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Qantas plane turned back after bird strike

Z

Zangief

Guest

Qantas plane turned back after bird strike


A Qantas jet was forced to return to Johannesburg after a bird strike damaged one of its engines, the latest in a series of incidents at the Australian airline since an engine failure on an Airbus A380 nearly two weeks ago.



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An exploding Rolls-Royce engine on one of Qantas' A380's forced the Australian carrier to ground its entire fleet of the Airbus super-jumbos
Photo: AFP

7:00AM GMT 17 Nov 2010

The Sydney-bound Boeing 747 with 171 passengers suffered minor engine damage and would be delayed by more than a day as Qantas had to ship replacement parts to South Africa from Australia, a spokesman for the Australian carrier said.

"The pilot followed standard procedure and shut down the number two engine but there was never any danger," the spokesman said. On Nov 4, a Qantas Airbus A380 with 466 people on board was forced to make an emergency landing in Singapore after one of its Rolls-Royce-made engines disintegrated mid-flight after an oil fire.

Just two days later a Qantas Boeing 747 was forced to make an emergency landing in Singapore with an engine failure and earlier this week, a Buenos Aires-bound 747 had to return to Sydney after a cockpit instrument failed. Qantas has kept its A380s grounded since the accident and has used its 26 Boeing 747s to fill gaps in its schedule.

A Qantas Boeing 717 on route from Alice Springs to Darwin also suffered a lightning strike on Tuesday but the aircraft continued to its destination and only suffered cosmetic damage, Qantas said. The string of incidents have coincided with Qantas celebrating its 90th anniversary.


 
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