NTSB AVIATION ACCIDENT/INCIDENT DATABASE REPORT (mylar)
Report Number: DCA99SA051
Local Date: 03/29/1999
Local Time: 12:00 PDT
State: CA
City: SAN BERNARDINO
Aircraft Make/Model: DOUG MD-11-11F
Operator Name: WORLD AIRWAYS, INC.
Narrative
On March 29, 1999, maintenance personnel in San Bernardino,
California, discovered evidence of a fire on board a McDonnell Douglas
MD-11, N274WA, operated by World Airways. The time and circumstances of
the fire went
unreported and are unknown. The airplane received minor damage, and no
injuries associated with the event were reported.
Maintenance personnel at Santa Barbara Aerospace in San Bernardino
contacted the Safety Board when they noted evidence of the fire while
opening up the aft cargo bay floorboards during a scheduled "4
C" maintenance check.
The airplane, a freighter, was manufactured in 1992 and accumulated
about
18,300 hours since delivery. A deferred maintenance item dated February
22,
1999, was noted in the aircraft logbook that reported a inoperative
electric cargo
loading system. A routine task card was scheduled to remove the
floorboards, so
the operator opted to defer this item until the 4C check (the
floorboards had
never been removed). Upon removal of the floorboards, the insulation
blanket
between stations 1661 and 1681 was found burned.
An detailed inspection of the area revealed that a wiring harness,
containing 20-guage wires insulated with Kapton, was routed across and
onto frame
1681. One wire was separated, and the insulation of seven other wires
were
damaged and chaffed where they contacted the frame. The bundle emanated
from the
aft cargo loading system control box, which routes 115 volt 3-phase
power to electric floor rollers when the aft cargo door is in the fully
open position.
Evidence of wire chaffing and arcing was present on the wire bundle and
the frame where the bundle was contacted it. The metalized mylar that
covered
the entire insulation blanket (measuring about 60 inches feet by 20
inches)
that fit into the bay between frame 1661 and 1681 had completely burned
away,
exposing partially burned insulation material beneath it. A 1.25-inch
hole in the blanket was found underneath the chaffed portion of the wire
bundle.
The mating edge of the adjoining insulation blanket (forward of frame
1681)
was also burned. The metalized mylar is DMS 2072K, type 2, class 1,
grade A, lot
no.2024. The tape that held the mylar in place is DMS 1984 tape. Two
wire
bundle "stand-offs" were installed on either side of the arced
area of the
wires. The wire run was 14 inches between the stand-offs. The outboard
stand-off
was 1 inch high, and the inboard stand-off was 1.5 inches high, with an
effective stand-off clearance of 3/4-inch from the frame.
Probable Cause -----Registration Number: 274WA
AND
NTSB AVIATION ACCIDENT/INCIDENT DATABASE REPORT (Mylar)
Report Number: ATL99IA015
Local Date: 11/08/1998
Local Time: 21:00 EST
State: GA
City: ATLANTA
Category of Operation: SCHEDULED, PART 121
Aircraft Type: AIRPLANE
Aircraft Make/Model: DOUG MD-11-XXX
Operator Name: DELTA AIR LINES
Narrative
On November 11, 1998, about 2100 eastern standard time, a McDonnell
Douglas MD-11, N811DE, experienced a fire in the center cargo
compartment
while the airplane was standing at the gate in Atlanta, Georgia. The
airplane
was operated by Delta Air Lines, under the provisions of Title 14 CFR
Part
121. There was no flight plan and weather conditions were undetermined.
There
were no passengers nor crewmembers aboard the airplane and no injures.
The
airplane received minor damage. The airplane was standing at the time of
the fire.
According to Delta Air Lines maintenance personnel, a mechanic had
removed a cargo container powered roller to replace it. While he was
obtaining the
replacement part, a shift change occurred with the airport customer
service personnel, who load the cargo containers. A container was
loaded, cutting the cannon plug wires of the removed powered roller. The
cargo control unit that controls the activation of the powered rollers
caught fire, when power was applied to the airplane. Metalizer mylar
insulation behind the cargo control unit caught fire, then extinguished
shortly afterwards.
Probable Cause -----
Registration Number: 811DE
Both items regarding mylar incidents came from the
NTSB Aviation Accident/Incident Database.
Instructions for retrieval follow;
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Under > "Enter a word or phrase for which to search" , type
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Click > "Begin Search" (at bottom)
Then click either "ATL99IA015" or "DCA99SA051" for
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