Incident Overview

Description
The aircraft suffered an uncontained failure of the No. 2 engine during takeoff roll. The takeoff was rejected and a no. 2 engine shutdown procedure was accomplished. The 727 was broken up at Miami October, 1999. PROBABLE CAUSE: “The catastrophic failure of the 8th stage high pressure compressor disk from cadmium embrittlement as a result of improper adherence to the prescribed plating procedures and requirements by the company that last plated the disk. Contributing to the accident was the failure of the engine repair company to provide adequate surveillance and oversight of the plating company, the engine repair companies use of an unauthorized repair vendor, the plating company, and the engine repair companies failure to inform the aircraft operator that they had used the plating company which was not on the aircraft operators vendor list. Also contributing to the accident was the aircraft operators failure to audit the engine repair company to the level of detail that they would have discovered the engine repair company was using an unauthorized repair vendor.”
Primary Cause
Catastrophic failure of the 8th stage high pressure compressor disk from cadmium embrittlement due to improper adherence to prescribed plating procedures and requirements by the company that last plated the disk.Catastrophic failure of the 8th stage high pressure compressor disk from cadmium embrittlement due to improper adherence to prescribed plating procedures and requirements by the company that last plated the disk.Share on: