Comment by dreamcompiler
3 months ago
Yes, when I said "improper" I meant the American 191 maintenance crew took shortcuts. The manual basically said "When removing the engine, first remove the engine from the pylon, then remove the pylon from the wing. When reattaching, do those things in reverse order." But the crew (more likely their management) wanted to save time so they just removed the pylon while the engine was still attached to it. They used a forklift to reattach the engine/pylon assembly and its lack of precision damaged the wing.[0]
Fatigue cracking would be a maintenance issue too but that's more like passive negligence while the 191 situation was actively disregarding the manual to cut corners. The crew chief of the 191 maintenance incident died by suicide before he could testify.
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Airlines_Flight_191#E...
> The crew chief of the 191 maintenance incident died by suicide before he could testify.
To be clear, a crew chief (Earl Russell Marshall) did. But he wasn't directly involved in maintenance of the specific DC-10 that crashed. Or at least, I haven't found a source saying he was, and some sources say he wasn't. https://www.upi.com/Archives/1981/03/26/The-wife-of-an-airli...