UPS and FedEx Ground MD-11 Fleets After Kentuckyโค Crash
LOUISVILLE, Ky. – United Parcel Service (UPS) and FedEx have โgrounded thier MD-11 freighter fleets following a โfatalโฃ crash of a UPS aircraft at Louisville Standiford International Airport on Sunday. Theโค move comes asโข investigatorsโ begin a comprehensive probe into the cause of the crash, which resulted in theโ deaths of two crew members and sparked a significant fire.
The grounding โฃaffects 28 UPS MD-11s and 26 โfedex MD-11s,halting a considerable portion of both companies’ overnight air cargo operations.The Louisville UPS hub,โ Worldport, is the company’s largest, employing over 20,000 people and handling more than 400,000 packages per hour. The disruption raises concerns about potential delays in package delivery, particularly during the peak holiday shipping season.
The UPS MD-11 crashed shortly after takeoff, impacting businesses near the airport and erupting in a fireball. Dramatic โvideo captured by phones, cars, and security cameras โprovides investigators with multiple perspectives of the incident. National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) investigator Brian Rayner stated there are different types of alarms โคwith varying meanings, and investigators haven’t determined why a bell rang in โขthe cockpit, though they โknow the left wing was โขburning and the engine on that side had detached.
Former federal crash investigator Jeff Guzzetti suggestedโ the bell likely signaled the engineโ fire,noting the aircraft was likely past the point โwhereโ it could safely abort the takeoff.”They were likely โขpast their critical decision โฃspeed to remain on the runway and stop safely,” guzzetti told The Associated Press. “They’ll need to thoroughly investigate the optionsโ the crew may or may not have had.”
Flight records indicate the crashed UPS MD-11 underwentโค maintenance inโ San Antonio for over a month until mid-October, though the specific โwork performed remains unclear.UPS resumed limited operations โฃat Worldport Wednesday night with its Next Day Air service. The NTSB expects โคa transcript of the cockpit recording โฃto be released in the coming months as part of the investigation.