Posted on 12/27/2005 6:34:42 PM PST by paulat
Hole found in Alaska plane
05:30 PM PST on Tuesday, December 27, 2005 KING5.com
Investigators: Problems spike after ramp work outsourced
SEATTLE An Alaska Airlines plane was forced to return to Seattle Monday after a gash in the planes fuselage caused the aircraft to lose pressurization.
The incident began when a ramp worker hit the plane with a baggage cart or baggage belt machine, according to National Transportation Safety Board spokesman Jim Struhsaker.
The accident created a crease in the skin of the plane which opened up into a hole when the pressure on the plane changed at 26,000 feet.
The employee told the agency that although the vehicle had touched the plane, he was not aware that he had dented it.
At that time in the driving rain it did not appear to be significant to him, Stuhsaker said.
According to Alaska Airlines and accounts provided to KING 5 News by passengers, flight 536 took off from Sea-Tac at 3:50 p.m., bound for Burbank, Calif.
Alaska Airlines flight 536 was forced to return to Sea-Tac Monday after it lost cabin pressure. Passenger Jeremy Hermanns took this snapshot of the scene after the oxygen masks had dropped down.
About 10 or 20 minutes into the flight, there was a loud noise and the cabin lost pressure. The plane then descended rapidly before returning to Sea-Tac, said Caroline Boren, a spokeswoman for Alaska Airlines.
Passenger accounts of the incident paint a scary picture.
I could feel that obviously my ears popping and that's not a good symbol and that didn't go away and then it got hard to breathe and then whoosh all the compression in the plane was lost. We totally decompressed, said passenger Jeremy Hermanns.
He said everyone on board scrambled to get their masks on and then the engine noise became very loud.
We knew that something was going on it was definitely frightening. It wasn't something I wanted to do again, he said.
Jeremy Hermanns shot this image of himself with his oxygen mask on after the plane he was on lost cabin pressure.
Hermanns believes, nevertheless that the crew handled the situation well.
I'm just very glad that the pilots and the crew and everybody handled it so well, he said.
Thanks for the new link.
feh, they didnt follow procedures. one ramper stands by the pit door and guides the belt loader in to a stop, the other drives it. They get hit often but you have to smack it hard to dent it like that.
Company rampers weren't much better but they had more to lose if they screwed up. Plus the Union would protect them.
That's impossible.
I was in Vegas playing blackjack at the Golden Nugget all weekend.
LOL dont fly and drink!
your welcome
..the airline says its a normal transition period..
any organization that puts a planeload of passengers in serious jeopardy and claims it a part of a normal transition is NUTS and not desereving of an airworthiness certificate
where are you FAA?
and people ride this death wagon?
"I tried Delta once, and was sure we were sardines."
At least you apparently got on the aircraft. Every time I fly Delta, a little cloud appears on the horizon, we do a ground hold for weather for 4 hours, and I miss my connections.
OK, maybe not every time, but it feels like it.
Monday, 26 Dec 2005
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Alaska has some maintenance issues as well. (Same deal - contracted out maintenance with mixed results).
I'll fly Delta if I can, but usually and in the winter almost always, the only choice is AKAir.
Not anymore.
You nailed it. I'm waiting breathlessly for their response...but not as breathlessly as the passengers were....
TSA Screener movin' up?
Jenny...you are BAD!!! (LOL!!!)
Thanks to Paulat for posting this must read article.
Aviation ping
Thanks for passing it on. It makes me sad...I remember when Alaska was a real class act!
Cool one there!
Just poking holes in airplanes that Americans aren't willing to poke.
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