Tag Archives: RED Air

FAA: FAA technicians rebuild the damaged MIA ILS in record time

Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) released this story about the record rebuild of the MIA ILS system after a Red Air DC-9-82 (MD-82) veered off the runway and plowed through the important guidance system (the aircraft was not rebuilt):

Rebuilding in Record Time

After a jet veered off the runway at Miami International Airport and destroyed an instrument landing system, FAA technicians, engineers, and incident response experts reacted with repairs in record time.

A technician assessing the damages of the crash.

By C. Troxell, FAA

On June 21, a Red Air MD-82 jet veered off the runway at Miami International Airport when its left landing gear collapsed.

The plane destroyed an instrument landing system glide slope — the part that provides pilots with vertical descent guidance to the runway. The nose of the jet hit the glide slope equipment building head on, taking out the structure, while the right wing took out the antenna tower and the left wing struck electrical equipment that powers the system. Four passengers suffered minor injuries in the incident.

The plane’s left wing destroyed through direct impact with electrical equipment.

“It just wiped it out completely. I mean, that whole site was flattened,” said Jose Hernandez, the FAA’s Miami Navigation/Communications System Support Center manager. “Fortunately, there was nobody in the building, which, you know, occasionally there could be technicians in there working.”

“It literally destroyed the building into pieces.”

Glide scope equipment building.

What ensued was a full-blown glide slope reconstruction project, completed start to finish in just 35 days, including a successful FAA flight check to validate the new system.

“I don’t know of a single glide slope facility installation that has been done near as quickly,” said Jim Parrish, the FAA’s Eastern Service Area field incident response manager.

The FAA assessed damage the day after the accident and prepared equipment. Four engineering technicians from the Facility Maintenance Program — Kris Kirvin, Ryan Drager, Sean Alexander and Gerald Reeves — drove in from Atlanta, Ga., and Titusville, Fla., and collaborated on rebuilding the glide slope from scratch, with a lot of help from local engineering technician Jeff Kilgore.

“It’s usually still in one piece when we get there,” Kirvin, the lead technician, said with a smile. “And we usually can reuse parts. We started digging and found there were a lot of parts we couldn’t reuse. We had half the manpower and had to find materials, which isn’t easy in the post-COVID world…It all happened really fast with a skeleton crew.”

Due to the site’s location between two intersecting runways in the middle of the airfield, the FAA employed a smaller crew than usual to facilitate the project in a compact work area. The team worked continuously, during the nights and through the Fourth of July weekend and a heat wave with 100-degree temperatures, to complete the job “without avoiding any safety protocols,” Hernandez said. Hernandez coordinated with the FAA technicians and leveraged his engineering expertise in leading the rebuild project. “We just fast-tracked the process.”

At night, the team is hard at work rebuilding the glide scope.

Key to fast-tracking was the FAA redirecting a glide slope equipment shelter that was en route to another location for a non-emergency project. It usually takes four to six months for airports to receive these equipment shelters.

The team also had to rebuild the shelter foundation, electrical rack, antenna tower and more, but was able to reuse the antenna tower foundation.

The team needed a crane to lift and lower the 45-foot tower into place. To minimize the impact to the air traffic operation, the FAA waited until 11 p.m. for both runways to close temporarily.

The FAA team uses a crane to raise the new antenna tower.

While incidents like the Red Air accident are uncommon, the FAA is well-prepared to respond to them. “This is what we do,” Bolin said.

FAA Seal

 

RED Air DC-9-82 (MD-82) makes a hard landing at Miami, exits the runway and catches fire

Flight L5 203 from Santo Domingo to Miami on June 21, 2022, made a harding landing at MIA, gear collapsed and exited the runway and caught fire (WO). 3 people received minor injuries exiting the aircraft.

Top Copyright Photo: RED Air McDonnell Douglas DC-9-82 (MD-82) HI1064 (msn 53027) MIA (Tony Storck). Image: 956267.

RED Air McDonnell Douglas DC-9-82 (MD-82) (HI1064, msn 53027) operating as flight L5 203 from Santo Domingo to Miami made an emergency landing at Miami International Airport this afternoon around 5:30 pm (1730) local time. 140 passengers and 11 crew members were on board.

The aircraft made a hard landing, the nose gear reportedly collapsed and the aircraft veered off the runway impacting some signage. The aircraft caught on fire and burned. Minor injuries to three people while evacuating.

The two southern runways at MIA are closed.

https://wsvn.com/news/local/miami-dade/plane-catches-fire-at-miami-international-airport-after-crash-landing-at-least-4-hurt/

The airframe was originally delivered to American Airlines as N16545 on December 18, 1990.

The aircraft is a probable insurance write off (WO) due to the damage and fire.

Videos:

Crashed and Destroyed aircraft photo gallery:

Photo: RED Air McDonnell Douglas DC-9-82 (MD-82) HI1064 (msn 53027) MIA (Tony Storck). Image: 956267.

Flight L5 203 from Santo Domingo to Miami on June 21, 2022, made a harding landing at MIA, gear collapsed and exited the runway and caught fire (WO). 3 people received minor injuries exiting the aircraft.

Copyright Photo: RED Air McDonnell Douglas DC-9-82 (MD-82) HI1064 (msn 53027) MIA (Tony Storck). Image: 956267.

RED Air adds a new route to Miami

Dominican carrier RED Air started charter service at MIA on November 1 with daily flights to Santo Domingo, with plans to add a second daily flight on November 21.

Previously on September 15, 2021made this announcement:

The new airline RED Air has an Air Operator’s Certificate (AOC), which recognizes it internationally as a scheduled airline, both by the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), the International Air Transport Association (IATA), and other multilateral organizations in the air transport sector.

This license, thanks to the Dominican Institute of Civil Aviation (IDAC) and the Civil Aviation Board (JAC), will allow direct flights to operate direct flights to different destinations that, according to passenger statistics, are cities that have a natural traffic to and from the international airport of Santo Domingo, which has allowed to mobilize more than ten million passengers in the last five years.

“The certification is the beginning of a project that has been taking shape for several years and that has been achieved thanks to the entire group of RED Air collaborators,” says Héctor Gómez, executive director of RED Air, which is formed by a group of entrepreneurs with extensive experience in the civil aviation and airport services sector.

The Dominican company RED Air has a fleet of four McDonnell Douglas MD-81 and MD-82 aircraft and a staff of more than fifty employees, a group that includes the administrative and operational staff, with five Dominican pilots, as well as the Cabin Staff also Dominican.

“Significant investments have been made in assets, infrastructure, and human talent, to start our regular operations and their sustainability, to develop an airline that lasts over time,” says Gómez.

To obtain this certification, RED Air has had to comply with the legal regulations in force in front of the authorities, which include training and training of operational and administrative personnel, safety demonstrations, 50 hours of demonstration flights, verification, emergency exercises and simulators, approval of operating and maintenance manuals, among others.

Top Copyright Photo: L. Apso. DC-9-82 HI1066 performed the inaugural flight to MIA.