NTSB: Flaw that led to engine flying off UPS plane grew unnoticed under
relaxed inspection schedule
[May 21, 2026]
By JOSH FUNK
A UPS plane crash that killed 15 people last year might have been
prevented if an original inspection schedule hadn't been relaxed, but
mechanics didn't get a close look at the parts that should have kept an
engine from flying off its wing because federal regulators allowed
Boeing to recommend checking them less frequently, according to
testimony Wednesday.
The National Transportation Safety Board's questions also drew out that
Boeing relied on older data when it asked to extend the inspection
schedule in 2015, and didn't seem to account for seven instances on
other planes of the same model when the key engine mount parts were
failing. The Federal Aviation Administration, for its part, approved the
request after a month's review without seeking more information.
“Safety is a shared responsibility between the airline, the
manufacturer, and the regulator. And the NTSB is attempting to parse out
the roles and responsibilities of each of those three entities,”
aviation safety expert Jeff Guzzetti said.
The two-day hearing made clear that key safety information wasn't being
shared among everyone involved, and the former crash investigator said
the FAA should have been more skeptical about Boeing's request, the
former crash investigator.

The risks were misjudged
Boeing and FAA officials acknowledged that they misunderstood the risks
related to the potential failure of a steel bearing and metal sheath in
the engine mount before the crash, not realizing that it could lead to
the lugs that secure engines to an MD-11's wings breaking. The bearings
are tucked deep inside near the pylons, so problems are hard to spot
without removing each engine for detailed inspections.
Boeing succeeded in extending the required inspections from once every
19,900 cycles of takeoffs and landings, to once every 29,260, so that
airlines could complete more of the major maintenance tasks
simultaneously, with less down time. The planemaker sought the change
even after receiving reports about seven of the flaws in the bearings
well before the planes had reached their original inspection limits. In
the years after the schedule was relaxed, three more instances were
discovered before the crash.
The plane that crashed after losing its engine while accelerating down
the runway at Louisville’s Muhammad Ali International Airport had flown
21,043 cycles, so it would have been thoroughly inspected under the
original schedule. The crash killed all three pilots and 12 people on
the ground. Twenty-three more were injured. There has been only one
other crash, decades earlier, involving a similar plane model losing an
engine, but that one was blamed on improper maintenance and not the same
flaw.

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This photo provided by the National Transportation Safety Board
shows UPS plane crash scene, Nov. 6, 2025 in Louisville, Ky. (NTSB
via AP, File)

Plane operators aren't expected to deviate from federally approved
maintenance schedules, said Greg Raiff, who owns several aviation
maintenance companies and operates a fleet of planes at Elevate
Aviation Group.
“I would not expect UPS or any other operator to do it unless it’s
specifically on the manufacturer’s design maintenance programs,”
Raiff said. “Surely everyone at UPS feels awful about this tragic
accident, but it’s not up to individual airlines to reinvent the
inspection program for the airplane.”
Homendy said FAA should have asked more questions
NTSB Chairwoman Jennifer Homendy said the FAA should have done more
to challenge Boeing's request in 2015, because even if regulators
didn't know about all the flaws, they knew the planemaker had sent
out a service letter about them and had previously reported two of
them.
“I’m confused on why you wouldn’t ask for more information, more
testing, and why you would just accept information that Boeing
provided in the late 80s during certification, 30 years earlier
basically,” Homendy said.
Boeing's Director of Airframe Service Engineering Justin Konopaske
didn't always have answers about what his company considered at the
time because the planemaker didn't have the records. The MD-11 and
its predecessor the DC-10 were designed and built by McDonnell
Douglas before that company merged with Boeing in 1997. Still, he
said Boeing should have shared the details of the problems it knew
about with FAA when it applied to extend the inspection schedule.

“I believe transparency is critical in that process. I don’t know
what the engineers were considering or how they were considering, or
if they considered those bearing failures in that discussion, I
can’t say,” Konopaske said.
The NTSB will continue investigating everything that might have
contributed to this crash before issuing its final report likely
either late this year or sometime next year.
But FedEx resumed flying its MD-11s earlier this month after the FAA
approved Boeing's plan to ensure their safety. The engine mounts
were closely inspected following the November crash, and going
forward the spherical bearings will be replaced regularly, after
every 4,000 cycles of takeoffs and landings. Homendy said the
problems documented from 2002 to 2009 all happened between 6,058
cycles and 13,650 cycles.
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