Namely 90s

#239 - Flight Risks: ValuJet 592 & TWA 800

Namely 90s Season 4 Episode 239

In light of recent events, Andrew wanted to talk about two momentous place crashes from the 90s he remembered and how their legacies shaped the future of airplane safety for years to come.

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Outro:
Pixelland by Kevin MacLeod
Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4222-pixelland
License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Audio file

Namely90s ep239 - Flight Risk.mp3

 

Transcript

00:00:00 Andrew

And then when I'm talking, please feel free pause.

00:00:02 Andrew

Because if I insane, I'm just going to talk for 29 minutes straight. I'll try to.

00:00:07 Brandon

I was just going to sit here and not listen.

00:00:10 Andrew

Try to pause periodically. Use glaze over.

00:00:16 Brandon

No, I'm always interested.

00:00:24 Andrew

All right, we got that recorded.

00:00:26 Andrew

Let's see this thing.

00:00:27 Brandon

Yeah, LG rreal.

00:00:28 Andrew

real.

00:00:33 Brandon

Did you, have you finally figured out what? LG REAL.

00:00:35 Andrew

Yes, last game.

00:00:40 Narrator

Welcome to namely 90.

00:00:44 Narrator

The podcast that takes you back to the time before smartphones goop.

00:00:49 Narrator

And why do you care?

00:00:52 Narrator

Join your host as they relive the pop culture that shaped a generation and the farts that many.

00:00:58 Narrator

Wish they could forget.

00:01:00 Narrator

Listen in to the conversation about how the decade defined those who spent their childhood there and how it shaped them as adults.

00:01:10 Narrator

So turn down the grunge and dial up the Internet.

00:01:15 Narrator

Let's get started.

00:01:16 Narrator

It's time for namely 90s.

00:01:22 Andrew

That's.

00:01:23 Andrew

You're listening to, namely.

00:01:24 Andrew

My name is Andrew and over there is Brandon.

00:01:27 Brandon

That's me.

00:01:28 Andrew

You can find this online at daily com or on Instagram and Bluesky at namely.

00:01:33 Andrew

You can always find us on YouTube every Monday at youtube.com slash at, namely 90.

00:01:39 Andrew

And if you'd like to get in late and support us through Patreon, head over to ourpatreonpage@patreon.com/neatly and I say Patreon one more time.

00:01:50 Brandon

And you're always. You're always welcome to support us even after the show is over.

00:01:50 Andrew

You didn't get signed up for our support levels.

00:01:55 Andrew

Yeah.

00:01:56 Andrew

I'll send.

00:01:56 Andrew

I'll send you my Venmo.

00:01:59 Andrew

Yeah. Well, we're back. Counting down the weeks.

00:02:02 Andrew

Are as you know.

00:02:03 Brandon

And we're back.

00:02:04 Andrew

Ending the podcast in May.

00:02:06 Andrew

Don't fret.

00:02:06 Andrew

Yeah.

00:02:07 Andrew

I suspect another project will be coming.

00:02:09 Andrew

I suddenly have more free time in my life.

00:02:09

Of course.

00:02:14 Andrew

I have been lightly demoted so.

00:02:16 Brandon

That doesn't sound good.

00:02:18 Andrew

Yeah, but hey, that means more time for Rocket League and various podcasting or other media projects.

00:02:24 Brandon

And reduce the stresses that we're stressing.

00:02:28 Brandon

In your life.

00:02:29 Andrew

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

00:02:31 Andrew

And the good news is the world today is helping me achieve that goal.

00:02:35 Andrew

God.

00:02:35 Andrew

It's a disaster, literally and figuratively.

00:02:37 Andrew

Ohh.

00:02:40 Brandon

Are you?

00:02:40 Andrew

Quite tragic news with two plane crashes and essentially.

00:02:46 Andrew

Two days, 348 hour period. The the crash obviously in DC and then now tonight as.

00:02:54 Andrew

This recording.

00:02:55 Andrew

The crash of that smaller jet in Pennsylvania so.

00:03:01 Andrew

Yeah. Our thoughts with those affected and that's really sad. But I guess what's particularly disturbing is how this is just distracting from all of the ****** things Donald Trump is doing to this country.

00:03:12 Andrew

Yes.

00:03:13 Andrew

Umm.

00:03:15 Andrew

Not least of which is gutting the FAA and then blaming it on.

00:03:20 Andrew

Right.

00:03:22 Brandon

As you said.

00:03:22 Andrew

This one.

00:03:23 Andrew

Assigning blame when it hasn't been determined what the cause was.

00:03:26 Andrew

Hello.

00:03:27 Andrew

And then assigning that blame to a group that he gutted.

00:03:31 Andrew

I I just.

00:03:31 Brandon

Yeah.

00:03:34 Andrew

Yeah, you know.

00:03:35 Andrew

Not to politicize it too much, but here I am politicizing it.

00:03:39 Brandon

He started.

00:03:40 Andrew

He started it.

00:03:41 Brandon

Your five year old.

00:03:44 Andrew

Anyway, so that's happening and what else?

00:03:46 Andrew

Hmm.

00:03:48 Andrew

Still still deporting people? That's fun.

00:03:50 Brandon

Are these ice raids going on around here right now? Yes.

00:03:54 Andrew

Sorry, did you say icecapades? No.

00:03:58 Brandon

Yeah, there's bands, there's.

00:04:01 Brandon

Like.

00:04:04 Brandon

A.

00:04:04 Brandon

It's a Mexican restaurant in Morro Bay that's closed until further notice. Because the entire kitchen Sih won't show up to work.

00:04:15 Brandon

It's like.

00:04:15 Andrew

Yeah, it's like the entire federal government that he's offering to just be like, hey, you can quit if you want. We'll give you your check through September.

00:04:22 Andrew

Like, that's just a blanket rule. I thought it was like, oh, people who don't want to return to the office, but like air traffic controllers are eligible for that.

00:04:22 Andrew

Yeah.

00:04:30 Andrew

I'm pretty sure air traffic controllers can't work from home. Like, imagine you're working from home and like your Xfinity goes out.

00:04:37 Andrew

Know you like. I just imagine that, but.

00:04:39 Brandon

Yeah.

00:04:40 Andrew

Yeah, but just.

00:04:44 Andrew

You, you know, it's crazy. And the fact that people can't even do their jobs in the institutions and restaurants that we all visit everyday and take for granted is ridiculous, you know?

00:04:50 Brandon

Yeah.

00:04:54 Andrew

You.

00:04:54 Andrew

You know.

00:04:56 Andrew

Well, shouldn't take them for.

00:04:57 Andrew

But you know what I mean? Like.

00:04:58 Brandon

I mean like, what's that? Anthony Warden called where it's like.

00:05:03 Brandon

The US population has a really love hate relationship with illegal Mexican migrant workers.

00:05:10 Brandon

If you were to deport them all at once.

00:05:15 Brandon

And immediately the entire food infrastructure would fall apart from.

00:05:18 Andrew

Yeah.

00:05:19 Andrew

If Donald Trump is eating a restaurant, he is.

00:05:22 Andrew

Definitely benefited from, you know, migrant workers in this country. You know what I mean?

00:05:26 Brandon

Yeah. I mean, what do you think Staffs might want to?

00:05:28 Andrew

It's it's crazy.

00:05:29 Andrew

You collapse the entire industry.

00:05:31 Andrew

Hello.

00:05:33 Andrew

And and how's that good for the?

00:05:34 Andrew

Yeah.

00:05:36 Andrew

It's like the that, that, that meme that's floating around, it's like it's the Gulf of Mexico, but it's crossed out. It says Gulf of how does this lower grocery price.

00:05:46 Andrew

Yeah.

00:05:48 Brandon

True.

00:05:51 Andrew

Yeah.

00:05:54 Andrew

Anyway.

00:05:54 Brandon

Well, if you some consider blow hard and think that Donald Trump's doing a good job and he's still listening to us for some reason, leave a comment like subscribe.

00:06:05 Andrew

Yeah. Or you can go on Doctor Drew's podcast website thing.

00:06:10 Andrew

It looks like Fox News and join him and Alex Jones for a stimulating interview of ******* nonsense.

00:06:17 Andrew

This is going to be an explicit episode.

00:06:18 Andrew

Probably shouldn't be anyway.

00:06:22 Andrew

I'm just saying.

00:06:23 Andrew

Over here.

00:06:24 Andrew

Uh.

00:06:26 Andrew

I know we don't do.

00:06:26 Andrew

Lot of explicits but.

00:06:29 Brandon

That's what the E takes for.

00:06:30 Andrew

I mean, it's also a big graphic, which will will, you know, talk about in a few moments, but.

00:06:35 Brandon

Good Lord, he was pulling out his.

00:06:37 Andrew

Well, no, like graduate descriptions of things.

00:06:42 Andrew

Report.

00:06:48 Brandon

Both of those are.

00:06:50 Andrew

Was he was going.

00:06:51 Andrew

I was going to reference that song by Donald like that Donald Trump thing where he said I'm going to come or something and he's like Bill Gates.

00:06:59 Andrew

You heard this remix of the I'm gonna come song.

00:07:01 Brandon

No, you told.

00:07:01 Brandon

You told me. I don't know.

00:07:04 Andrew

It's.

00:07:05 Andrew

It's worth checking into, honestly.

00:07:06 Brandon

Is it?

00:07:07 Brandon

Is it like Sharma show?

00:07:10 Brandon

No, I haven't. Did the tiger blood, Joey, she don't.

00:07:15 Andrew

I actually don't know that person still alive.

00:07:19 Brandon

Charlie Sheen, or the person who did the mix.

00:07:24 Andrew

Oh, Kendrick Lamar's gonna be the halftime performer.

00:07:25 Brandon

Show yo.

00:07:28 Andrew

Here's one thing about that I'm not gonna go into my opinion of that, but.

00:07:31 Brandon

He's already done it on the podcast.

00:07:32 Andrew

I I could have sworn like a month ago they announced who it was and it wasn't him. Did it change, or am I misremembering?

00:07:39 Brandon

Dear Mr. honouring.

00:07:40 Andrew

Who are they announcing that there was some other musical artist that got announced as performing at some big thing?

00:07:46 Brandon

A month ago.

00:07:48 Andrew

Am I thinking of last?

00:07:49 Andrew

Oh my God, am I thinking of last year?

00:07:52 Andrew

When was it?

00:07:53 Andrew

Year.

00:07:55 Brandon

Pretty much I think.

00:07:57 Andrew

No.

00:07:58 Brandon

Does his brutalizes gay?

00:08:02 Andrew

Uh oh.

00:08:06 Andrew

I gotta look it up now.

00:08:07 Andrew

Was.

00:08:10 Andrew

Usher.

00:08:11 Andrew

Well, I swear they had been out somebody else and they changed it, but I can't.

00:08:12 Brandon

Same difference.

00:08:14 Andrew

I apparently not.

00:08:16 Brandon

Smack.

00:08:18 Andrew

So yeah, apparently I have not connected to pop culture whatsoever.

00:08:21 Brandon

Yeah, associated with your opinions.

00:08:25 Brandon

Grammy winning Kendrick Lamar.

00:08:28 Andrew

Well, I mean, is 1 not entitled to dislike certain types of music?

00:08:32 Brandon

Mujuru are absolutely allowed to have wrong opinions.

00:08:38 Andrew

There think about how many Grammy Award winners think about.

00:08:41 Andrew

Think about how many country artists won Grammys. I think I've just found your kryptonite.

00:08:46 Brandon

I'll listen to the chicks.

00:08:49 Andrew

Chicks. Yeah. You can't call them the.

00:08:50 Andrew

Chicks anymore.

00:08:52 Andrew

Also remember that time they got cancelled from country music because they're Democrats.

00:08:57 Brandon

I wish I never would have guessed your children.

00:09:00 Andrew

Yeah. So anyway, but that that's cool.

00:09:03 Andrew

So apparently I thought it was somebody else. What?

00:09:06 Andrew

You know.

00:09:08 Brandon

You know landslide will something Rascal.

00:09:11 Andrew

How dare?

00:09:12 Andrew

That's a cover of a legendary Fleetwood Mac song.

00:09:16 Brandon

I also advise on flights so.

00:09:21 Brandon

I once.

00:09:25 Brandon

Find a girl singing.

00:09:29 Brandon

She's like, listening to The Smashing Pumpkins version of landslide and say, you know, I love the original Dixie Chicks version.

00:09:37 Brandon

And then, yeah.

00:09:37 Andrew

Yeah, yeah.

00:09:41 Brandon

We broke up immediately.

00:09:43 Andrew

Fleetwood Mac.

00:09:45 Andrew

Dear God, I mean.

00:09:45 Andrew

Of a.

00:09:46 Andrew

I've been guilty of that too, where I thought a song was the original, but.

00:09:50 Andrew

I mean that song, I don't know.

00:09:52 Brandon

Yeah, how could you?

00:09:54 Brandon

It's have you not seen the guy drinking ocean spray, cranberry juice skateboarding to was it rumors?

00:10:01 Brandon

Was it?

00:10:02 Andrew

Rumors is the name.

00:10:03 Andrew

The CD.

00:10:05 Brandon

What's?

00:10:05 Andrew

Go your own way.

00:10:08 Brandon

No, it's. I think it's Rihanna.

00:10:13 Andrew

Yeah.

00:10:14 Brandon

Ocean spray cranberry juice.

00:10:18 Andrew

Oh, my nose is burning.

00:10:20 Brandon

Jai song.

00:10:24 Brandon

Fluid Mac dreams used by dreams.

00:10:26 Andrew

Streams.

00:10:27 Brandon

You do you?

00:10:27 Brandon

Not know this meme from four years ago.

00:10:32 Brandon

This is during COVID and this dude is I think like on TikTok or something and it's just like him, just like on a longboard just.

00:10:43 Brandon

He's in a hoodie and he's like.

00:10:47 Brandon

Writing long word and just drinking out of the entire carton of.

00:10:51 Brandon

Ocean spray hand pain shoots and the song that's on is dreams by Fleetwood Mac.

00:10:57 Brandon

It's just, yeah, it made people smile.

00:10:58 Andrew

Huh.

00:11:00 Andrew

Strange.

00:11:06 Andrew

Yeah, I mean, until Max's good.

00:11:09 Andrew

Bummer about fleetwoods on Front Street getting burned down in line.

00:11:12 Andrew

Couple years.

00:11:13 Andrew

Finally, I actually got to go there, which I always wanted to, and then it burned down like three months later.

00:11:20 Brandon

Oh, I thought.

00:11:21 Brandon

Maybe after we burned down.

00:11:26 Andrew

Let's think about that. How I visited the town of Lion as a tourist after.

00:11:33 Andrew

Burned.

00:11:34 Andrew

Well, it's about 3 months before.

00:11:37 Brandon

There was a reason why you didn't go previously and I.

00:11:40 Brandon

Remember why?

00:11:42 Andrew

It was because of over.

00:11:44 Andrew

Post Mortem was hurting islands, yeah.

00:11:44 Brandon

Yes. Yeah, that's what it was, OK.

00:11:47 Andrew

Anyway, so I was being all wolfed and ****.

00:11:48 Andrew

Well.

00:11:50 Brandon

Bring bringing my levity and eloquence to this episode already.

00:11:56 Andrew

Yeah, great.

00:11:57 Andrew

That's 10 minutes, right?

00:11:58 Brandon

It is 10 minutes 3 seconds plus whatever the intro is and whatever. It'll banter before the episode was.

00:12:06 Andrew

So first thing I want to say.

00:12:09 Andrew

Is well.

00:12:10 Andrew

I because of of what's happened.

00:12:12 Andrew

Week we and my interest in aviation like I'm super interested in commercial.

00:12:18 Andrew

I did a flight SIM for a while like I find them all very fascinating.

00:12:21 Brandon

I studied arts and.

00:12:22 Brandon

Very interesting.

00:12:22 Andrew

Yep, there you.

00:12:23 Andrew

So we're going to talk about some of the prominent air disasters, plane crashes, calm, which you will from the 1990s and also specifically telling the stories.

00:12:34 Andrew

How these incidents led to improvements in.

00:12:39 Andrew

Our air safety, which caused us to basically go was from 2009.

00:12:44 Andrew

We haven't had a a deadly commercial air accident in the United States, which?

00:12:49 Andrew

Pretty.

00:12:49 Andrew

Like for all the failings there are in the system.

00:12:52 Andrew

Mm.

00:12:52 Andrew

We're still one of the.

00:12:54 Andrew

Best, safest countries in terms of air travel.

00:12:57 Brandon

Computer, stop.

00:12:57 Andrew

This may be.

00:12:59 Andrew

Doesn't mean we couldn't be better, but it's hopeful.

00:13:02 Andrew

Smacks like these that can do.

00:13:04 Andrew

So that said, I also want to say viewer discretion is advised.

00:13:05 Andrew

Hmm.

00:13:11 Andrew

Some descriptions of the events that you know may trouble some people.

00:13:14 Andrew

They're.

00:13:15 Andrew

Of flying or have been affected by an air disaster.

00:13:18 Andrew

Just just a fair warning.

00:13:19 Brandon

And I get.

00:13:20 Brandon

Be the funny guy this week.

00:13:22 Andrew

Yeah. One of the great tasks I've given you.

00:13:24 Andrew

Have to try.

00:13:25 Andrew

Be funny, but I mean, there's places.

00:13:27 Andrew

To be funny in this but, but mostly not.

00:13:30 Brandon

Yeah.

00:13:31 Andrew

So anyway, we are going to start with.

00:13:33 Andrew

Value Jet Airlines flight 592, which took place on May 11th, 1996 and.

00:13:41 Andrew

The name of that company kind of tells the story. I'll say that.

00:13:46 Andrew

It's.

00:13:46 Brandon

Spirit Airline 1.0.

00:13:49 Andrew

Yeah, yeah, I think it was absorbed by.

00:13:53 Andrew

They had absorbed by somebody, I don't know which company it was, but.

00:13:56 Andrew

But we've gone away now.

00:14:00 Brandon

'Cause they were rebranded as AirTran Airlines and merged into AirTran Airways.

00:14:06 Andrew

An AirTran got bought by Stealth W Southwest.

00:14:08 Brandon

Southwest.

00:14:11 Andrew

Exactly what I was saying.

00:14:12 Andrew

Mm.

00:14:13 Andrew

So anyway I.

00:14:16 Andrew

In this situation, a McDonald Douglas DC-9 operating the Miami to Atlanta route crashed into the Florida Everglades about 10 minutes after departing Miami. As a result of a fire in the cargo compartment caused by mislabeled and improperly stored hazardous cargo. Remember this?

00:14:32 Andrew

I don't.

00:14:34 Brandon

I also the only one I remember is TWA Flight 800.

00:14:35 Andrew

I don't.

00:14:41 Andrew

Spoiler alert.

00:14:44 Andrew

Anyway, I remember this one because I like my parents, always had, like the local news on at night before dinner. So I usually see these things, but I remember specifically, I didn't know anything else about it other than it crashed in the Everglades.

00:14:50 Andrew

Mm.

00:14:57 Andrew

And it was really difficult to like.

00:15:00 Andrew

Figure all the stuff out because of the access.

00:15:02 Andrew

We'll.

00:15:03 Andrew

In a little bit later, when we talk about the search and rescue and recovery efforts.

00:15:06 Andrew

Oh.

00:15:08 Andrew

That was, I do actually remember this one.

00:15:10 Andrew

To some degree.

00:15:11 Brandon

And it was a DC-10.

00:15:15 Andrew

I mean I copied directly from Wikipedia as it was ADC 9, so I'm gonna trust that.

00:15:20 Andrew

Uh.

00:15:23 Brandon

No, I'm.

00:15:23 Andrew

I.

00:15:23 Brandon

There was a a different part that says DC.

00:15:26 Brandon

Did you say DC-9?

00:15:27 Brandon

Yeah, not listening.

00:15:28 Andrew

DC-9.

00:15:28 Andrew

Yep. So the this DC-9 in particular was 27 years old than been previously flown by Delta. Its first flight occurred in 1969.

00:15:35 Andrew

Yeah.

00:15:39 Andrew

Granted, it was 96, so that year sounds really old.

00:15:43 Andrew

It's not as bad as it as it seems.

00:15:45

Yeah.

00:15:46 Andrew

Delta had that plane until 92 sold back to McDonald Douglas, and then they then resold the plane to value jet in 93.

00:15:53 Andrew

I always check the age of my airplane when I fly.

00:15:58 Andrew

And I flew on a.

00:15:59 Andrew

There was 35 years of.

00:16:02 Andrew

I was like, do I have to get on this?

00:16:04 Andrew

I I think.

00:16:05 Andrew

The issue is just like we've done that many cycles like they're obviously safe, you know, but they're you do get these like micro cracks and things and some of the components and parts.

00:16:14 Andrew

It's a little bit nerve wracking and they feel.

00:16:17 Andrew

A bit wickedy sometimes when they're of that age.

00:16:20 Andrew

Yeah.

00:16:22 Brandon

And you know, these days, maintenance isn't done as often.

00:16:26 Brandon

As it used to be.

00:16:28 Andrew

Well, especially the value carriers like sometimes they do in theory.

00:16:32 Andrew

Or at least this one may have, but in any case, this particular aircraft had suffered a series of incidents the two years before the crash.

00:16:34 Brandon

Mm.

00:16:40 Andrew

Including two aborted takeoffs and eight emergency landings, engine and pressurization errors were the primary issues, and in May 95 the FAA issued a rewiring directive for all DC-9 cockpit.

00:16:53 Andrew

Because the wire bundles in the switch panel could cause fire and uncontrolled smoke throughout the cockpit.

00:16:59 Andrew

Which is not very when you're a flight.

00:16:59 Andrew

Why were fading?

00:17:01 Brandon

Why were they not recalled or decommissioned or?

00:17:04 Andrew

Well, that's what this.

00:17:05 Andrew

The Rewiring directive was to fix that, apparently, but.

00:17:10 Andrew

It was not a matter of pilot experience, though.

00:17:13 Andrew

Catherine Candy Kuback, 35 years old and Rich, First Officer Richard Hayes and 52 years old, were in command.

00:17:20 Andrew

And both of them were extremely experienced pilots.

00:17:25 Andrew

I.

00:17:25 Andrew

I don't think there's any question. There's nothing.

00:17:26 Andrew

You know, they could have done or didn't do that. You know that.

00:17:32 Andrew

In total, there were 110 people on board, 105 passengers, mostly from the Florida and Georgia areas and obviously the two pilots and three flight attendants. The plane departed at 2:04 local time and departed from Runway 9 left, and began a.

00:17:49 Andrew

Climb out.

00:17:52 Brandon

I'm sorry, I'm just.

00:17:54 Brandon

Why candy Kubik has a entire Wikipedia page dedicated to her.

00:17:58 Andrew

I don't know. So clear.

00:18:00 Andrew

Lady, you know.

00:18:01 Andrew

You know.

00:18:02 Andrew

But other than this, what she famous for?

00:18:05 Brandon

This.

00:18:07 Andrew

Of interesting, huh?

00:18:09 Brandon

Like like.

00:18:10 Brandon

She married Roger Kubica on the Queen Mary like someone seriously has.

00:18:14 Andrew

Hmm. Oi went into the detail.

00:18:17 Brandon

Filled this out for no reason.

00:18:20 Andrew

So anyway, took off at 2:04. About 6 minutes later at 210, roughly the passengers began to smell smoke and at the same time the pilots heard a loud bang in their headsets and noticed that the plane was losing electrical power.

00:18:34 Andrew

Seconds later, this is a flight attendant enters the cockpit and forms a flight crew of a fire in the passenger cabin.

00:18:43 Andrew

Unfortunately, on the the cockpit voice recorder, they could actually hear the passengers shouting about a fire.

00:18:52 Andrew

The flight attendant manual specifically stated that they should not open the cockpit door when there's smoke or harmful gases in the cabin.

00:18:59 Andrew

Makes sense, right?

00:19:00 Andrew

But of course this is value.

00:19:04 Andrew

Air com not functioning.

00:19:06 Andrew

No other way to tell the pilots.

00:19:09 Andrew

Like, knock twice for fire.

00:19:10 Andrew

Mean.

00:19:10 Andrew

You know, you've got to.

00:19:11 Andrew

So.

00:19:11 Andrew

They had to.

00:19:12 Andrew

The door and whether that actually affected the pilots or not, I don't know. But that was against policy.

00:19:17 Andrew

Right.

00:19:19 Andrew

But if Intercom doesn't work, how can you make that?

00:19:20 Andrew

It is, yeah.

00:19:22 Andrew

Policy, right?

00:19:23 Brandon

It is strange that that.

00:19:27 Brandon

Happened. You know, the whole idea of a black box is kind of mortifying to me, 'cause.

00:19:34 Andrew

Yeah.

00:19:36 Brandon

Just.

00:19:38 Andrew

Also, apparently withstand almost anything.

00:19:41 Andrew

Like they.

00:19:42 Andrew

Almost indestructible, which is crazy considering the forces that are at play.

00:19:46 Andrew

Mm.

00:19:47 Andrew

But they typically they have the flight data recorder and the cockpit voice recorder been separate.

00:19:54 Andrew

You know, devices, apparently.

00:19:57 Brandon

Yeah, who doesn't need to hear all that.

00:20:02 Andrew

Yeah, imagine being a person who has to sift through.

00:20:05 Andrew

That gross.

00:20:07 Andrew

Imagine being the person on CNN who has to keep playing it over and over again because we can't help ourselves.

00:20:13 Andrew

Anyway, so when this all happened.

00:20:16 Andrew

The pilots immediately asked ATC to return to Miami and were given instructions. One minute later, the first officer requested the nearest available airport and Captain Quebec began to turn the plane left in preparation for the return.

00:20:30 Andrew

3 minutes later, the Flight 592 disappeared from radar 2:13 PM when it crashed about two minutes after takeoff.

00:20:40 Andrew

Eyewitnesses watched as the plane banged sharply rolled onto its side.

00:20:44 Andrew

And nose dived into the Francis S Tailor Wildlife management area in the Everglades, a few miles West of Miami, and speed in excess of 507 mph.

00:20:58 Andrew

The pilots made a valiant effort to control things.

00:21:04 Andrew

That they thought basically the plane lost control just 10 seconds before the impact.

00:21:08 Andrew

That the captain was in control and trying to safely get that back.

00:21:12 Andrew

To the airport.

00:21:15 Andrew

But unfortunately, examination of the debris showed that fire had burned through the floorboards in the cabin and resulted in a structural failure, but more importantly, damaged the cables underneath the instrument panels and also they could not rule out that they were incapacitated by.

00:21:32 Andrew

Smoke or heat in the cockpit during the last 7 seconds of the flight. I think it's well, well thought that the controls just weren't working because of the fire at that point.

00:21:42 Brandon

Back in the day, when you could just enter the cockpit, no problem from the outside.

00:21:47 Andrew

Right. And this is not fly by wire.

00:21:49 Andrew

Is cables and pulleys and.

00:21:51 Andrew

You know, it's it's there's no electric. I mean, there's a little bit of electrical, but it's not like the sophisticated fly by wire stuff we have now.

00:21:52 Andrew

Right.

00:22:00 Andrew

Anyway, so unfortunately, as as we would expect, all 110 passengers were did not survive in this crash.

00:22:09 Andrew

And because of the location, it was extremely difficult to get to the location and the location of its own complications.

00:22:15 Andrew

For example, the nearest Rd. of any kind was more than 1/4 of a mile away.

00:22:20 Andrew

And it was either deep water swamp. In addition to that, sawgrass alligators and the risk of bacterial infection from cuts plague searchers involved in recovery efforts.

00:22:29 Andrew

Basically it.

00:22:30 Andrew

Couldn't have been more difficult to get to the site and deal with that.

00:22:36 Andrew

The NTSB conducted a 15 month investigation which determined that the fire had developed in a the cargo compartment below the passenger cabin.

00:22:46 Andrew

So the.

00:22:47 Andrew

Basically this is a little bit technical, but I'm going to explain it.

00:22:50 Andrew

It is important.

00:22:51 Andrew

So the NTSB determined that just before take off, 144 expired chemical oxygen generators have been placed in the cargo compartment in five boxes.

00:23:02 Andrew

This violated the FAA regulations, the transport of hazardous materials into passenger aircraft cargo holds.

00:23:09 Andrew

Is.

00:23:09 Andrew

You came in your lithium ion battery in there.

00:23:13 Brandon

What is Olivia?

00:23:13 Andrew

The well, I just know when they fail, they explode.

00:23:18

Right.

00:23:20 Andrew

But a failure to cover the generator's firing pins with the prescribed plastic caps made accidental activation much more likely. The investigation revealed that rather than covering the pins, maintenance personnel simply cut the cords attached to the pins or applied duct tape around the cans.

00:23:35 Andrew

Yes, duct tape, well known to.

00:23:36 Andrew

A very safe.

00:23:38 Andrew

Product for this sort of situation.

00:23:38 Andrew

The.

00:23:40 Andrew

Mm.

00:23:41 Andrew

And consumer grade adhesive tape was also used to secure the ends indicated on the cargo manifest. The oxy canisters were loosely packed in boxes.

00:23:48 Andrew

Each were sealed with tape and bubble wrap, and were quote UN quote empty that was determined not to be the case.

00:23:58 Andrew

The boxes were then loaded in mistakenly believing that the devices were simply empty canisters and would be safe and legal to transport on a passenger aircraft.

00:24:09 Andrew

For those of you who don't know, because I didn't know, chemical oxygen generators were activated, produce oxygen for passengers. If the plane suffers a decompression.

00:24:16 Andrew

Presumably masks comes down don't have big oxygen tanks.

00:24:21 Andrew

Generate oxygen.

00:24:23 Andrew

But it is a certain type of reaction called an exothermic reaction, which creates a lot of heat.

00:24:30 Andrew

Mm.

00:24:33 Andrew

Therefore, not only can the heat and.

00:24:35 Andrew

Oxygen.

00:24:36 Andrew

But the oxygen can also keep the fire burning.

00:24:40 Andrew

The investigators determined that one of the oxygen can cause cancers was likely triggered when the plane experienced a slight jolt.

00:24:46 Andrew

While taxiing and as a taxi took off, the generator began releasing heat and caused the other canisters to activate.

00:24:53 Andrew

Each activation created more heat, which rapidly caused all the generators to activate a chain reaction.

00:24:59 Andrew

The intense heat ignited a fire of the inner cargo materials and the fire worsened by the presence of the two.

00:25:05 Andrew

Aircraft tires.

00:25:10 Andrew

Sorry. Oh, there were aircraft tires in the plane that popped, which made problems as well. 'cause, they contain oxygen.

00:25:16 Andrew

So the problem is the oxygen from the generators fed the resulting fire in the cargo hole without any need for outside air. Defeating the cargo holds air tight design, which was theoretically to prevent fire by eliminating oxygen.

00:25:23 Andrew

I was not saying that.

00:25:29 Andrew

So no oxygen, no fire.

00:25:31 Andrew

Therefore it's.

00:25:32 Andrew

But when you put oxygen generating devices in there, you now have a recipe for a fire.

00:25:39 Brandon

Two questions.

00:25:40 Andrew

Yeah.

00:25:42 Brandon

Is a pet cargo a whole different from a regular cargo hold?

00:25:46 Andrew

They've changed cargo holds.

00:25:49 Andrew

No animals can go to the cargo hold.

00:25:52 Andrew

I'll come back to that, but investigators determined in the process the fire began to destroy the control cables that ran in the back of the aircraft, which is why the pilots began losing control before it crashed.

00:26:04 Andrew

And the airplane was under positive control by the pilots until the sharp turn right and dive prior to impact.

00:26:12 Andrew

They were giving it their best effort.

00:26:15 Brandon

Yeah.

00:26:16 Brandon

Second question, doesn't every basically every rechargeable battery listening on a battery?

00:26:17 Andrew

Yeah, go ahead.

00:26:22 Andrew

Yes.

00:26:22 Brandon

Yeah. And how many people just played me live? Yeah.

00:26:24 Andrew

Why?

00:26:26 Andrew

Yeah, that's true.

00:26:27 Andrew

Not ideal.

00:26:30 Andrew

But the regulatory that came regulatory change that came to this and that's why it's more to come is that smoke detectors in the cargo holds can alert the flight crew fire long before the problem becomes apparent in the cabin. And a fire suppression system buys valuable time to.

00:26:41 Andrew

Mm.

00:26:44 Andrew

The plane safely.

00:26:45 Andrew

This would have prevented a scenario similar to this this crash.

00:26:49 Andrew

In which the emergency had escalated beyond the flight crews ability to respond by the time that the problem had become apparent.

00:26:55 Andrew

In February 1998, the FAA issued revised standards requiring all Class D Cargo holds, which this one was to be converted by early 2001 to Class C or E These types of holds have additional fire detection and fire suppression equipment.

00:27:05 Brandon

You understand?

00:27:11 Andrew

But yes, animals can go in the cargo hold and survive, so I would suspect they're not as airtight, because otherwise you would die.

00:27:19 Andrew

But if you have fire detection suppression, that's theoretically a better system than just depriving oxygen.

00:27:25 Andrew

In this situation there something they can do.

00:27:27 Andrew

Mean there's too much oxygen.

00:27:29 Brandon

Mm.

00:27:31 Andrew

So you.

00:27:31 Andrew

This at least made some positive change in the way that cargo holds were handled and the way that fire suppression and fire detection were implemented in future aircraft.

00:27:42 Brandon

But if you had to go to a Class C or a class E, just getting rid of the Class D cargo holes.

00:27:51 Andrew

Yeah, that is weird.

00:27:53 Andrew

It's like it's an elegant solution.

00:27:55 Andrew

Make it airtight.

00:27:57 Andrew

But unfortunately this was literally the perfect.

00:28:00 Andrew

Storm Perfect series of events. But when air disasters are so uncommon, it almost has to be, you know, like if common things cause them and it happen all the time. But for them to be so spectacularly uncommon means that the perfect set of circumstances, and by perfect I.

00:28:17 Andrew

Worst set of circumstances would have to occur.

00:28:21 Andrew

Sure.

00:28:22 Brandon

So what?

00:28:22 Andrew

Hmm.

00:28:23 Brandon

Who, who got went to jail for this?

00:28:26 Andrew

Really. Basically the company got in trouble. Some value jet got in trouble.

00:28:33 Andrew

The maintenance contractor got in trouble for marking these as empty.

00:28:39 Andrew

But there were no.

00:28:40 Andrew

I don't believe there were any criminal charges. I I don't have that information. But the main contributors were just the airline and the maintenance people who loaded the stuff on the plane.

00:28:52 Brandon

It feels like you're.

00:28:53 Brandon

The real.

00:28:54 Brandon

Here in pop culture, the series premiere of CSI Miami.

00:28:59 Brandon

Also, reference elements of this crash, such as the Everglades search.

00:29:01 Andrew

Oh, I missed that. It makes sense.

00:29:04 Andrew

Yeah, I did miss that. I'm sorry.

00:29:07 Brandon

Stop two and two together.

00:29:08 Andrew

Yeah, I don't even wanna know what Horatio Kane says in the beginning of that episode.

00:29:14 Brandon

I think I want to say they were still serial like serious more serious back then before.

00:29:19 Andrew

Right, right. Yeah.

00:29:21 Brandon

Yeah, Hindu.

00:29:25 Brandon

Well, you know what they say.

00:29:28 Brandon

The evergrades suck evergrades.

00:29:30 Andrew

Yeah, evergreens.

00:29:33

Yeah.

00:29:34 Andrew

Put those glasses on.

00:29:36 Andrew

That's the worst.

00:29:37 Andrew

I.

00:29:37 Andrew

Of the whole song, by the way.

00:29:39 Brandon

I still remember the one where he's like you.

00:29:42 Brandon

Know what they say.

00:29:44 Brandon

Speed kills.

00:29:47 Andrew

Replay.

00:29:49 Andrew

Oh gosh. Well, umm, let's see.

00:29:52 Andrew

Was in May, right?

00:29:55 Andrew

Well, unfortunately two months passed.

00:29:59 Brandon

Two months passed.

00:30:00 Andrew

And then another thing happens.

00:30:02 Brandon

Another thing did happen, yes.

00:30:05 Andrew

So I think more people are familiar with the Transworld Airlines flight 800 or TWA 800.

00:30:14 Andrew

Although I have a new conspiracy theory on why this one happened.

00:30:17 Brandon

Interesting.

00:30:18 Andrew

And has transfer.

00:30:19 Andrew

So I believe Donald Trump was responsible for yeah, sorry.

00:30:24 Brandon

Taking it out, you know.

00:30:25 Andrew

I'm just saying.

00:30:27 Andrew

Anyway, that's. That was my little joke. But we'll get into the serious nature of this now.

00:30:33 Andrew

So this was a scheduled international passenger flight from JFK in New York to Rome with a stop over in France.

00:30:41 Andrew

12 minutes after take off the Boeing 747 100 exploded and crashed into the Atlantic Ocean South of the Hamptons.

00:30:49 Andrew

New York.

00:30:51 Andrew

You know, the Hamptons is.

00:30:53 Brandon

Yes, it's where that one concierge Dr. on us a practice medicine.

00:30:58 Andrew

And Ina Garten Barefoot Contessa lives there.

00:31:01 Brandon

Was Jeffrey.

00:31:03 Andrew

Jeffrey Jeffrey's gonna love.

00:31:04 Andrew

He.

00:31:05 Andrew

He's not gonna love this podcast, though.

00:31:06 Brandon

He was a.

00:31:07 Brandon

He was a that was a question yesterday at trivia, which we won, by the way.

00:31:11 Andrew

Emeritus Dean of I think business at Yale.

00:31:14 Andrew

Really. Yeah.

00:31:17 Brandon

'Cause, I figured he was just like a trap husband or something.

00:31:20 Andrew

No, he's he's an emeritus professor of, I think it's economics or something at at Yale, so you know.

00:31:29 Andrew

Anyway, the aircraft involved was manufactured in July 1971, so I guess 25 years old and completed nearly 17,000 flights in around 93 hours of operation.

00:31:35 Andrew

Mm.

00:31:44 Andrew

The crew is led by 58 year old captain Ralph G Kevorkian. That's not.

00:31:51 Brandon

No, no relations.

00:31:53 Andrew

Don't know. Actually I feel like they would.

00:31:55 Andrew

Said that, it's not.

00:31:57 Andrew

It's just like that name has become, so you know.

00:32:01 Brandon

Synonymous with foreign.

00:32:02 Andrew

Synonymous. It also seems kind of like a rare name. Anyway, correct us if we're wrong.

00:32:06 Andrew

Phoned for TWA for 31 years in the US Air Force for nine years and had logged many, many hours.

00:32:12 Andrew

And then the other captain, Steven E Snyder, 57, had flown for TWA for 32 years.

00:32:21 Andrew

There actually.

00:32:22 Andrew

Like four other people, there was like people training in the cockpit and the navigator. And like the systems person. But it just got to be too many people to.

00:32:29 Andrew

Name them all so.

00:32:32 Andrew

There were actually 230 people on board in total, which included sixteen other crew members and 20 off duty employees. Because those employees were going to be the crew meant to cover the Paris to Rome leg.

00:32:43 Andrew

But unfortunately none of the 230 occupants of the aircraft survived.

00:32:51 Andrew

Notable to passengers.

00:32:53 Andrew

This is a brief list.

00:32:55 Andrew

More.

00:32:56 Andrew

This is.

00:32:57 Andrew

Jed Johnson, Andy Warhol's partner of 12 years, interior designer and director, passed away.

00:33:01 Andrew

Hmm.

00:33:04 Brandon

Group to match.

00:33:05 Andrew

Pam Lichtner, American crime victims rights advocate and former TWA flight attendant.

00:33:11 Brandon

Look the Max.

00:33:13 Andrew

This one maybe you'll know.

00:33:14 Andrew

You won't.

00:33:15 Andrew

Courtney Elizabeth Johns, sister of Jeff Johns.

00:33:18 Andrew

You know why?

00:33:19 Andrew

Important.

00:33:20 Brandon

Jeff Jones, the comic book artist.

00:33:22 Andrew

Yes.

00:33:25 Andrew

In sister Courtney, Elizabeth Johns was the inspiration for the DC comic superhero Courtney Whitmore Slash Star Girl.

00:33:32 Brandon

Oh really?

00:33:33 Andrew

So I figured I'd do.

00:33:34 Andrew

In there for you. I knew you that one. Yeah.

00:33:35 Brandon

Appreciate that.

00:33:37 Andrew

Jack O'Hara, executive producer of ABC Sports, along with his wife and daughter, he was going to France to supervise coverage of.

00:33:44 Andrew

Tour de France.

00:33:46 Andrew

To the phone, yeah.

00:33:46 Andrew

Bike race, right?

00:33:47 Andrew

This is the saddest part in what was to be his last assignment for the network after being let go the previous week.

00:33:54

I knew enough.

00:33:54 Andrew

God, if you were.

00:33:55 Andrew

If you thought you were having a bad day.

00:33:58 Andrew

Yeah, that's that's really rough.

00:34:03 Andrew

And to make it even worse, so sorry, 16 students and five little chaperones from the French club of the Montoursville Area High School in Pennsylvania also passed away on this flight.

00:34:15 Brandon

Sorry, did they?

00:34:18 Brandon

They also have like 16 newborn babies and a creative puppies and.

00:34:24 Andrew

Yeah.

00:34:26 Andrew

It was a bunch of nuns on their way to a.

00:34:28 Andrew

Now this isn't funny, but it's like it just goes to show you that like it's always just a combination of regular people going through regular things and like some of them having a bad day, something about to go on a trip of a lifetime.

00:34:39 Andrew

It's just.

00:34:40 Andrew

Yeah.

00:34:41 Andrew

It's why it's such a tragedy when these things.

00:34:44 Andrew

Happen because you.

00:34:45 Andrew

We'd like it to never happen, but it's impossible to make it 0.

00:34:50 Brandon

And I.

00:34:50 Andrew

You try.

00:34:51 Brandon

Jeff Johns is a comic book writer, screenwriter, and film and television producer.

00:34:54 Andrew

OK, I see.

00:34:56 Brandon

Isn't an artist.

00:34:59 Andrew

So I'm going to read a little bit about why this happened on Twitter.

00:35:02 Andrew

Through.

00:35:02 Andrew

Here on the day of the accident, the airplane departed from Athens, Greece, as TWA Flight 881 arrived at JFK in the evening 430 and then refuelled, and the crew was changed.

00:35:03 Andrew

Hmm.

00:35:13 Brandon

Places.

00:35:15 Andrew

The ground maintenance crew locked out the thrust reverser for engine #3 because of technical problems with the sensors during the landing at JFK and additionally severed cables for the engine's thrust reverser were replaced. Yikes.

00:35:21 Andrew

Mm.

00:35:29 Brandon

Yikes.

00:35:30 Andrew

During the fueling of the aircraft, the volumetric shutoff control, which I believe is like when you go to the gas pump and it turns.

00:35:36 Andrew

Off similar to that was believed to have been triggered before the tanks were full, so to continue the pressure fuelling TWA mechanic overrode the automatic VSO by pulling the fuse and an overflow circuit breaker.

00:35:51 Andrew

It indicates that the.

00:35:53 Andrew

Aircraft had numerous VSO related maintenance write ups in the weeks before the accident.

00:35:58 Andrew

The flight was disabled by about an hour because of some issue on the ground with some non aircraft equipment and a baggage problem.

00:36:07 Andrew

They pushed back from the gate and they started the engines at 8:00.

00:36:10 Andrew

Interestingly, they only started engines 1-2 and four and then started #3 about 10 minutes later. During the taxi we departed uneventfully, taking off from runway 22 right 5 minutes later at 8:19 PM.

00:36:27 Andrew

They receive their usual series of heading changes and generally increasing attitude.

00:36:32 Andrew

Sorry, altitude assignments and weather in the area was light winds, scattered clouds, dust, lighting conditions.

00:36:39 Andrew

The last radio transmission from the airplane occurred 11 minutes later at 8:30 PM when the flight flight crew received and acknowledged instructions from Boston Center to climb to 15,000 feet.

00:36:53 Andrew

The last recorded radar transponder returned from the airplane was.

00:36:56 Andrew

By the FAA radar.

00:36:58 Andrew

8:31 PM, which is presumably.

00:37:02 Andrew

Around when it crashed or exploded.

00:37:07 Andrew

38 seconds later, David McLean, the captain of Eastwind Airlines flight 507, a Boeing 737, reported to Boston that he just he quote, just saw an explosion out here. Adding quote, we just saw an explosion up ahead of us here about 16,000 feet.

00:37:21 Andrew

Something like that.

00:37:23 Andrew

It just went down into the water.

00:37:26 Andrew

Subsequently, many air traffic control facilities in the area received reports of an explosion from other pilots and witnesses in the vicinity saw her explosions and large fireballs observed.

00:37:38 Andrew

Debris, sorry.

00:37:41 Andrew

And various civilian, military and police vessels reached the crash site within minutes of the initial impact.

00:37:45 Andrew

Unfortunately, the search for survivors was fruitless and making this the second deadliest aircraft incident in the United States at that time.

00:37:56 Brandon

It brings pride's depressed.

00:38:00 Andrew

Detritus.

00:38:02 Andrew

So the NTSB investigation ended with the adoption of the board's final report in August 2000.

00:38:09 Andrew

And they determined that the probable cause was an explosion of the center wing fuel tank resulting from ignition of the flammable.

00:38:18 Andrew

Fuel air mixture in the tank.

00:38:20 Andrew

The source of ignition could not be determined uncertainty, but of the sources evaluated with the investigation. The most likely was a short circuit outside of the tank that allowed excessive voltage to enter it through electrical wiring associated with the fuel quantity indication system or gas gauge.

00:38:38 Andrew

Let's turn.

00:38:40 Brandon

Have you seen the?

00:38:43 Brandon

The frame of the CIA's animated depiction of how the TWA Flight 800 broke apart.

00:38:50 Andrew

No, but I feel like I should watch that.

00:38:52 Brandon

Did you just? Did you just described it right? Like the?

00:38:54 Andrew

Yeah.

00:38:56 Brandon

The bottom of the aircraft blew out from exploding fuel tank and it cracks better on a fuselage and severed the entire front section of the plane.

00:39:10 Brandon

Take the plane got decapitated.

00:39:10 Andrew

Addition in addition to the probable cause, the NTSB found that the control and contributing factors, the design and certification concept that fuel tank explosions can be prevented solely by precluding ignition sources.

00:39:25 Andrew

And the certification of the 747 with heat sources located beneath the central wing.

00:39:31 Andrew

With no means to reduce the heat transferred into the CWT or to render the fuel tank vapor non combustible.

00:39:38 Andrew

In its final report, the NTSB issued 15 safety recommendations, mostly covering fuel, tank and wiring related issues.

00:39:45 Andrew

Apparently we've adopted some like 83% of all NTSB recommendations.

00:39:50 Andrew

That's good.

00:39:52 Andrew

Along the recommendations was that significant consideration should be given to the development of modifications such as nitrogen in nerding systems for new airplane designs.

00:40:01 Andrew

So basically pumping nitrogen in so that it can't combust because there's no oxygen.

00:40:06 Andrew

Familiar.

00:40:06 Andrew

As long.

00:40:06 Andrew

As I don't keep oxygen generators in.

00:40:07 Andrew

Mm hmm.

00:40:08 Andrew

Fuel tank. We should be fine.

00:40:11 Andrew

All right.

00:40:12 Brandon

But you don't ask about that at the airport these days.

00:40:15 Andrew

Some other legacy stuff though.

00:40:17 Andrew

So the crash of TWA and out of value jet Flight 592 earlier 96 prompted Congress to pass the aviation Disaster Family Assistance Act of 1996.

00:40:17 Andrew

Mm.

00:40:29 Andrew

Among other things, it gives the NTSB instead of the particular airline involved, responsibility for coordinating services to the families of victims of fatal aircraft accidents.

00:40:39 Andrew

In addition, this is.

00:40:41 Andrew

It restricts lawyers and other parties from contacting family members within 30 days.

00:40:44 Andrew

The accident.

00:40:45 Andrew

So pretty much NTSB is where all those.

00:40:48 Andrew

Group and it's a bipartisan, you know, committee.

00:40:48 Brandon

Interesting.

00:40:53 Andrew

It's not very politicized.

00:40:57 Andrew

However.

00:40:59 Andrew

During the investigation, the NTSB and FBI.

00:41:01 Andrew

With each other.

00:41:02 Andrew

The agencies lacked a detailed protocol describing which agencies should take the lead.

00:41:07 Andrew

It was because there was some thought that maybe there was a bomb that exploded or there was a missile or terrorist attack.

00:41:13 Andrew

The FBI wanted to get involved.

00:41:17 Andrew

At the time of the crash, the federal regulations specified that the Ntsb's Aviation accident investigations have priority over all federal investigations, but the FBI felt there could have been criminal involvement.

00:41:27 Andrew

They felt they had to be.

00:41:29 Andrew

So after the after the investigation, it was recognized for a better. There was a need for better clarity.

00:41:35 Andrew

And so the NTSB sought and secured language by the issue in 20.

00:41:39 Andrew

1000, which then led to in 2005, the NTSB and FBI entering into a memorandum of understanding in that the NTSB will be the key investigative agency, but that they will coordinate with the FBI and they can share resources.

00:41:56 Andrew

To further investigate the.

00:41:57 Andrew

So this did help basically solidify the NTSB as the definitive body to investigate Air Accidents.

00:42:05 Andrew

The last two things that are kind of interesting for almost 25 years, the wreckage of Flight 800 was kept by the NTSB and used as an Accident Investigation teaching aid.

00:42:17 Andrew

By 2021, the methods taught using the wreckage were determined to no longer be relevant to modern Accident Investigation, which then relied heavily on new technology, including three-dimensional laser scanning.

00:42:28 Andrew

They did not wish to renew the lease to decommissioned in 2021 and.

00:42:35 Andrew

They scanned or had planned to scan each piece with a three-dimensional scanner, with the data being permanently archived, after which the record records would be destroyed in the metal recycled.

00:42:48 Andrew

Wreckage was destroyed in June 2023 near the former Ashburn facility, in which it was housed.

00:42:55 Andrew

So it taught a lot of people about air investigations, air crash investigations and clarified investigative policies.

00:43:02 Andrew

It improved the design of fuel tanks and it allowed the NTSB to be the primary point of contact for the families of the victims, so.

00:43:11 Andrew

Overall, you know.

00:43:13 Andrew

At least there were some positive changes made to the the industry and the safety recommendations, which is, if you look for the small bright spot in any of these things, that would be it.

00:43:26 Brandon

Yeah.

00:43:28 Brandon

Another thing I noticed is that.

00:43:32 Brandon

There's an article from 1996 from the LA Times talking about how.

00:43:34 Andrew

Hmm.

00:43:40 Brandon

Atwa pilot that was a friend of.

00:43:45 Brandon

Not Jack.

00:43:45 Brandon

What was his?

00:43:46 Brandon

Robert Nope, the Cav working.

00:43:48 Andrew

The pilot.

00:43:50 Andrew

Oh yeah, Kevorkian, Kevorkian, kevorkian.

00:43:52 Brandon

Ralph Ralph's working.

00:43:53 Andrew

Ralph kevorkian.

00:43:56 Brandon

So apparently at the time that.

00:43:59 Brandon

Just like now, the some baseless accusations came out based on incomplete facts.

00:44:07 Brandon

Before.

00:44:09 Brandon

Like you were saying.

00:44:11 Brandon

And they were like this working guy had a strike on his record, and apparently the strike is he landed a plane.

00:44:23 Brandon

When he was told to turn away.

00:44:26 Brandon

In.

00:44:26 Brandon

Louis, because he did want to wait to burn off 7000 lbs of.

00:44:34 Brandon

Fuel and.

00:44:39 Brandon

'Cause there was like a winter storm coming in and he didn't want to try to make it to New York with on low fuel because he was afraid.

00:44:39 Andrew

Yeah, it's crazy like.

00:44:47 Brandon

Would.

00:44:48 Brandon

Sent away after he burned off? Yeah.

00:44:50 Andrew

Yeah, I'm gonna get stuck.

00:44:51 Andrew

Yeah. And then so he therefore blew up the plane he was flying.

00:44:55 Andrew

What are you talking about?

00:44:56 Brandon

Exactly, yeah.

00:44:57 Andrew

The stupidest.

00:44:58 Andrew

Thing.

00:44:59 Andrew

I mean, they're they detected explosive residue at one point, so they thought there was a bomb.

00:45:02 Andrew

Go home.

00:45:04 Andrew

But like the wreckage, pattern didn't show any of things that happened to metal when there's an explosion.

00:45:08 Andrew

Right.

00:45:09 Andrew

From an explosive device and it turned out they had done like a.

00:45:15 Andrew

Dog bomb sniffing dog exercise in that plane. Or they theorize that.

00:45:19 Andrew

Perhaps some explosive residue from a military vessel you know was tracked into that.

00:45:25 Andrew

You know the area or contaminated on the part, so you know.

00:45:29 Andrew

They couldn't really approve it and I think their explanation is pretty plausible.

00:45:34 Andrew

Fuel and mixed with air is pretty damn explosive. Although Jeff feels a little bit more like.

00:45:42 Andrew

Diesel, which requires a sustained.

00:45:47 Andrew

You don't have a spark plug in a diesel.

00:45:49 Andrew

You have a glow.

00:45:49 Andrew

It requires, like a sustained higher heat ignition point, so perhaps this.

00:45:52 Andrew

Come on.

00:45:56 Andrew

Short circuit caused a an issue there, but it makes you wonder if like the volumetric.

00:46:01 Andrew

Since everything wasn't working like, was there a problem with the pressure in the tank or whatever?

00:46:06 Andrew

Yeah, I mean it's it's a real.

00:46:08 Andrew

In any case.

00:46:10 Brandon

Yeah. And then I also got distracted because it said the only times had an article.

00:46:15 Brandon

Said Trump floods California by releasing Northern California water.

00:46:23 Brandon

Federal federally run dam or something? I don't know.

00:46:26 Andrew

The front.

00:46:27 Andrew

Anyway.

00:46:27 Andrew

Is going to kill those marmots or whatever.

00:46:29 Brandon

He's gonna flood the Central Valley.

00:46:33 Brandon

And cause a drought for.

00:46:35 Andrew

There's a wave of water behind you that you can't see right now.

00:46:38 Andrew

Oh no.

00:46:39 Brandon

And I'll see it.

00:46:40 Brandon

Yeah. Well, those were two crazy.

00:46:46 Brandon

1996 accidents that helped inform the future of aviation.

00:46:48 Andrew

Yeah, well, let's just hope that something is learned from these.

00:46:54 Andrew

Like don't speculate before all the facts are known. And then once we do all the facts, maybe we can prove the safety of aviation yet further.

00:47:02 Brandon

Bring divers.

00:47:04 Andrew

Yeah, that's ********, Donald.

00:47:09 Andrew

I'm Michael. Listen your podcast anymore.

00:47:11 Andrew

A liberal.

00:47:12 Andrew

You think, OK.

00:47:13 Brandon

Wow, we had a BLM special like the third episode.

00:47:20 Andrew

I hope this wasn't offensive, that the intention was to, you know, sort of.

00:47:25 Andrew

Pay tribute learning about air safety in the US and you know, I just it's on everyone's mind right now.

00:47:28 Andrew

Mm.

00:47:32 Andrew

It.

00:47:33 Andrew

Seemed like a good topic to cover.

00:47:35 Brandon

Yeah, and it's.

00:47:36 Andrew

And we love aviation.

00:47:38 Brandon

Go ahead. That finish with the word aviation.

00:47:44 Brandon

All right.

00:47:46 Brandon

Any final?

00:47:46 Brandon

Well, that was your final.

00:47:48 Andrew

That was my final.

00:47:48 Brandon

We have sets of. Yeah. That's it for this week's edition of the 90s.

00:47:51 Brandon

In your findings, is out every Monday until the end of May.

00:47:55 Brandon

Find some Instagram, blue sky and YouTube. Which ones talk about a future episodes people like to support the show.

00:48:03 Brandon

Check out our patreonpatreon.com/david.

00:48:06 Brandon

And finally, you can also contact us through our website namingandes.com.

00:48:10 Brandon

Subscribe to us on Apple Podcast, Spotify, YouTube, audible, the giant floodwaters that secretly behind me, pocket cast cast box I heart good pods and whatever you podcast from raining.

00:48:21 Brandon

That's Andrew, and we'll catch you next time.

00:48:46 Andrew

I'm the onion driving.