NTSB: Spirit jet had
'uncontained' engine failure By: Joan Lowy
(AP) An engine on an
Atlanta-bound Spirit Airlines jet
where passengers said they heard an explosion and saw flames sustained an especially serious type of failure, a National Transportation Safety Board official said Wednesday.
The official told The Associated
Press that it was an
"uncontained" engine failure, meaning broken pieces and parts of the engine escaped the outer engine housing. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly.
The plane returned to Dallas-Fort
Worth International
Airport on Tuesday and landed safely.
Passenger Fred Edwards told
WGCL-TV in Atlanta that
he heard an explosion before flames came up the side of the plane, lighting up the interior of the Airbus A319. He and other passengers reported that smoke then filled the cabin.
Spirit spokeswoman Misty Pinson
said no injuries were
reported. She said the captain received an indication of a "possible mechanical issue" shortly after takeoff from the Dallas-Fort Worth airport. She said by email Wednesday that there was no fire, before adding later that Spirit is "actively investigating to confirm the specifics of what happened and the cause."
The passengers were placed on
another Spirit jet for
Atlanta later Tuesday.
Aircraft engines are designed to
contain any broken
pieces within the engine during a failure. That's because when parts are released, they often spray like shrapnel and cause severe damage to fuel lines, electrical cables, hydraulic lines and other critical aircraft systems. Airliners are capable of safely flying with only one engine if the other engine breaks down or has to be shut off, but damage from an uncontained engine failure can jeopardize the plane.
Despite the government shutdown,
NTSB is recalling
furloughed investigators to open an investigation of the incident, the agency official said.
Federal Aviation Administration
spokeswoman Laura
Brown confirmed the agency is investigating the incident as well. |
at Oakland International Airport following a 'bird strike' Alaska Airlines flight was en route from San Jose to Honolulu this morning The 157 passengers and 6 crew members landed without injuries and re-boarded a different flight an hour later
(AP) An Alaska Airlines flight en
route from San Jose
to Honolulu today was forced to make an emergency landing in Oakland shortly after takeoff after the crew reported a possible bird strike. The flight landed without incident at Oakland International Airport around 9 a.m. Wednesday. No one was injured, officials said. Alaska Airlines spokeswoman Marianne Lindsey said the pilot reported feeling something ingested into an engine and landed as a precaution. The Alaska Airlines flight en route from San Jose to Honolulu was forced to make an emergency landing in Oakland. The plane likely hit a bird, but Lindsey said crews were still inspecting the plane in the afternoon and had not yet confirmed a bird strike. |
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