penetrate the left aft fuselage. The penetrating debris left two passengers dead and two severely injured; all were from the same family. The pilot aborted takeoff, and the airplane stopped on the runway.
  • On June 1, 1999, American Airlines Flight 1420, an MD-82, attempting to land in severe weather conditions at Little Rock Airport, overshot the runway and crashed into the banks of the Arkansas River. Eleven people, including the captain, died.
  • On January 31, 2000, Alaska Airlines Flight 261, an MD-83, crashed in the Pacific Ocean because it lost horizontal stabilizer control.[84] All 88 passengers and crew on board were killed. Following the crash, an improperly maintained Acme nut and jackscrew recovered from the aircraft were found to be excessively worn.[85] An airworthiness directive (AD) was issued by the FAA requiring more frequent inspections and lubrication of the jackscrew assembly.[86]
  • On October 8, 2001, Scandinavian Airlines Flight 686, MD-87 (SE-DMA) collided with a Cessna Citation CJ2 jet (D-IEVX) during takeoff at Linate Airport, Milan, Italy. The Linate Airport disaster left 118 people dead and remains the deadliest air disaster in Italy. The cause of the accident was a misunderstanding between air traffic controllers and the Cessna jet, complicated by inoperative ground movement radar at the time of the accident. The SAS crew had no role in causing the accident.
  • On May 7, 2002, China Northern Airlines Flight 6136, MD-82 (B-2138), from Beijing to Dalian, crashed into Dalian Bay near Dalian after the pilot reported "fire on board". All 112 people on board were killed. Investigators determined that the fire had been set by a suicidal passenger.
  • On November 30, 2004, Lion Air Flight 583, an MD-82, crashed on landing at Adi Sumarmo Airport in Surakarta, Indonesia and overran the end of the runway, killing 25 of 163 on board.
  • On August 16, 2005, West Caribbean Airways Flight 708, an MD-82, crashed in a mountainous region in northwest Venezuela killing all 152 passengers and eight crew.[87]
  • On September 16, 2007, One-Two-GO Airlines Flight 269, an MD-82, crashed at the side of the runway and exploded after an apparent attempt to execute a go-around in bad weather at Phuket International Airport in Phuket, Thailand. Of the 130 passengers and crew on board, 90 were killed.[88][89]
  • On November 30, 2007, Atlasjet Flight 4203, an MD-83, crashed in the southwestern province of Isparta, Turkey, killing all 57 passengers and seven crew.[90] The cause of the crash was attributed to pilot spatial disorientation.
  • On August 20, 2008, Spanair Flight 5022, MD-82 (EC-HFP), from Madrid's Barajas Airport crashed shortly after takeoff on a flight to Las Palmas de Gran Canaria in the Canary Islands. The MD-82 had 162 passengers and ten crew on board, of whom 18 survived. The crash was caused by attempting to take off with the flaps and slats retracted. The flight crew omitted the "set flaps and slats" item in both the After Start checklist and the Takeoff Imminent checklist and the takeoff warning system (TOWS), which should have emitted an audio warning on the runway when the throttles were advanced for takeoff with the airplane wrongly configured for takeoff did not sound.[91]
  • On June 3, 2012, Dana Air Flight 992, MD-83 (5N-RAM), crashed into a two-story building in Lagos, Nigeria, caused by engine failure. All 153 passengers and crew on board were killed, as well as 10 on the ground.[92][93][94]
  • On July 24, 2014, Air Algérie Flight 5017, MD-83, registration EC-LTV, a scheduled flight from Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, to Algiers, Algeria, operated with an MD-83 leased from Swiftair. The aircraft crashed southeast of Gossi, Mali, about 50 minutes after takeoff. All 110 passengers and six crew were killed.[95]

Hull losses

 
Delta Air Lines Flight 1086 resting on the seawall following its overrun at La Guardia
  • On December 27, 1991, SAS Flight 751, an MD-81 (OY-KHO, Dana Viking), crash-landed at Gottröra, Sweden. In the initial climb, both engines ingested ice broken loose from the wings (although they had been properly deiced before departure). The ice damaged the compressor blades causing compressor stall. The stall further caused repeated engine surges that finally destroyed both engines, leaving the aircraft with no thrust. The aircraft landed in a snowy field and broke into three parts. No fire occurred, and all aboard survived.
  • On March 16, 2007, Kish Air MD-82 (LZ-LDD) leased from Bulgarian Air Charter was damaged beyond repair in a hard landing accident at Kish Island Airport. There were no fatalities.[96]
  • On January 24, 2012, Swiftair Flight 94, an MD-83 (EC-JJS), suffered a wingtip strike while landing at Kandahar Airport, Afghanistan. Although there were no injuries to the 92 passengers and crew on board, the starboard wing sustained a broken main spar, and the aircraft was damaged beyond economic repair. It was consequently scrapped at Kandahar.[97]
  • On March 5, 2015, Delta Air Lines Flight 1086, an MD-88 (N909DL), skidded off the runway on landing at LaGuardia Airport, New York in snowy weather, suffering severe damage. A few minor injuries occurred during evacuation via the emergency chutes.[98] Investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board were reportedly focusing on the aircraft's braking system and rudder.[67]
  • On March 8, 2017, Ameristar Charters Flight 9363, MD-83 (N786TW), overran the end of runway 23L at Willow Run Airport in Ypsilanti, Michigan, after rejecting a takeoff at very high speed due to a jammed elevator which could not be detected prior to the attempted takeoff.[99] Only one injury occurred among the 116 on board, but the aircraft's belly and wings were substantially damaged after its landing gear collapsed during the overrun, and it was eventually written off.[100]
  • On June 14, 2018, Bravo Airways Flight 4406, an MD-83 (UR-CPR), slid off the runway on landing at Igor Sikorsky International Airport following an unstable approach; all 176 on board survived.[101]
  • On January 27, 2020, Caspian Airlines Flight 6936, an MD-83, overran the end of the Mahshahr Airport's runway 13 with 144 people on board. There were two injuries; the aircraft received substantial damage.[102]
  • On October 19, 2021, an MD-87, registration N987AK,[103] crashed on take-off from Houston Executive Airport. All 21 people on board survived but the aircraft was destroyed by a post-crash fire. During examination of the intact tail section, it was found that both left and right elevators were jammed in a trailing edge down position. The aircraft was chartered to fly the passengers to Boston for a Red Sox baseball game.[104][105][106]
  • On June 21, 2022, Red Air Flight 203, an MD-82 (reg. HI1064), suffered a landing gear collapse and runway excursion upon landing at Miami International Airport, causing the right wing to catch fire. There were three minor injuries among the 140 passengers and crew, but the aircraft was written off.[107]

Aircraft on display

Specifications

 
Comparison of DC-9, Boeing 717 and different MD-80 versions
Airplane characteristics[118]
Variant MD-81/82/83/88 MD-87
Cockpit crew Two
1-class seats[119] 155Y @32-33" (max 172) 130Y @31-33" (max 139)
2-class seats[119] 143: 12J @ 36" + 131Y@ 31-34" 117: 12J+105Y
Length 147 ft 10 in (45.06 m) 130 ft 5 in (39.75 m)
Wing 107 ft 8 in (32.82 m) span, 1,209 sq ft (112.3 m2) area, aspect ratio: 9.6
Tail height 29 ft 7 in (9.02 m) 30 ft 4 in (9.25 m)
Width 131.6 in / 334.3 cm fuselage, 122.5 in / 311.2 cm cabin
Cargo 1,253 cu ft (35.5 m3)
-83/88: 1,013 cu ft (28.7 m3)
938 cu ft (26.6 m3)
Empty weight 77,900–79,700 lb (35,300–36,200 kg) 73,300 lb (33,200 kg)
MTOW -81: 140,000 lb (63,500 kg)
-82: 149,500 lb (67,800 kg)
-83/88: 160,000 lb (72,600 kg)
140,000–149,500 lb (63,500–67,800 kg)
Fuel capacity 5,850 US gal (22,100 L) -83/88: 7,000 US gal (26,000 L)
Engines (×2) Pratt & Whitney JT8D-200 series
Thrust (×2) 18,500–21,000 lbf (82–93 kN)
Long-range cruise Mach 0.76 (448 kn; 830 km/h)[120]
High-speed cruise Mach 0.8 (472 kn; 873 km/h)[119]
Range[a] -81: 1,800 nmi (3,300 km) @ 137 pax
-82: 2,050 nmi (3,800 km) @ 155 pax
-83/88: 2,550 nmi (4,720 km) @ 155 pax
2,400–2,900 nmi (4,400–5,400 km)
Takeoff[b] 7,200–8,000 ft (2,200–2,400 m) 7,500 ft (2,300 m)
  1. ^ ISA, 200nm alt + 45 mn LRC reserves
  2. ^ MTOW, sea level, ISA

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References

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  1. ^ Some sources said that the Super 80 designation (shorted, without DC-9 prefix) was intended to avoid association with the DC-10's bad reputation at the time.
  2. ^ As the MD-80 was not in effect a new aircraft, it continues to be operated under an amendment to the original DC-9 FAA aircraft type certificate (a similar case to the later MD-90 and Boeing 717 aircraft). The type certificate issued to the aircraft manufacturer carries the aircraft model designations exactly as it appears on the manufacturer's application, including use of hyphens or decimal points, and should match what is stamped on the aircraft's data or nameplate. What the manufacturer chooses to call an aircraft for marketing or promotional purposes is irrelevant to the airworthiness authorities. The first amendment to the DC-9 type certificate for the new MD-80 aircraft was applied as DC-9-81, which approved on August 26, 1980. All MD-80 models have since been approved under additional amendments to the DC-9 type certificate.

Sources

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  • Michell, Simon. Jane's Civil and Military Aircraft Upgrades 1994–95 Coulsdon, UK: Jane's Information Group, 1994. ISBN 0-7106-1208-7.
  • Taylor, John W. R. Jane's All The World's Aircraft 1982–83. London: Jane's Yearbooks, 1982. ISBN 0-7106-0748-2.
  • Taylor, John W. R. Jane's All The World's Aircraft 1988–89. Coulsdon, UK: Jane's Defence Data, 1988. ISBN 0-7106-0867-5.
  • Thisdell, Dan and Fafard, Antoine. "World Airliner Census". Flight International, Volume 190, No. 5550, 9–15 August 2016. pp. 20–43. ISSN 0015-3710

External links

mcdonnell, douglas, redirect, here, former, state, highways, list, former, maryland, state, highways, series, five, abreast, single, aisle, airliners, developed, mcdonnell, douglas, produced, developer, company, until, august, 1997, then, boeing, commercial, a. MD 81 MD 82 MD 83 MD 87 and MD 88 redirect here For the former state highways see List of former Maryland state highways 2 199 The McDonnell Douglas MD 80 is a series of five abreast single aisle airliners developed by McDonnell Douglas It was produced by the developer company until August 1997 and then by Boeing Commercial Airplanes The MD 80 was the second generation of the DC 9 family originally designated as the DC 9 80 DC 9 Series 80 and later stylized as the DC 9 Super 80 short Super 80 Stretched enlarged wing and powered by higher bypass Pratt amp Whitney JT8D 200 engines the aircraft program was launched in October 1977 The MD 80 made its first flight on October 18 1979 as the Super 80 and was certified on August 25 1980 The first airliner was delivered to launch customer Swissair on September 13 1980 which introduced it into commercial service on October 10 1980 MD 80 seriesAn Iberia MD 88 in 2002Role Narrow body jet airlinerNational origin United StatesManufacturer McDonnell Douglas Boeing Commercial Airplanes from Aug 1997 First flight October 18 1979Introduction October 10 1980 with SwissairStatus In service mostly for cargo transportPrimary users Aeronaves TSMWorld Atlantic Airlines LASER Airlines European Air Charter 1 Produced 1979 1999Number built 1 191Developed from McDonnell Douglas DC 9Developed into McDonnell Douglas MD 90 Boeing 717 Comac ARJ21Keeping the fuselage cross section longer variants are stretched by 14 ft 4 3 m from the DC 9 50 and have a 28 larger wing The larger variants MD 81 82 83 88 are 148 ft 45 1 m long to seat 155 passengers in coach and with varying weights can cover up to 2 550 nmi 4 720 km The later MD 88 has a modern cockpit with EFIS displays The MD 87 is 17 ft 5 3 m shorter for 130 passengers in economy and has a range up to 2 900 nmi 5 400 km The MD 80 series competed with the Boeing 737 Classic and the Airbus A320ceo family Its successor introduced in 1995 the MD 90 was a further stretch powered by IAE V2500 high bypass turbofans while the shorter MD 95 later known as the Boeing 717 was powered by Rolls Royce BR715 engines Production ended in 1999 after 1 191 MD 80s were delivered of which 116 aircraft remain in service as of August 2022 Contents 1 Development 1 1 Feasibility study 1 2 Program launch 1 3 Certification 1 3 1 Type designation 1 3 2 Type certification TC 1 3 3 Type conversion STC 1 3 3 1 AEI MD 80SF freighter 1 3 3 2 EAT MD 87 firefighter 1 4 Entry into service 1 5 Production 1 6 Other proposals 1 6 1 MD 89 1 6 2 MD 80 Advanced 1 7 Further developments 1 7 1 MD 90 1 7 2 MD 95 2 Design 2 1 Performance 2 2 Engines 2 3 Avionics 2 4 Flight deck 2 5 Cabin 3 Operational history 3 1 Passenger 3 2 Freighter 3 3 Firefighter 4 Variants 4 1 MD 81 4 2 MD 82 4 3 MD 83 4 4 MD 87 4 5 MD 88 4 6 Others conversions 4 6 1 AEI MD 80SF freighter 4 6 2 EAT MD 87 firefighter 5 Operators 5 1 Current operators 5 2 Former operators 5 3 Deliveries 6 Accidents and incidents 6 1 Accidents with fatalities 6 2 Hull losses 7 Aircraft on display 8 Specifications 9 See also 10 References 11 Sources 12 External linksDevelopment EditThe DC 9 series the first generation of the DC 9 family entered service in late 1965 and became a commercial success with 976 units built when production ended in 1982 2 The all new designed aircraft family includes five members or variants DC 9 10 DC 9 Series 10 Series 20 Series 30 Series 40 and Series 50 with ten sub variants or versions Series 11 Series 12 Series 14 Series 15 Series 21 Series 31 Series 32 Series 33 Series 34 Series 41 and Series 51 and features two rear fuselage mounted turbofan engines a T tail configuration 3 a narrow body fuselage with five abreast seating for 80 to 135 passengers 4 The success prompted the manufacturer to further develop the aircraft family with the last member Series 50 as the reference aircraft Feasibility study Edit In the 1970s McDonnell Douglas began development of the first derivative or second generation of the DC 9 family a lengthened version of the Series 50 with a higher maximum take off weight MTOW larger wing new main landing gear and higher fuel capacity Availability of newer versions of the Pratt amp Whitney JT8D turbofan engine with higher bypass ratios and thrust ratings drove early studies including designs known as Series 55 Series 50 refanned Super Stretch and Series 60 In August 1977 the design effort focused on the Series 55 Program launch Edit With entry into service projected in 1980 the improved aircraft design was initially designated as the Series 80 which would be the sixth variant of the first generation 5 In October 1977 Swissair became the launch customer for the Series 80 with an order for 15 plus an option for five 3 The launch of the next aircraft models followed in October 1977 for the Series 81 MD 81 on April 16 1979 for the Series 82 MD 82 on January 31 1983 for the Series 83 MD 83 January 1985 for Series 87 MD 87 and January 23 1986 for Series 88 MD 88 6 Certification Edit Type designation Edit Similar to the first generation of the DC 9 family the second generation uses second digit notation with zero for variant names Series 80 and non zero for subvariant or version names Series 81 through Series 88 Because there was only one variant within the second generation the Series 80 became the family name and the Series 81 through Series 88 became variant or version names The first Series 80 DC 9 line number 909 made its first flight on October 18 1979 as the Super 80 7 which then became the preferred designation for the newly developed aircraft family note 1 Although two aircraft were substantially damaged in accidents flight testing was completed on August 25 1980 when the first variant and respectively production model the JT8D 209 powered Series 81 was certified under an amendment to the FAA type certificate for the DC 9 The flight testing leading up to certification had involved three aircraft accumulating a total of 1 085 flying hours on 795 flights After production of the first generation ended in late 1982 a new designation with McDonnell Douglas initials MD 80 was proposed as the type designation for the second generation and in July 1983 McDonnell Douglas decided that the Super 80 would be officially designated the MD 80 8 However the type designation according to the type certificate TC is still the original DC 9 prefix to save on certification costs but could also be provided with the new MD prefix written in parentheses e g DC 9 81 MD 81 DC 9 82 MD 82 DC 9 83 MD 83 and DC 9 87 MD 87 Only the last variant the MD 88 was officially certified under the MD designation 9 Type certification TC Edit An MD 81 of the type s launch operator Swissair It was certified by FAA in August 1980 Following the MD 81 s first flight on October 18 1979 the MD 82 and MD 83 made their maiden flights on January 8 1981 and December 17 1984 respectively 10 They were then certified by the FAA on August 25 1980 July 29 1981 and October 17 1985 respectively The first airliner an MD 81 was delivered to launch operator Swissair on September 13 1980 11 6 Instead of merely using the MD prefix as a marketing symbol an application was made to again amend the type certificate to include the MD 81 MD 82 and MD 83 This change was dated March 10 1986 and the type certificate declared that although the MD designator could be used in parentheses it must be accompanied by the official designation for example DC 9 81 MD 81 All Long Beach aircraft in the MD 80 series thereafter had MD 81 MD 82 or MD 83 stamped on the aircraft nameplate note 2 An MD 87 operated by Scandinavian Airlines The shortest variant certified in October 1987 An MD 88 operated by Aviaco The last and only variant certified with MD prefix in December 1987 9 The MD 87 and MD 88 made their first flight on December 4 1986 and August 15 1987 respectively 10 Although not certified until October 21 1987 McDonnell Douglas had already applied for models DC 9 87 and DC 9 87F on February 14 1985 The third derivative was similarly officially designated DC 9 87 MD 87 although no nameplates were stamped DC 9 87 For the MD 88 an application for a type certificate model amendment was made after the earlier changes so there was not a DC 9 88 which was certified on December 8 1987 12 The FAA s online aircraft registry database shows the DC 9 88 and DC 9 80 designations in existence but unused 13 Type conversion STC Edit Type conversions were programs started in 2010 by third parties with support from the TC holder Boeing as this was only happening after the merger with McDonnel Douglas in 1997 to convert used MD 80 passenger airliners and provide the required supplemental type certificate STC from FAA or EASA AEI MD 80SF freighter Edit The MD 80SF was a freighter conversion program for the MD 80 series launched in February 2010 where the suffix SF stands for special freighter 14 The conversion company the Aeronautical Engineers Inc AEI based in Miami Florida had noticed that pre owned MD 80s could be bought for under 1M and at 2 5M for the freighter conversion an MD 80FS could offer a narrowbody freighter for half the price of a Boeing 737 400SF 15 The first conversion was undertaken on an ex American Airlines MD 82 aircraft FSN 49470 built in 1987 which was used as a test bed for the supplemental type certificate 16 The MD 80SF made its inaugural flight on 28 September 2012 AEI was the first and solely firm authorized by Boeing to receive the STC ST02434LA for the longer variants of the MD 80 series from the FAA in February 2013 17 The converted freighter with the designation AEI MD 80SF would have a payload of 21 1 tonnes and the ability to take 12 pallets measuring 88 x 108 inches which would be a good replacement for the Boeing 727 freighter 15 The first converted freighter an AEI MD 82SF the prototype was delivered to the launch customer Everts Air Cargo in February 2013 14 In 2013 after the first delivery AEI had orders for 20 MD 80SF freighters 18 expecting more than 100 conversions over ten years Despite the initial lively interest the uptake had been sluggish 15 AEI had six MD 80s converted by 2015 and three more were on the books for that year Demand for the MD 80SF was disappointing due to two factors First the MD 80 s cross section does not match the narrowbody freighter types used by the integrators severely limiting the market for the freighter Second the values of the 737 400SF fell faster than expected closing the gap with the MD 80SF which burns 12 percent more fuel 15 In October 2015 the MD 80SF was approved by the EASA with Doc No 10055029 17 In 2021 after the COVID 19 pandemic demand for cargo aircraft increased and the initial cost of an MD 80SF was around 5M half the cost of a 737 400SF which made it attractive again In March USA Jet Airlines had signed a contract with AEI to convert three MD 88s into freighter which they purchased from Delta Air Lines and planned to have seven AEI MD 88SF in its fleet AEI itself had delivered 21 AEI MD 80SF freighters two were in progress and six had been ordered 19 EAT MD 87 firefighter Edit An EAT MD 87 for aerial firefighting was certified by FAA in 2014 The FAA issued the Doc No STC ST02507LA for Erickson Aero Tanker LLC located in Hillsboro Oregon referred to as EAT in 2014 to certify their EAT MD 87 firefighters 20 In the said STC EAT MD 87 air tankers are required to drop retardant with landing gear down to prevent stalling The dedicated test pilot said that during a test with the external tank the FAA representative was not satisfied with the aircraft s response after being placed deep in the stall beyond the stall warnings stick shaker and stick pusher In early 2017 EAT petitioned the FAA for an exemption from this requirement 14 CFR 25 201 b 1 and requested a Flaps 40 Landing Gear Up configuration while dropping but on June 28 2017 that exemption was denied with the reason given by the FAA that it would have allowed aerial firefighting retardant drops in a configuration that does not fully meet the stall characteristics requirements on the modified DC 9 87 MD 87 aircraft EAT was then working on an additional layer of status display to complement the existing system 20 21 Entry into service Edit The launch operator Swissair put the MD 81 into service on October 10 1980 with a flight from Zurich Airport to London Heathrow 6 The MD 82 MD 83 MD 87 and MD 88 entered service later with Republic Airlines in August 1981 Alaska Airlines in February 1985 Austrian Airlines in November 1987 and Delta Air Lines in January 1988 respectively 10 6 Production Edit One of the final MD 80s built an MD 83 for TWA operating for American Airlines after the two companies merged The second generation later named MD 80s was produced on a common line with the first generation DC 9s with which it shares its line number sequence After the delivery of 976 DC 9s and 108 MD 80s McDonnell Douglas stopped DC 9 production Hence commencing with the 1 085th DC 9 MD 80 delivery an MD 82 for VIASA in December 1982 only second generation or MD 80s were produced In 1985 McDonnell Douglas after years of negotiating attributed to Gareth C C Chang 22 president of a McDonnell Douglas subsidiary signed an agreement for joint production of MD 80s and MD 90s in the People s Republic of China The agreement was for 26 aircraft of which 20 were eventually produced along with two MD 90 aircraft 23 Upon cancellation of the co production program China refused to return the tooling used to McDonnell Douglas and subsequently used it and the fuselage cross section design in what became the Comac ARJ21 regional jet 24 During 1991 MD 80 production had reached a peak of 12 per month having been running at approximately 10 per month since 1987 and was expected to continue at this rate in the near term 140 MD 80s were delivered in 1991 As a result of the decline in the air traffic and a slow market response to the MD 90 MD 80 production was reduced and 84 aircraft were handed over in 1992 A further production rate cut resulted in 42 MD 80s delivered during 1993 3 5 per month and 22 aircraft were handed over 11 page needed MD 80 production ended in 1999 with the final MD 80 an MD 83 registered as N984TW being delivered to TWA 25 Other proposals Edit MD 89 Edit In 1984 1985 McDonnell Douglas proposed a 173 passenger 152 in 390 cm 12 7 ft 3 9 m stretch of the MD 80 called the MD 89 which would use the International Aero Engines V2500 engine instead of the regular JT8D 200 series engines 26 The MD 89 was intended to have two 57 in 140 cm 4 8 ft 1 4 m fuselage plugs forward of the wing and one 38 in 97 cm 3 2 ft 0 97 m fuselage plug aft of the wing 27 IAE and McDonnell Douglas announced an agreement to jointly market this 160 ft 6 in 48 9 m derivative on February 1 1985 but the concept was subsequently deprioritized in favor of the proposed MD 91 and MD 92 derivatives using ultra high bypass UHB propfan engines By 1989 however lack of airline orders for the UHB derivatives caused McDonnell Douglas to return to the IAE V2500 engines to launch its MD 90 series aircraft 3 MD 80 Advanced Edit In order to better manage the transition from the second generation MD 80 to the third generation MD 90 McDonnell Douglas revealed at the end of 1990 that it would be developing an MD 80 improvement package with the intent to offer beginning in early 1991 for delivery from mid 1993 The aircraft concept became known as the MD 80 Advanced The main improvement was the installation of Pratt amp Whitney JT8D 290 engines never built with a 1 5 in larger diameter fan that would allow for a 6 dB reduction in exterior noise 28 The MD 80 Advanced was to incorporate the advanced flight deck of the MD 88 including a choice of reference systems with an inertial reference system as standard fitting and optional attitude heading equipment It was to be equipped with an electronic flight instrument system EFIS an optional second flight management system FMS and light emitting diode LED dot matrix electronic engine and system displays A Honeywell wind shear computer and provision for an optional traffic alert and collision avoidance system TCAS were also to be included A completely new passenger compartment design would have a 12 increase in overhead baggage space and stowage compartment lights that come on when the doors open as well as new video system featuring drop down LCD monitors above 12 These changes would be also available by retrofit to existing MD 80s 12 Due to lack of market interest McDonnell Douglas dropped its plans to offer the MD 80 Advanced during 1991 28 In the course of 1993 a mark 2 MD 80 Advanced version reappeared with the modified JT8D 290 engines as previously proposed 12 In late 1993 Pratt amp Whitney launched a modified version of the JT8D 200 series the 218B which was being offered for the DC 9X re engining program and was also evaluating the possibility of developing a new JT8D for possible retrofit on the MD 80 The 18 000 lbf 80 kN to 19 000 lbf 85 kN thrust 218B engine version shares a 98 commonality with the existing engine with changes designed to reduce NOx improve durability and reduce noise levels by 3 dB The 218B could be certified in early to mid 1996 The new engine dubbed the 8000 was to feature a new fan of increased diameter by 1 7 in extended exhaust cone a larger LP compressor a new annular burner and a new LP turbine and mixer The initial thrust rating would be around 21 700 lbf 97 kN A launch decision on the new engine was expected by mid 1994 but never occurred The engine would also be available on new build MD 80s McDonnell Douglas also evaluated the addition of winglets on the MD 80 12 Further developments Edit An MD 90 of Delta Air Lines both its launch customer and last operator 29 MD 90 Edit The MD 90 was developed from the MD 80 series and is a 5 foot longer 1 5 m updated version of the MD 88 with a similar electronic flight instrument system EFIS glass cockpit and improved and quieter IAE V2500 high bypass turbofan engines The MD 90 program began in 1989 first flew in 1993 and entered commercial service in 1995 The MD 90ER extended range version was also offered Delta Air Lines flew the final MD 90 passenger flight on June 2 2020 marking the retirement of the type 29 MD 95 Edit The MD 95 was developed to replace early DC 9 models which were approaching 30 years of age The project completely overhauled the original DC 9 into a modern airliner It is slightly longer than the DC 9 30 and is powered by new Rolls Royce BR715 engines The MD 95 was renamed Boeing 717 after the McDonnell Douglas Boeing merger in 1997 Design Edit MD 83 Flight deck Five abreast coach seating and four abreast premium seating of the MD 80 The MD 80 series is a mid size medium range airliner featuring a fuselage 14 ft 3 in 4 34 m longer than the DC 9 50 The small highly efficient wing design of the baseline aircraft was enlarged by adding sections at the wing root and tip for a 28 larger wing The aircraft derivative retains the configuration of two rear fuselage mounted turbofan engines a T tail and has cockpit avionics and aerodynamic upgrades The airliner is designed for frequent short haul flights for up to 172 passengers depending on airplane version and seating arrangement 30 Performance Edit The maximum and cruise speed of the aircraft are 925km h and 811km h respectively It has a maximum range of 2 897km and a fuel capacity of 22 106l The aircraft weighs around 35 300kg The maximum take off weight is 63 500kg 31 Engines Edit The MD 80 is powered by two more powerful more efficient and quieter Pratt amp Whitney JT8D 209 turbofan engines which are a significant upgrade over the smaller JT8D 15 17 11 and 9 series Each engine can produce 82 93kN of thrust The JT8D 209 is an advanced engine operated by 350 operators to power around 4 500 aircraft The engine provides high reliability and low maintenance costs The engine operates at 77 84 F flat rated temperature clarification needed 31 Avionics Edit The MD 80 features an advanced avionics suite which includes two autonomous digital flight guidance computers It is also equipped with a glareshield mounted flight guidance control panel flight director autothrottle thrust mode selection system and an autoland system 31 Flight deck Edit The flight deck of the MD 80 aircraft was manufactured by Eaglesoft and Payne Aviation Software It is equipped with a multi panel electronic flight instrument system a full flight management system an air data computer a traffic alert and collision avoidance system a state of the art inertial reference system and LED dot matrix displays for engine and system monitoring 31 Cabin Edit The left side of the main cabin features aisle seats It comprises three to six rows in the first class section seven to 32 in the main cabin and around 21 in the exit row It features five abreast seating in the coach class 31 Operational history Edit A Super 80 MD 80 of American Airlines being deiced at Syracuse Hancock International Airport A Mad Dog MD 88 of Delta Air Lines being serviced for a flight to Atlanta International Airport An MD 82SF freighter of the conversion launch operator USA Jet Airlines at Tucson International Airport An EAT MD 87 air tanker with landing gear down during the retardant drop onto the Boxcar Fire in Central Oregon in June 2018 Passenger Edit The second generation MD 80 series passenger airliners have longer fuselages as well as longer range than their earlier counterparts the first generation of the DC 9 family Some customers such as American Airlines still refer to the airplanes in fleet documentation as the Super 80 their former designation Comparable airliners to the MD 80 series include the Boeing 737 400 and Airbus A319 It was the most delivered MD series and often nicknamed as the Mad Dog 32 by the operators 33 34 35 has been used by airlines around the world 36 37 Major customers have included Aerolineas Argentinas Aeromexico Aeropostal Aerorepublica Alaska Airlines Alitalia Allegiant Air American Airlines Aserca Austral Lineas Aereas Austrian Airlines Avianca China Eastern Airlines China Northern Airlines Delta Air Lines Finnair Iberia Insel Air Japan Air System JAS Korean Air Lion Air Martinair Holland Pacific Southwest Airlines PSA Reno Air Scandinavian Airlines System SAS Spanair Spirit Airlines Swissair Trans World Airlines and Meridiana 38 American Airlines was the first US major carrier to order the MD 80 when it leased twenty 142 seat aircraft from McDonnell Douglas in October 1982 to replace its Boeing 727 100s It committed to 67 firm orders plus 100 options in March 1984 and in 2002 its fleet peaked at more than 360 aircraft 30 of the 1 191 produced The MD 80 was the workhorse of the airline s fleet throughout the 1980s and beyond 39 Due to the use of the aging JT8D engines the MD 80 is not fuel efficient compared to the A320 or newer 737 models it burns 1 050 US gal 4 000 L of jet fuel per hour on a typical flight while the larger Boeing 737 800 burns 850 US gal 3 200 L per hour 19 reduction In the 2000s many airlines began to retire the type Alaska Airlines tipping point in using the 737 800 was the 4 per gallon price of jet fuel the airline was paying by the summer of 2008 the airline stated that a typical Los Angeles Seattle flight would cost 2 000 less using a Boeing 737 800 than the same flight using an MD 80 40 In late March 2008 and again in early April 2008 an FAA safety audit of American Airlines forced the airline to ground all its MD 80 series aircraft approximately 300 to inspect the wiring for one of the aircraft s hydraulic systems This led to American canceling nearly 2 500 flights in March and over 3 200 in April In addition Delta Air Lines voluntarily inspected its own MD 80 fleet to ensure its 117 MD 80s were also operating within regulation This resulted in Delta canceling 275 flights 41 42 Midwest Airlines announced on July 14 2008 that it would retire all 12 of its MD 80s used primarily on routes to the West Coast by the fall 43 The JT8D s comparatively lower maintenance costs due to simpler design help narrow the fuel cost gap 44 American Airlines announced that it would remove all of its MD 80s by 2019 replacing them with 737 800s 45 The airline flew its final MD 80 revenue flights on September 3 and 4 2019 before retiring its 26 remaining aircraft 46 The final MD 80 flight on September 4 2019 Flight 80 flew from Dallas Fort Worth to Chicago O Hare 47 The retired planes were flown later to the New Mexico desert to be mothballed 39 Delta Air Lines was expected to retire its MD 80 series jetliners at the end of 2020 but instead the airline began accelerating the fleet retirement in March 2020 when the COVID 19 pandemic saw passenger levels drop critically low for airlines On June 2 2020 the final flights arrived Delta s home base and hub Hartsfield Jackson Atlanta International in Atlanta from Dulles International Airport in Washington D C and George Bush International Airport in Houston 48 This was the last scheduled passenger service in the US of any McDonnell Douglas airliner 49 Delta s MD 80 fleet was put into storage 50 Freighter Edit In February 2013 Commercial Jet Inc CJI delivered the first AEI MD 80SF an MD 82SF the prototype to Everts Air Cargo the launch customer of the MD 80SF passenger to freighter conversion program by the Aeronautical Engineers Inc AEI 18 In August 2013 USA Jet Airlines became the launch operator of the MD 80SF freighter conversion program with an MD 88SF The cargo airline purchased 15 MD 88 aircraft from Delta six of which would be converted and the other nine used as spares 51 USA Jet Airlines specialized in on demand cargo transport within North America 19 In 2021 most operators used the AEI MD 80SF freighter to carry Ford Motor Co and General Motors automotive parts from Mexico to the U S but it was also used in Alaska for general freight and fish The MD 80SF has a low deck height that allows it to load cargo from a pickup truck when needed which is not possible on a Boeing 757 freighter However its cross section is too narrow to transport standard A type containers and instead a dozen non standard 88 x 108 inch containers or pallets which is the main disadvantage in cargo operations 19 In late July 2022 Everts Air Cargo EAC selected Universal Avionics an Elbit Systems company to deliver cockpit upgrades avionics FMS with LPV capability and integrated GPS for its MD 80SF aircraft to improve safety and operational efficiency EAC specializes in transporting freight and mail in Alaska and uses its MD 80SF fleet to supply on demand charter service operations throughout the United States Canada Mexico and Caribbean Islands 52 Firefighter Edit As of July 2022 Erickson Aero Tanker operates six MD 87 aircraft converted for use as aerial firefighting air tankers for the U S Forest Service California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection and other government agencies 53 54 The MD 87 air tanker s capacity is 4 000 gallons or 1 920 gallons more than the capacity of the Lockheed P 2 Neptune tankers and 1 000 gallons more than Bae 146 tankers That is well short of the 19 000 gallon capacity of the 747 Global Super Tanker but the MD 87 is much more cost effective to operate and can utilize more austere fields with shorter runways 55 Another interesting feature of the MD 87 tanker as well as Douglas DC 7s and some other large tanker modified aircraft is that the plane can be flown with the landing gear down during the retardant drop which reduces airspeed while allowing higher engine RPMs reducing lag on post drop climb out similar to a speed break 55 Variants EditThis section includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this section by introducing more precise citations July 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Douglas MD 80 Family top to bottom MD 81 82 MD 83 88 MD 87 MD 90 References Flight International s Commercial Aircraft of the World 1981 56 1982 57 1983 58 Jane s All the World s Aircraft 1994 1995 59 and 2004 2005 60 Dimensions The basic long body MD 80 versions MD 81 MD 82 MD 83 and MD 88 have an overall length of 147 ft 10 in 45 06 m and a fuselage length of 136 feet 5 inches 41 58 m that is 4 62 m longer than the DC 9 50 and 13 5 m longer than the initial DC 9 the Series 10 Wingspan was also increased by 4 4 m in comparison with earlier DC 9s at 107 feet 10 2 inches 32 873 m The aircraft s passenger cabin from cockpit door to aft bulkhead is 101 feet 0 inches 30 78 m long and as with all versions of the DC 9 has a maximum cabin width trim to trim of 123 7 inches 3 14 m citation needed Powerplant The initial production version of the MD 80 was the Pratt and Whitney JT8D 209 18 500 lbf 82 kN thrust powered MD 81 Later build MD 81s have been delivered with more powerful JT8D 217 and 219 engines APU All versions of the MD 80 are equipped with an AlliedSignal Garrett GTCP85 98D APU as standard which is located in the aft fuselage Flight deck The MD 80 is equipped with a two crew flightdeck similar to that on the DC 9 from which it evolved Later models could be equipped to a higher specification with EFIS displays in place of the traditional analogue instruments TCAS windshear detection etc An EFIS retrofit to non EFIS equipped aircraft is possible Cabin Typical passenger cabin seating arrangements include 11 page needed A mixed class with aft full service galley configuration for a total of 135 passengers with 12 first class four abreast 36 inch seat pitch 123 economy class passengers five abreast 32 inch pitch All economy layout for 155 passengers five abreast 32 and 33 inch pitch A typical high density layout is for 167 in one class i e Airtours Undercarriage All versions of the MD 80 are equipped with a tricycle undercarriage featuring a twin nose unit with spray deflector and twin main units with rock deflectors The MD 80T developed for the Chinese differs in that the main units are each fitted with a four wheel double main bogey undercarriage to reduce pavement loading 11 page needed 58 Aerodynamic improvements From mid 1987 new MD 87 style low drag beaver tail cones were introduced on all series of MD 80s reducing drag and improving fuel burn Some operators have been modifying the old DC 9 style cones on earlier build MD 80s to the new low drag style Scandinavian Airlines System has done this citing the improved economics and cosmetics from the modification 11 page needed MD 81 Edit Scandinavian Airlines MD 81 taking off The MD 81 originally known as the DC 9 Super 81 or DC 9 81 was the first production model of the MD 80 and apart from the MD 87 the differences between the various long body MD 80 variants are relatively minor The four long body models MD 81 MD 82 MD 83 and MD 88 only differ from each other in having different engine variants fuel capacities and weights The MD 88 and later build versions of the other models have more up to date flight decks featuring for example EFIS Performance Standard maximum take off weight MTOW on the MD 81 is 140 000 lb 63 500 kg with the option to increase to 142 000 lb 64 400 kg Fuel capacity is 5 840 US gallons 22 100 L and typical range with 155 passengers is 1 565 nmi 11 page needed MD 81 timelineFormal launch October 1977 First flight October 18 1979 FAA certification August 25 1980 First delivery September 13 1980 to Swissair Entry into service October 10 1980 with Swissair on a flight from Zurich to Heathrow Last delivery June 24 1994 to JAL DomesticMD 82 Edit Alitalia MD 82 Announced on April 16 1979 the MD 82 DC 9 82 was a new MD 80 variant with similar dimensions to those of the MD 81 but equipped with more powerful engines The MD 82 was intended for operation from hot and high airports but also offered greater payload range when in use at standard airfields 61 American Airlines was the world s largest operator of the MD 82 with at one point over 300 MD 82s in the fleet Originally certified with 20 000 lbf 89 kN thrust JT8D 217s a 217A powered MD 82 was certified in mid 1982 and became available that year The new version featured a higher MTOW 149 500 lb 67 800 kg while the JT8D 217As had a guaranteed take off thrust at temperatures up to 29 C 84 F or 5 000 ft 1 500 m altitude The JT8D 217C engines were also offered on the MD 82 giving improved Thrust specific fuel consumption TSFC Several operators took delivery of the 219 powered MD 82s while Balair ordered its MD 82s powered by the lower thrust 209 engine 11 page needed 58 The MD 82 features an increased standard MTOW initially to 147 000 lb 66 700 kg and this was later increased to 149 500 lb 67 800 kg Standard fuel capacity is the same as that of the MD 81 5 840 US gal 22 100 L and typical range with 155 passengers is 2 050 nmi 3 800 km 11 page needed 58 MD 82 timelineAnnounced go ahead April 16 1979 First flight January 8 1981 FAA certification July 29 1981 First delivery August 5 1981 to Republic Airlines Entry into service August 1981 with Republic Airlines Last delivery November 17 1997 to U Land Airlines of TaiwanThe MD 82 was assembled under license in Shanghai by the Shanghai Aviation Industrial Corporation SAIC today s COMAC beginning in November 1986 the sub assemblies were delivered by McDonnell Douglas in kit form 11 page needed China had begun design on a cargo version designated Y 13 but the project was subsequently canceled with the conclusion of the licensed assembly of the MD 82 and MD 90 in China 62 63 In 2012 Aeronautical Engineers Inc performed the first commercial freighter conversion of an MD 82 14 MD 83 Edit Spanair MD 83 The MD 83 DC 9 83 is a longer range version of the basic MD 81 82 with higher weights more powerful engines and increased fuel capacity Powerplant Compared to earlier models the MD 83 is equipped with slightly more powerful 21 000 lbf 93 kN thrust Pratt and Whitney JT8D 219s as standard Performance The MD 83 features increased fuel capacity as standard to 6 970 US gal 26 400 L which is carried in two 565 US gal 2 140 L auxiliary tanks located fore and aft of the center section The aircraft also has higher operating weights with MTOW increased to 160 000 lb 73 000 kg and MLW to 139 500 lb 63 300 kg Typical range for the MD 83 with 155 passengers is around 2 504 nautical miles 4 637 km To cope with the higher operating weights the MD 83 incorporates strengthened landing gear including new wheels tires and brakes changes to the wing skins front spar web and elevator spar cap and strengthened floor beams and panels to carry the auxiliary fuel tanks From MD 80 line number 1194 an MD 81 delivered in September 1985 it is understood that all MD 80s have the same basic wing structure and in theory could be converted to MD 83 standard 11 page needed MD 83 timelineAnnounced go ahead January 31 1983 First flight December 17 1984 FAA certification October 17 1985 MTOW 149 500 lb 67 800 kg MTOW of 160 000 lb 73 000 kg certified November 4 1985 First delivery February 1985 to Alaska Airlines initially as 82 powered by 217A engines and certified as MD 82s Alaska Airlines first four aircraft were subsequently re engined and re certified as MD 83s Entry into service February 1985 with Alaska Airlines Last delivery December 28 1999 to TWAMD 87 Edit An Iberia MD 87 In January 1985 McDonnell Douglas announced it would produce a shorter fuselage MD 80 variant designated MD 87 DC 9 87 which would seat between 109 and 130 passengers depending upon configuration The designation was intended to indicate its planned date of entry into service 1987 Dimensions With an overall length of 130 ft 5 in 39 75 m the MD 87 is 17 ft 4 in 5 28 m shorter than the other MD 80s but is otherwise generally similar to them employing the same engines systems and flight deck The MD 87 features modifications to its tail with a fin extension above the tailplane It also introduced a new low drag beaver tail cone which became standard on all MD 80s Powerplant The MD 87 was offered with either the 20 000 lbf 89 kN thrust JT8D 217C or the 21 000 lbf 93 kN thrust 219 Performance Two basic versions of the MD 87 were made available with either an MTOW of 140 000 lb 64 000 kg and MLW of 128 000 lb 58 000 kg or an MTOW of 149 000 lb 68 000 kg and an MLW of 130 000 lb 59 000 kg Fuel capacity is 5 840 US gal 22 100 L increasing to 6 970 US gal 26 400 L with the incorporation of two auxiliary fuel tanks Typical range with 130 passengers is 2 370 nmi 4 390 km increasing to 2 900 nmi 5 400 km with two auxiliary fuel tanks Cabin The MD 87 provides typical mixed class seating for 114 passengers or 130 in an all economy layout five abreast 31 in and 32 in seat pitch The maximum seating exit limited is for 139 passengers MD 87 timelineAnnounced go ahead January 1985 First flight December 4 1986 FAA certification October 21 1987 First delivery November 27 1987 to Austrian Airlines 64 Last delivery March 27 1992 to Scandinavian Airlines SAS MD 88 Edit An Iberia MD 88 from behind The MD 88 was the last variant of the MD 80 which was launched on January 23 1986 on the back of orders and options from Delta Air Lines for a total of 80 aircraft The MD 88 is depending on specification basically similar to the MD 82 or MD 83 except it incorporates an EFIS cockpit instead of the more traditional analog flight deck of the other MD 80s Other changes incorporated into the MD 88 include a wind shear warning system and general updating of the cabin interior trim These detail changes are relatively minor and were written back as standard on the MD 82 83 The wind shear warning system was offered as a standard option on all other MD 80s and has been made available for retrofitting on earlier aircraft including the DC 9 Delta s initial eight aircraft were manufactured as MD 82s and upgraded to MD 88 specifications MD 88 deliveries began in December 1987 and it entered service with Delta in January 1988 The final commercial passenger flight of an MD 88 within the United States took place on June 2 2020 by a Delta flight from Washington Dulles to Atlanta 65 In 2021 Michigan s USA Jet Airlines added MD 88s to their ad hoc operations freighter fleet 66 Performance The MD 88 has the same weight range and airfield performance as the other long body aircraft MD 82 and MD 83 and is powered by the same engines MDC quotes a typical range for the MD 88 as 2 050 nmi 3 800 km with 155 passengers Adding two additional auxiliary fuel tanks increases its 155 passenger range to 2 504 nmi 4 637 km similar to the MD 83 A Wall Street Journal article about the crash of Delta Air Lines Flight 1086 at New York City s LaGuardia Airport in March 2015 stated that pilots and other safety experts have long known that when the MD 88 s reversers are deployed its rudder sometimes may not be powerful enough to control deviations to the left or right from the center of a runway safety board investigators among other things are looking to see if this tendency played any role in the crash 67 MD 88 timelineAnnounced go ahead January 23 1986 First flight August 15 1987 FAA certification December 8 1987 First delivery December 19 1987 to Delta Air Lines Entry into service January 5 1988 with Delta Air Lines Last delivery June 25 1997 to Onur Air Final commercial flight in the U S June 2 2020 by Delta Air Lines 65 Others conversions Edit The freighter conversion is available for the longer variants of MD 80 series the MD 81 MD 82 MD 83 and MD 88 while the firefighter conversion is for the shortest variant the MD 87 AEI MD 80SF freighter Edit An MD 83SF of the launch customer of the freighter conversion program Everts Air Cargo In February 2010 the Aeronautical Engineers Inc AEI announced it was beginning a freighter conversion program for the MD 80 series 14 The converted aircraft use the MD 80SF MD 80 special freghter designation AEI is solely certified by FAA and EASA to perform conversions on the longer variants of MD 80 series the MD 81 MD 82 MD 83 and MD 88 The AEI MD 80SF freighter conversion consists of the installation of a 85 136 large cargo door on the left side of the fuselage and modification of main deck to a Class E cargo compartment with independent smoke detection system Cabin windows replaced with lightweight aluminum window plugs After conversion the freighter can carry twelve 88 108 or eight 125 88 ULDs or eight 125 96 ULDs The cargo door is hydraulically operated and actuated from the inside of the aircraft by an independent system Hydraulic pressure is available from two sources an electrically operated hydraulic pump or a manual hand pump The door control and manual pump are located on the 9 g barrier allowing a single person to operate the door manually 51 The installation of cargo doors and other structural changes are performed by Commercial Jet Inc CJI which is licensed to install the AEI designed conversion kit at its Dothan Alabama facility 19 EAT MD 87 firefighter Edit In 2013 five MD 87 aircraft formerly operated by Scandinavian Airlines SAS were converted for aerial firefighting use by Aero Air Erickson Aero Tanker EAT 68 69 The external tank pod is installed below the retardant tank doors lowering the release point by 46 inches and thus reducing the possibility of retardant spreading over the wing that could be further ingested into the engines 70 On May 30 2019 AerSale a global supplier of mid life aircraft engines and maintenance repair and overhaul MRO services announced that it had signed a contract with Aero Air Erickson Aero Tanker to build the sixth MD 87 firefighting air tanker beginning conversion on April 1 2019 at AerSale s MRO facility in Goodyear Arizona The new air tanker will cruise at 450 knots carry 3 000 gallons of fire retardant in all environments up to 40 degrees Celsius boast a 900 mile loaded strike range require only a 5 200 foot runway loaded and both take off and land fully loaded 54 Operators Edit LASER Airlines is currently the largest scheduled passenger operator Aeronaves TSM is currently the largest MD 80SF freighter operator Main article List of McDonnell Douglas MD 80 operators Current operators Edit There were 116 MD 80 series aircraft in service as of August 2022 with operators including Aeronaves TSM 15 World Atlantic Airlines 9 LASER Airlines 9 European Air Charter 8 Everts Air 5 USA Jet Airlines 5 and other carriers with smaller fleets 71 better source needed Former operators Edit Major airlines that operated the MD 80 series Alaska Airlines retired its MD 80 series aircraft after making its last commercial flight on August 25 2008 72 American Airlines retired its MD 80 series aircraft after making its last commercial flight on September 4 2019 73 Delta Air Lines retired its MD 88 and MD 90 aircraft on June 2 2020 74 Deliveries Edit Deliveries 75 Type Total 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980MD 81 132 3 3 5 15 5 8 6 4 9 8 1 1 11 48 5MD 82 539 2 2 13 8 14 18 48 48 37 51 50 64 55 43 50 23 13MD 82T 30 1 1 2 6 8 6 4 2MD 83 265 26 8 9 10 5 11 12 25 26 30 26 26 31 12 8MD 87 75 5 13 25 15 14 3MD 88 150 5 13 29 32 23 25 19 4MD 80 series 1 191 26 8 16 12 18 23 43 84 140 139 117 120 94 85 71 44 51 34 61 5Accidents and incidents EditAs of June 2022 update the MD 80 series has been involved in 89 major aviation accidents and incidents including 46 hull losses with 1 446 fatalities of occupants 76 77 Accidents with fatalities Edit On December 1 1981 Inex Adria Aviopromet Flight 1308 MD 81 YU ANA crashed into Corsica s Mt San Pietro during a holding pattern for landing at Campo dell Oro Airport Ajaccio France All 180 passengers and crew were killed This was the first ever fatal incident involving the MD 80 series and also the deadliest 78 On August 16 1987 Northwest Airlines Flight 255 an MD 82 crashed shortly after takeoff from Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport because the flight crew failed to use the taxi checklist to ensure that flaps and slats were extended for takeoff according to the US National Transportation Safety Board NTSB All crew and passengers were killed with the exception of a four year old girl Cecelia Cichan Two people on the ground were also killed 79 80 81 On June 12 1988 Austral Lineas Aereas Flight 46 MD 81 N1003G crashed short of the runway at Libertador General Jose de San Martin Airport in Posadas Misiones All 22 passengers and crew were killed 82 On October 26 1993 China Eastern Airlines Flight 5398 MD 82 B 2103 overran the runway on landing at Fuzhou Yixu Airport in poor visibility due to pilot error killing two of 80 on board On November 13 1993 China Northern Airlines Flight 6901 MD 82 B 2141 crashed before landing at Urumqi Diwopu International Airport in Xinjiang China killing twelve of the 102 passengers and crew on board 83 On July 6 1996 Delta Air Lines Flight 1288 an MD 88 attempting to take off from Pensacola Regional Airport experienced an uncontained catastrophic turbine engine failure that caused debris from the front compressor hub of the number one left engine to penetrate the left aft fuselage The penetrating debris left two passengers dead and two severely injured all were from the same family The pilot aborted takeoff and the airplane stopped on the runway On June 1 1999 American Airlines Flight 1420 an MD 82 attempting to land in severe weather conditions at Little Rock Airport overshot the runway and crashed into the banks of the Arkansas River Eleven people including the captain died On January 31 2000 Alaska Airlines Flight 261 an MD 83 crashed in the Pacific Ocean because it lost horizontal stabilizer control 84 All 88 passengers and crew on board were killed Following the crash an improperly maintained Acme nut and jackscrew recovered from the aircraft were found to be excessively worn 85 An airworthiness directive AD was issued by the FAA requiring more frequent inspections and lubrication of the jackscrew assembly 86 On October 8 2001 Scandinavian Airlines Flight 686 MD 87 SE DMA collided with a Cessna Citation CJ2 jet D IEVX during takeoff at Linate Airport Milan Italy The Linate Airport disaster left 118 people dead and remains the deadliest air disaster in Italy The cause of the accident was a misunderstanding between air traffic controllers and the Cessna jet complicated by inoperative ground movement radar at the time of the accident The SAS crew had no role in causing the accident On May 7 2002 China Northern Airlines Flight 6136 MD 82 B 2138 from Beijing to Dalian crashed into Dalian Bay near Dalian after the pilot reported fire on board All 112 people on board were killed Investigators determined that the fire had been set by a suicidal passenger On November 30 2004 Lion Air Flight 583 an MD 82 crashed on landing at Adi Sumarmo Airport in Surakarta Indonesia and overran the end of the runway killing 25 of 163 on board On August 16 2005 West Caribbean Airways Flight 708 an MD 82 crashed in a mountainous region in northwest Venezuela killing all 152 passengers and eight crew 87 On September 16 2007 One Two GO Airlines Flight 269 an MD 82 crashed at the side of the runway and exploded after an apparent attempt to execute a go around in bad weather at Phuket International Airport in Phuket Thailand Of the 130 passengers and crew on board 90 were killed 88 89 On November 30 2007 Atlasjet Flight 4203 an MD 83 crashed in the southwestern province of Isparta Turkey killing all 57 passengers and seven crew 90 The cause of the crash was attributed to pilot spatial disorientation On August 20 2008 Spanair Flight 5022 MD 82 EC HFP from Madrid s Barajas Airport crashed shortly after takeoff on a flight to Las Palmas de Gran Canaria in the Canary Islands The MD 82 had 162 passengers and ten crew on board of whom 18 survived The crash was caused by attempting to take off with the flaps and slats retracted The flight crew omitted the set flaps and slats item in both the After Start checklist and the Takeoff Imminent checklist and the takeoff warning system TOWS which should have emitted an audio warning on the runway when the throttles were advanced for takeoff with the airplane wrongly configured for takeoff did not sound 91 On June 3 2012 Dana Air Flight 992 MD 83 5N RAM crashed into a two story building in Lagos Nigeria caused by engine failure All 153 passengers and crew on board were killed as well as 10 on the ground 92 93 94 On July 24 2014 Air Algerie Flight 5017 MD 83 registration EC LTV a scheduled flight from Ouagadougou Burkina Faso to Algiers Algeria operated with an MD 83 leased from Swiftair The aircraft crashed southeast of Gossi Mali about 50 minutes after takeoff All 110 passengers and six crew were killed 95 Hull losses Edit Delta Air Lines Flight 1086 resting on the seawall following its overrun at La Guardia On December 27 1991 SAS Flight 751 an MD 81 OY KHO Dana Viking crash landed at Gottrora Sweden In the initial climb both engines ingested ice broken loose from the wings although they had been properly deiced before departure The ice damaged the compressor blades causing compressor stall The stall further caused repeated engine surges that finally destroyed both engines leaving the aircraft with no thrust The aircraft landed in a snowy field and broke into three parts No fire occurred and all aboard survived On March 16 2007 Kish Air MD 82 LZ LDD leased from Bulgarian Air Charter was damaged beyond repair in a hard landing accident at Kish Island Airport There were no fatalities 96 On January 24 2012 Swiftair Flight 94 an MD 83 EC JJS suffered a wingtip strike while landing at Kandahar Airport Afghanistan Although there were no injuries to the 92 passengers and crew on board the starboard wing sustained a broken main spar and the aircraft was damaged beyond economic repair It was consequently scrapped at Kandahar 97 On March 5 2015 Delta Air Lines Flight 1086 an MD 88 N909DL skidded off the runway on landing at LaGuardia Airport New York in snowy weather suffering severe damage A few minor injuries occurred during evacuation via the emergency chutes 98 Investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board were reportedly focusing on the aircraft s braking system and rudder 67 On March 8 2017 Ameristar Charters Flight 9363 MD 83 N786TW overran the end of runway 23L at Willow Run Airport in Ypsilanti Michigan after rejecting a takeoff at very high speed due to a jammed elevator which could not be detected prior to the attempted takeoff 99 Only one injury occurred among the 116 on board but the aircraft s belly and wings were substantially damaged after its landing gear collapsed during the overrun and it was eventually written off 100 On June 14 2018 Bravo Airways Flight 4406 an MD 83 UR CPR slid off the runway on landing at Igor Sikorsky International Airport following an unstable approach all 176 on board survived 101 On January 27 2020 Caspian Airlines Flight 6936 an MD 83 overran the end of the Mahshahr Airport s runway 13 with 144 people on board There were two injuries the aircraft received substantial damage 102 On October 19 2021 an MD 87 registration N987AK 103 crashed on take off from Houston Executive Airport All 21 people on board survived but the aircraft was destroyed by a post crash fire During examination of the intact tail section it was found that both left and right elevators were jammed in a trailing edge down position The aircraft was chartered to fly the passengers to Boston for a Red Sox baseball game 104 105 106 On June 21 2022 Red Air Flight 203 an MD 82 reg HI1064 suffered a landing gear collapse and runway excursion upon landing at Miami International Airport causing the right wing to catch fire There were three minor injuries among the 140 passengers and crew but the aircraft was written off 107 Aircraft on display EditN259AA cn 49289 MD 82 on display at the Tulsa Air and Space Museum in Tulsa Oklahoma 108 The cabin has been converted into a movie theater to become the MD 80 Discovery Center 109 110 N292AA cn 49304 MD 82 is on static display at the Carolina Children s Museum in Carolina Puerto Rico 111 112 N491AA cn 49684 MD 82 owned by Oklahoma State University and located at the Stillwater Regional Airport in Stillwater Oklahoma 113 It is used by the university s School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering as part of its education programs 114 N948TW cn 49575 is an MD 83 preserved by the Tristar Experience organization at Charles B Wheeler Downtown Airport in Kansas City Missouri It is displayed as it appeared in service with Trans World Airlines in a special reversed color Wings of Pride livery in the 1990s 115 116 I SMEL cn 49247 a former Meridiana MD 82 is displayed at the Volandia Park and Flight Museum in Milan 117 Specifications Edit Comparison of DC 9 Boeing 717 and different MD 80 versions Airplane characteristics 118 Variant MD 81 82 83 88 MD 87Cockpit crew Two1 class seats 119 155Y 32 33 max 172 130Y 31 33 max 139 2 class seats 119 143 12J 36 131Y 31 34 117 12J 105YLength 147 ft 10 in 45 06 m 130 ft 5 in 39 75 m Wing 107 ft 8 in 32 82 m span 1 209 sq ft 112 3 m2 area aspect ratio 9 6Tail height 29 ft 7 in 9 02 m 30 ft 4 in 9 25 m Width 131 6 in 334 3 cm fuselage 122 5 in 311 2 cm cabinCargo 1 253 cu ft 35 5 m3 83 88 1 013 cu ft 28 7 m3 938 cu ft 26 6 m3 Empty weight 77 900 79 700 lb 35 300 36 200 kg 73 300 lb 33 200 kg MTOW 81 140 000 lb 63 500 kg 82 149 500 lb 67 800 kg 83 88 160 000 lb 72 600 kg 140 000 149 500 lb 63 500 67 800 kg Fuel capacity 5 850 US gal 22 100 L 83 88 7 000 US gal 26 000 L Engines 2 Pratt amp Whitney JT8D 200 seriesThrust 2 18 500 21 000 lbf 82 93 kN Long range cruise Mach 0 76 448 kn 830 km h 120 High speed cruise Mach 0 8 472 kn 873 km h 119 Range a 81 1 800 nmi 3 300 km 137 pax 82 2 050 nmi 3 800 km 155 pax 83 88 2 550 nmi 4 720 km 155 pax 2 400 2 900 nmi 4 400 5 400 km Takeoff b 7 200 8 000 ft 2 200 2 400 m 7 500 ft 2 300 m ISA 200nm alt 45 mn LRC reserves MTOW sea level ISASee also Edit Aviation portal United States portalAirstairRelated development McDonnell Douglas C 9 McDonnell Douglas DC 9 McDonnell Douglas MD 90 Boeing 717 Comac ARJ21Aircraft of comparable role configuration and era Airbus A320 Boeing 737 400Related lists List of jet airliners List of civil aircraft List of McDonnell Douglas MD 80 operatorsReferences Edit McDonnell Douglas MD 80 Operators planespotters net Orders amp Deliveries Boeing a b c Norris Guy and Wagner Mark Douglas Jetliners MBI Publishing 1999 ISBN 0 7603 0676 1 Quest for Performance The Evolution of Modern Aircraft Part II THE JET AGE NASA Boeing History Chronology 1977 1982 Archived from the original on March 6 2012 Retrieved July 16 2015 a b c d MD 80 com Online service for the MD 80 MD 90 Boeing 717 and DC 9 in German MD 80 com Retrieved July 29 2022 Historical Snapshot MD 80 MD 90 COMMERCIAL TRANSPORTS Boeing Retrieved October 18 2019 McDonnell Douglas MD 80 Passenger Aircraft Aerospace Technology Retrieved July 25 2022 a b Comment Response Document CRD to Notice of Proposed Amendment NPA 19 2006 PDF EASA Retrieved July 29 2022 a b c McDonnell Douglas now Boeing MD 80 Medium Range Jetliner Aerospace Web Retrieved July 30 2022 a b c d e f g h i j Airclaims Jet Programs 1995 a b c d e Airliner Color History MD 80 amp MD 90 ISBN 0 7603 0698 2 FAA Registry Aircraft Make Model Inquiry Registry faa gov Archived from the original on April 19 2020 Retrieved July 10 2015 a b c d Conway Peter October 5 2012 Converted MD 80 lifts off on maiden flight FlightGlobal Retrieved November 12 2015 a b c d Do not wait for an MD 90 freighter Air Cargo News February 24 2015 Retrieved August 30 2022 Polek Gregory February 18 2013 First MD 80 Freighter Set To Fly in U S Aviation International News Retrieved November 12 2015 a b Kaminski Morrow David October 20 2015 EASA approves US firm s MD 80 freighter conversion Flightglobal com Retrieved November 12 2015 a b Commercial Jet Advanced MRO Solutions News commercialjet com Archived from the original on October 30 2015 Retrieved November 12 2015 a b c d Why are iconic MD 80 jets being converted to freighters Freight Waves March 23 2021 Retrieved August 31 2022 a b AMENDED PETITION FOR RECONSIDERATION GRANT OF EXEMPTION PDF June 28 2017 Retrieved August 25 2022 Gabbert Bill September 16 2017 The FAA requires Erickson s MD 87 s to drop retardant with landing gear down Fireaviation com Retrieved August 25 2022 Kraar Louis August 18 1986 Selling How One Man Landed China s 1 Billion Order Gareth C C Chang of McDonnell Douglas spent six years of hope and frustration pursuing Peking s biggest U S purchase He had to promise a lot more than planes archive fortune com Retrieved September 28 2018 YOSHIHARA NANCY April 13 1985 Douglas China Agree on Jet Co Production 1st Time Foreign Nation to Produce U S Jetliner via LA Times Burchell Bill Setting Up Support For Future Regional Jets dead link Aviation Week October 13 2010 Boeing Delivers Last Ever MD 80 To TWA MediaRoom Commercial aircraft of the world PDF Flight International October 12 1985 p 61 Morris John Romberg Lars 1984 Technology and the market place A changing air transport equation SAE Transactions SAE International 93 841545 6 447 6 458 JSTOR 44467158 a b The McDonnell Douglas Website MD 80 Advanced Retrieved July 27 2022 a b Staff writer June 1 2020 By the numbers A final salute to Delta s MD 88 and MD 90 Mad Dogs Press release Delta Air Lines Retrieved June 1 2020 Portfolio of 62 Aircraft A Desktop Appraisal Morgan Stanley Aircraft Finance a b c d e McDonnell Douglas MD 80 Passenger Aircraft Aerospace Technology Why Was The MD 80 Called The Mad Dog September 9 2020 Retrieved July 27 2022 Delta s MD 88 and MD 90 Mad Dogs to touch down one last time Delta Air Lines May 29 2020 Retrieved July 27 2022 American Airlines Announces Schedule of Final MD 80 Revenue Flights final revenue flights on the Mad Dog American Airlines June 24 2019 Retrieved July 27 2022 Bye Bye Mad Dog Onboard Danish Air Transport s Farewell MD 83 Flight Danish Air Transport October 16 2021 Retrieved July 27 2022 Mad Dog Goes Silent With Delta s Retirement of Workhorse Jet Bloomberg News April 30 2020 Retrieved July 27 2022 American Airlines shares timeline of Mad Dog MD 80 as aircraft exits fleet Business Traveller August 11 2019 Retrieved July 27 2022 McDonnell Douglas MD 80 Production List Planespotters net Just Aviation Planespotters net Archived from the original on July 2 2015 Retrieved July 10 2015 a b American Airlines to retire last of MD 80 fleet June 29 2019 Retrieved February 1 2022 Aerospace Notebook MD 80 era winding down as fuel costs rise Seattlepi com June 24 2008 Cancellation wave latest problem for airlines NBC News April 10 2008 Accessed November 12 2020 American Delta cancel more flights to inspect MD 80 aircraft KRGV News Channel 5 March 27 2008 Archived from the original on April 19 2008 Retrieved November 12 2020 Midwest Airlines will cut 1 200 jobs Kansas City Business Journal July 14 2008 Retrieved August 27 2017 JT8D 219Turbofan Engine PDF Pratt amp Whitney September 2010 Archived from the original PDF on May 10 2017 Retrieved August 25 2016 American to say adios to MD 80s in 2019 Flight Global October 31 2017 MRO Aviation Week Network aviationweek com American Airlines Announces Schedule of Final MD 80 Revenue Flights American Airlines June 24 2019 Coronavirus sends MD 88 Mad Dog jets to an early retirement from U S fleets CNBC June 2 2020 Retrieved February 1 2022 Delta s last MD 88 flight Farewell to a Mad Dog CNN June 2 2020 Retrieved February 1 2022 What it was like on the last fight of a Delta McDonnell Douglas Mad Dog jet which were all just sent to an early retirement after 33 years in the sky Business Insider a b Aeronautical Engineers MD 80SF Spec Sheet Archived 2013 12 03 at the Wayback Machine Everts Air selects Universal Avionics upgrades for MD 80 fleet Universal Avionics UA Home Erickson Aero Tanker a b AerSale signs deal to convert 6th MD 87 for Erickson Aero Tanker aerialfiremag May 30 2019 Retrieved August 1 2022 a b Classic MD 87s Still Earning a Living as Aerial Firefighting Tankers avgeekery com July 30 2018 Retrieved August 2 2022 Commercial Aircraft of the World Flight International October 17 1981 Flight International Commercial Aircraft of the World October 23 1982 a b c d Commercial Aircraft of the World Flight International October 15 1983 Jane s All the World s Aircraft 1994 1995 Jane s All the World s Aircraft 2004 2005 Taylor 1982 p 419 红色巨灵神 中国大型运输机之路八 运十三篇 cqvip com 红色巨灵神 中国大型运输机之路 八 运13 二 维普网 仓储式在线作品出版平台 www cqvip com 2010 cqvip com Retrieved July 10 2015 Airliner List airlinerlist com a b McMenemy Jeff June 6 2020 Dover High grad pilots last flight of Delta s Mad Dog Foster s Daily Democrat Dover New Hampshire Retrieved June 7 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Herald Retrieved April 24 2013 Hradecky Simon Accident Delta MD88 at New York on Mar 5th 2015 runway excursion on landing The Aviation Herald Retrieved March 5 2015 Simon Hradecky March 7 2019 created 8 March 2017 Accident Ameristar MD83 at Detroit on Mar 8th 2017 overran runway after rejected takeoff due to elevator malfunction The Aviation Herald Archived from the original on June 28 2021 Retrieved August 19 2021 ASN Aircraft accident McDonnell Douglas MD 83 N786TW Detroit Willow Run Airport MI YIP Aviation Safety Network Archived from the original on August 20 2021 Retrieved August 19 2021 Accident description for UR CPR at the Aviation Safety Network Caspian MD83 at Mahshahr on Jan 27th 2020 overran runway on landing Aviation Herald Retrieved January 27 2020 Incident McDonnell Douglas MD 87 N987AK 19 Oct 2021 Aviation Safety Network Retrieved October 19 2021 Plane crashes catches fire near Houston area airport WFSA12TV Gray Media Group Inc Retrieved October 19 2021 First responders 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November 6 2016 N491AA American Airlines McDonnell Douglas MD 82 cn 49684 1564 Planespotters net Planespotters net Archived from the original on October 14 2016 Retrieved October 13 2016 American Airlines delivers retired MD 80 to OSU for hands on learning STEM study News and Information Oklahoma State University September 23 2015 Retrieved October 13 2016 MD83 TriStar Experience www tristarexperience org Wings of Pride A TWA Plane that was Nearly Forgotten August 7 2015 McDonnell Douglas MD 82 I SMEL Aircraft Pictures amp Photos AirTeamImages com www airteamimages com MD 80 Series Airplane Characteristics for Airport Planning PDF McDonnell Douglas December 1989 a b c MD 80 PDF Boeing August 31 2007 Commercial aircraft PDF Flight International October 31 November 6 2000 p 68 Some sources said that the Super 80 designation shorted without DC 9 prefix was intended to avoid association with the DC 10 s bad reputation at the time As the MD 80 was not in effect a new aircraft it continues to be operated under an amendment to the original DC 9 FAA aircraft type certificate a similar case to the later MD 90 and Boeing 717 aircraft The type certificate issued to the aircraft manufacturer carries the aircraft model designations exactly as it appears on the manufacturer s application including use of hyphens or decimal points and should match what is stamped on the aircraft s data or nameplate What the manufacturer chooses to call an aircraft for marketing or promotional purposes is irrelevant to the airworthiness authorities The first amendment to the DC 9 type certificate for the new MD 80 aircraft was applied as DC 9 81 which approved on August 26 1980 All MD 80 models have since been approved under additional amendments to the DC 9 type certificate Sources EditBecher Thomas Douglas Twinjets DC 9 MD 80 MD 90 and Boeing 717 The Crowood Press 2002 ISBN 1 86126 446 1 Michell Simon Jane s Civil and Military Aircraft Upgrades 1994 95 Coulsdon UK Jane s Information Group 1994 ISBN 0 7106 1208 7 Taylor John W R Jane s All The World s Aircraft 1982 83 London Jane s Yearbooks 1982 ISBN 0 7106 0748 2 Taylor John W R Jane s All The World s Aircraft 1988 89 Coulsdon UK Jane s Defence Data 1988 ISBN 0 7106 0867 5 Thisdell Dan and Fafard Antoine World Airliner Census Flight International Volume 190 No 5550 9 15 August 2016 pp 20 43 ISSN 0015 3710External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to McDonnell Douglas MD 80 MD 90 Historical Snapshot MD 80 and MD 90 McDonnell Douglas Corporation January 1981 The McDonnell Douglas DC 9 Super 80 Configuration Guide Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title McDonnell Douglas MD 80 amp oldid 1129926193, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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