jinman
Rest in Peace
- Joined
- Feb 23, 2001
- Messages
- 21,059
- Location
- Texas - Wise County - Sunset
- Tractor
- NHTC45D, NH LB75B, Ford Jubilee
The DC-10s are not popular airplanes with the pilots I know. The freight version had outward swinging cargo doors that had to be held shut with strong locks. Several of these failed, leading to explosive decompression at altitude. Inward doors are the norm. The inward opening door seals tighter and tighter as altitude is gained and cabin pressure differential becomes greater. They also take up cargo space when open and must have a clearway to close. The DC-10's design allows more cargo with the possibilty for catastrophic failure.
The earlier DC-10s and even the retrofitted models were susceptible to multiple hydraulic failures. If an engine went bad and exploded, it could render all three of the hydraulic systems inoperable. Some safety features were added to the systems on later aircraft, but they were not 100% effective.
I have no first hand knowledge, but I suspect the DC-10s are in use today because they can be bought at bargain prices compared to other similar capable airplanes. Getting and keeping them airworthy seems to be the rub.
The earlier DC-10s and even the retrofitted models were susceptible to multiple hydraulic failures. If an engine went bad and exploded, it could render all three of the hydraulic systems inoperable. Some safety features were added to the systems on later aircraft, but they were not 100% effective.
I have no first hand knowledge, but I suspect the DC-10s are in use today because they can be bought at bargain prices compared to other similar capable airplanes. Getting and keeping them airworthy seems to be the rub.