Posted on 02/08/2024 10:58:50 AM PST by george76
The jets collided on the tarmac while passengers were inside both aircraft..
One was headed to Las Vegas, while the other was on its way to Orlando..
The FAA confirmed that the collision occurred at 6.40am at the Boston airport
...
Two JetBlue airplanes collided on the tarmac at Boston's Logan Airport on Thursday.
The jets collided while a fleet full of passengers were inside both aircraft. One plane was left with damage to its wing, while the other aircraft’s tail section was wrecked.
Debris was scattered on the runway and both jets were taken out of service.
The incident on Thursday occurred after the planes pulled away from the gate around 6.40am. The FAA confirmed that one of the plane's 'left winglet' struck the 'right horizontal stabilizer' of the other passenger jet.
...
Our plane collided with another plane on the runway. You have to be some kind of stupid to let that happen.
'Your continuous downfall as the worst airline available is truly remarkable and should be studied. You are a bunch of morons.'
...
In March last year, two United Airlines planes made contact at Boston Logan Airport.
Last year, dozens of near-misses between aircrafts in the US were recorded.
There were 46 'close calls' in July 2023 alone, according to reports shared by the Federal Aviation Authority, and airline workers fear it's only a matter of time before a devastating incident in the US.
Recent examples include several cases of aircraft almost colliding during take-off or landing at major US airports. Others include a mid-air near miss between two planes traveling in excess of 500mph.
(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...
ATC or Plane crew. One or the other or possibly both. Too soon to tell. Obviously two planes can’t share the same runway. Many people have died at times when they do.
Well turns out United 777 was not a Boeing 777, it was a brand new A321 NEO, flt#777.
Airbus is having issues with it's PW engines on their A320neo "Airbus A320neo Pratt Engine Issues to Ground 650 Planes Next Year"(this was Sep 2023).
While true this is a PW not Airbus mfg. issue, one would think Airbus would get some "equal opportunity" MSM bashing.
...yet I found this out through some obscure UTube video.
It wasn’t the flight crews, it was the ground handlers.
These planes were not on the runway, they were near the gates. Ground control gives the planes clearance to push back, other than that, it is up to the plane crew and ground crew, to make sure the planes do not hit each other.
That is what I was thinking...ground crew.
Not ground crew but Ground controllers. They direct traffic and grant taxiing clearances, then hand off to Tower. The headline said the collision occurred on the tarmac so that’s typically the purview of Ground.
Good discussion here:
https://www.cfinotebook.net/notebook/air-traffic-control/radio-communications
Heaven’s to Betsy. They aren’t gliders!
Probably Airbus but a lot of Freepers been doggin’ on 30-year old 757’s for the tires coming off and such.
Re: 71 - So you know the sex of the aircrew involved in the collision?
The fact that they were not on the runway is what probably explains why no one died as their speeds were much lower.
Still the same people at fault though.
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