Posted on 10/11/2005 5:25:10 AM PDT by topher
Yesterday, October 10, 2005, a flight from one of the Chicago area airports to a NYC airport, alerted passengers just before landing that they had lost one of their engines.
The flight landed okay, but fire trucks were on the runway as the plane landed.
One of the passengers heard a sound when the engine was lost (apparently when the aircraft was at least 20,000 feet in altitude).
The passenger decribed the sound as a "whiz" not as a bang or "pop".
Apparently a Freeper exclusive -- no other reports of this incident. The flight number was 1082.
Don't you waste more gas by stopping and starting than by letting your engine idle? Something I read once said turning on an engine is equivalent to idling for about 60 seconds (or more), not to mention wear and tear on your starter.
Some recently built aircraft don't even have engine failures in their emergency checklists; they consider it "abnormal" :)
Not likely related. About a year ago a NWA flight I was on diverted to the nearest airport because it had lost one of its two engines; didn't get home until the following day. Before that, in 2000, I had another NWA incident: center engine blew 5 minutes into the flight. (NWA isn't the only airline I've seen with mechanical problems: KLM has yet to get me out of Stuttgart on time.)
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