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Don Hanson
McDonnell Douglas
(562) 593-4710

McDonnell Douglas

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

97-59A

MCDONNELL DOUGLAS TO CONVERT CARGO JETS IN ARIZONA

Long Beach, Calif., March 6, 1997 -- McDonnell Douglas has selected an airport complex at Goodyear, Ariz., near Phoenix, as a principal center for converting McDonnell Douglas DC-10 jetliners to advanced technology MD-10 cargo jets for use by Federal Express.

The Douglas Aircraft Company division of McDonnell Douglas has signed a contract to do major modifications on at least 12 DC-10s for FedEx at the Goodyear site.

Under an agreement reached last fall between McDonnell Douglas and Federal Express, Douglas Aircraft will manage passenger-to-freighter modifications on up to 60 DC-10s, which will be redesignated as MD-10s.

The number of conversions and the timing will be determined by Federal Express as its needs dictate.

Douglas will be responsible for MD-10 engineering, systems integration, program management, flight test and certification of the converted aircraft.

The Goodyear facility will be operated under McDonnell Douglas' Federal Aviation Administration repair station license, and will be the site of work performed under a contract with Dimension Aviation. Work will begin at the site this month.

McDonnell Douglas has signed a separate contract with Dimension Aviation for work converting MD-11 passenger jets to freighters for Federal Express. That work also begins this month.

MD-10 modifications will be done in two phases. The first step involves converting DC-10 passenger jets to freighters. Completion of three aircraft is expected by next fall. Deliveries under the initial contract will continue on a regular basis into 2000.

A contract for the second phase modifications has not yet been awarded. The second phase on each aircraft will consist of installing the McDonnell Douglas Advanced Common Flightdeck which requires a crew of only two people, rather than the three-person DC-10 crew.

Honeywell Air Transport Systems of Phoenix will provide the advanced avionics systems for the cockpit.

Federal Express is acquiring passenger DC-10s from both United Airlines and American Airlines for the passenger-to-cargo conversion and will require the advanced flightdeck on those aircraft.

The Goodyear facility includes two large aircraft hangars totaling more than 240,000 square feet of space, more than 65,000 square feet of support shops and office space, plus associated taxiways and ramp space for aircraft parking. The location will accommodate work on as many as four DC-10s at one time.

McDonnell Douglas has also selected Aeronavali, a company in the Finmeccanica / Alenia group in Italy, to be a European second source location for DC-10 conversions. Aeronavali, which has capacity available for work exceeding the current availability of domestic facilities, will convert 13 DC-10 Series 10s to the freighter configuration starting this year.

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