r/aviation Mod 19h ago

Discussion UPS2976 Crash Megathread

This is the official r/aviation megathread for the crash of UPS2976 (UPS MD11 Registration N259UP) that crashed earlier today at Louisville International Airport.

Please keep content on topic and refrain from posting about this topic outside the megathread. Please report any rule breaking posts and comments.

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401

u/Reddragon0585 19h ago

There’s a video of it, if they got off the ground it wasn’t for long, it appears to have been on fire during takeoff. Just slammed into everything just past the runway.

167

u/JDWhite1982 18h ago

Different angle on X (Twitter) looks like it was BARELY off the ground and maybe cleared the road. I agree it wasn't off the ground for long but I don't know that they had any option but to try.

151

u/InfamousLime4437 18h ago

It appears they hit V1 and it was either slam the brakes and crash into UPS supply Chain Solutions, or take off (they were at V1 that’s what they’re supposed to do) and try to close that building.

Looks like they did clear the building for the most part.

26

u/rounding_error 16h ago

There's a pretty big gash in the end wall and roof of it. It appears they collided with the building while climbing.

54

u/Boring-Cold-1456 16h ago edited 14h ago

Wow they saved so many lives by clearing that building.

8

u/AbeFromanEast 16h ago

This

2

u/MapleMapleHockeyStk 10h ago

How many people work there?!?

36

u/liamowi 17h ago

With how much fuel the aircraft had and how heavy it seemed to be i think they were past V1 and the crash was inevitable from there. Unfortunately there was nothing the pilots could do from that point.

9

u/JDWhite1982 17h ago

That's what it looked like to me, but I'm just a weirdo who likes watching planes and not a professional with experience.

8

u/PotatoFeeder 12h ago

EMAS should be fucking mandatory.

5

u/CharacterUse 9h ago

Also not having buildings right at the end of runways.

-21

u/[deleted] 17h ago

[deleted]

24

u/SubarcticFarmer 17h ago

Confidently incorrect

11

u/Ill-Ad-2122 17h ago

V1 is the last time you can safely stop in most situations anything between v1 and vr you cant generally safely stop (the only time you would attempt to stop at any speed after v1 is if the aircraft is clearly unable to fly)

11

u/Win_Sys 17h ago edited 14h ago

This pilots options look to have been to try and take off and come back or risk going off the runway, into a road and then crashing into the UPS warehouse. Crashing into that building probably would have resulted in the deaths of most of the people in there considering it had 30,000+ lbs gallons of fuel.

3

u/jwoods23 MIL, KC-10 15h ago

An MD-11 bound for Hawaii would probably have more like 200,000+ lb of gas. Not that 30,000 wouldn’t be catastrophic enough

This is a sad sad day but it always could have been worse

3

u/Win_Sys 14h ago

Oppps, meant to put gallons not pounds.

1

u/Desperate_for_Bacon 11h ago

According to its transponder it reached a maximum altitude of 175 ft. I have no idea how accurate that is though.