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Drudge Retort: The Other Side of the News
Saturday, November 22, 2025

The engine of a UPS cargo plane came off its wing before exploding into flames during takeoff, newly released photos from a federal investigation into the deadly crash earlier this month show.

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The National Transportation Safety Board unveiled new details describing a stunning frame-by-frame images showing the left engine separating from the plane and going up and over the wing, after the fiery crash of a UPS plane in Louisville killed 14 people earlier this month.

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-- CNN (@cnn.com) Nov 20, 2025 at 12:32 PM

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The same happened many years ago in Chicago when a similar plane (DC-10) was taking off. The cause was engine mounts with not enough pins and mounting hardware. One would have thought the matter had been resolved decades ago. I guess not ...

#1 | Posted by catdog at 2025-11-22 08:47 AM | Reply

The same happened many years ago in Chicago when a similar plane (DC-10) was taking off. The cause was engine mounts with not enough pins and mounting hardware. One would have thought the matter had been resolved decades ago. I guess not ...

#2 | Posted by catdog at 2025-11-22 08:47 AM | Reply

The same happened many years ago in Chicago when a similar plane (DC-10) was taking off.

Yes. The two are remarkably similar.

#3 | Posted by REDIAL at 2025-11-22 12:40 PM | Reply

On the DC-10, the pylon fitting bolts themselves were removed.

"During the investigation, an examination of the pylon attachment points revealed some damage done to the wing's pylon mounting bracket that matched the bent shape of the pylon's rear attachment fitting. This meant that the pylon attachment fitting had struck the mounting bracket at some point. This was important evidence, as the only way the pylon fitting could strike the wing's mounting bracket in the observed manner was if the bolts that held the pylon to the wing had been removed, and the engine/pylon assembly was supported by something other than the aircraft itself. Therefore, investigators could now conclude that the observed damage to the rear pylon mount had been present before the crash occurred rather than being caused by it." NTSB AAR7917

It was bad maintenance procedure. They inspected 3 fleets. United was doing it right. American and Continental were doing it wrong.

#4 | Posted by sitzkrieg at 2025-11-23 08:13 AM | Reply

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