Wednesday, July 10, 2024 - A United Airlines jet lost a landing-gear wheel during take-off from Los Angeles but was able to land safely in Denver, its planned destination, with no injuries.
It was the second such incident for the airline this year.
"The wheel has been recovered in Los Angeles, and we
are investigating what caused this event,” United said in a statement.
The aircraft involved in the incident on Monday, July 8, was
a nearly 30-year-old Boeing 757-200, which was carrying 174 passengers and 7
crew members.
Boeing ended production of the 757 in 2004.
In March, a United Airlines Boeing 777-200 jet headed for
Japan lost a tire mid-air after takeoff from San Francisco, landing safely at
Los Angeles International Airport. The wheel landed on a car in an airport
employee parking lot, breaking a car window, but no one was hurt.
Monday’s incident was the latest in a string of incidents
involving United Airlines planes. One aircraft was forced to make an emergency
landing at Los Angeles international airport in March due to an issue with its
hydraulic system.
Elsewhere that month, another flight was attempting to land
in Houston when it rolled off the taxiway and into the grass.
Also in March, a flight carrying 167 passengers made an
emergency landing in Houston, after bright flames burst out of the engine of
the United Flight 1118, a Boeing 737-900 en route from Houston to Fort Myers,
Florida.
US flight issues were catapulted into the headline in
January, after a door plug blew off an Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 MAX 9 in
mid-air, shortly after it took off from Portland Oregon, forcing it to make an
emergency landing. Several people were injured.
In April, United Airlines blamed a $200m (£161m) hit to its
earnings in the first three months of the year on the incident, saying the
mid-flight blowout on rival Alaska Airlines forced it to ground many of its
Boeing planes, contributing to the losses.
0 Comments