Delta flight diverts when engine fails

Some poor soul forgot to torque nose dome, tell me it ain't so...
It ain't so Mike, that is the #1 bearing exposed! The N1 cover is gone, looks more like a bearing, or oil pump gear failure. Just
covering the back of a fellow A&P, God knows his management will not.
 
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Kev, thanks for the link. The input from other readers was really interesting. I flew MD-80s for most of my career at AA (low seniority means you fly older planes:(. I actually liked flying the 80s. They have (soon to be had at AA) the best First Class galley of any of the B737s and AB320, 321 group of a/c.
Oh, and in 15 years, I had exactly 1 incident similar to this one. We had an engine go out right after take-off from STL. (Loud bang, then less engine noise--pilot shut down the damaged engine. No dramatic shots like in this video.) The pilot very calmly brought the plane back to the airport, and we landed without incident.
 
It ain't so Mike, that is the #1 bearing exposed! The N1 cover is gone, looks more like a bearing, or oil pump gear failure. Just
covering the back of a fellow A&P, God knows his management will not.
I gotta go with chilokie1's assessment. Looks like failed bearing came apart.
Just so glad they landed safely and no injuries. Kudos to the Pilots and flight crew...
 

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