Iron Maiden’s “Ed Force One” plane has been repaired following its March 12 collision and will take off today from Santiago, Chile to rejoin the tour in Brazil.
Following the show at Nilsen Nelson Arena, the plane will be loaded up once again on Wednesday with over 20 tons of equipment and the band’s tour personnel to fly to Fortaleza for the concert on Thursday and on from there to Sao Paulo then New York and onwards round the world on “The Book Of Souls” world tour.
The accident required the replacing of both of the Boeing 747’s port side jet engines, a tough proposition at the best of times but not made any easier by the fact of the distances involved in getting such huge components, parts, tools and technical crew to Chile as quickly as possible to get Ed Force One back in the air.
Ed Force One is leased from Air Atlanta who went into immediate action following the incident, with technical assistance from Boeing. An emergency meeting on the Sunday was called to create a comprehensive detailed plan for this complex operation — locating suitable engines, thrust reversers, cowlings and parts, working out necessary tooling and technical team, logistics of ground and freight transport and tech team travel and a myriad of other detail. All from scratch. The next couple of days were spent putting these plans meticulously into place
The result was that on last Thursday, March 17, a Cargolux chartered 747 freighter left Luxembourg carrying two huge replacement jet engines, trucked there from Hannover, Germany. The charter stopped over at Stansted Airport, Essex, U.K. to collect two more consignments. Cowlings and thrust reversers were trucked there in huge boxes from Kemble, U.K., along with tooling and consumables flown in specially from Jeddah to Heathrow and hauled to Stansted. The chartered 747 then completed the 12,000km (7410 miles) flight to Santiago , arriving at 9 a.m. Friday morning. The technicians were flown there from Iceland and from Air Atlanta ‘s base in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, six in total, to join with Ed Force One ‘s own two onboard techs, Bjorn Bjarnason and Sigurbjarni (Barney) Thormundsson, and Jeremy Smith of Rock It Cargo Ltd. , who is on tour with the band supervising the freight and customs aspects.
The engines were cleared by Chilean customs Friday lunchtime and they were transferred to the LAN Chile maintenance area of the airport arriving just before 2 p.m. Working in shifts 24 hours a day, the techs were then able to start removing engine number one and then on Saturday engine number two. Using hoists and cranes, the damaged engines had to be detached then lowered into a cradle in order to swap with the new replacement engines. The replacement engines were then lifted up and into a place. Once the support pylons had been inspected and x-rayed and damage assessed, both of which passed with flying colours, then the new engines were attached with, as one of the techs said, a “million” wires. Both were finally in place and attached by Sunday lunchtime and then the thrust reversers fitted overnight, almost as complex an operation as fitting the actual engines due to being right under the wing. Final piece of the jigsaw was for the Eddie decals to be fitted and then both engines tested by running to full power.
Bruce Dickinson , Iron Maiden vocalist and pilot of Ed Force One, commented : “The speed and thoroughness of this incredibly complex operation was stunning, and we are so very pleased to get our plane back!
We would like to thank Air Atlanta and their terrific rescue team for a fantastic effort in achieving this in the time they did, and to Boeing, LAN Chile. ACS and Rock It Cargo for all their invaluable support.
We are sorry, though, for our fans in Cordoba, Buenos Aires, Rio and Belo Horizonte who missed out seeing the plane, but we hope they enjoyed the concerts as much as we did.
We should also thank our killer crew, who found themselves at lunchtime on the Saturday of the accident with over 20 tons of equipment at the airport in Santiago and over 60 people all to get to Cordoba for early the next day to set up the huge show we are carrying. The distance is ‘only’ 1000km, but with a small matter of the Andes in between! They did it, by the skin of the teeth, and all went very well for the show in Cordoba and the other cities Ed Force One just missed.
It’s quite a feat of logistics to find and put into action at such short notice all the transport, replacement air charters, schedule flights etc. to enable us to play those next four shows on time without Ed Force One , our transport for everything.”
source: Ironmaiden.com