Engine Fire in a Boeing 737 Forces Emergency Landing

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Engine Fire in a Boeing 737 Forces Emergency Landing​


By MBN Staff | MBN staff - Thu, 03/07/2024 - 15:33

A United Airlines Boeing 737 made an emergency landing shortly after takeoff from the George Bush Intercontinental Airport, Texas.

The flight, designated as United 1118 and bound for Fort Myers, Texas, encountered engine troubles just ten minutes into its journey. Videos captured by passengers revealed flames emanating from the left engine. According to FlightAware data, the aircraft took off at 18:40 on March 4 and executed a turnaround at 18:52, landing back at George Bush Intercontinental Airport at 19:13.

"It was our left engine, our number one engine, that surged as we climbed to about 10,000 [feet], and flight attendants saw flames momentarily back there," said the pilot about the incident. Passengers were promptly disembarked, and a replacement aircraft was arranged to transport them to Fort Myers later that day. United Airlines offered affected travelers a US$200 travel voucher and a US$15 food voucher.

In January 2024, the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) grounded several Boeing 737 Max for several weeks after an incident in which an airplane lost a door mid flight. The incident led the FAA to prompt an investigation. On Tuesday, the FAA said it found "non-compliance issues in Boeing’s manufacturing process control, parts handling and storage, and product control," according to Reuters.
 

Video shows United Airlines engine catch fire shortly after takeoff​

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It's not a 737 MAX.

The 21-year-old Boeing 737 departed from Houston's Bush International Airport and was headed to Fort Myers with 167 passengers onboard.

United said bubble wrap was sucked into the plane's engine. It's unclear how it happened,
 
It's not a 737 MAX.




It is not even a jet engine fire. It is an engine surge, which has many causes, including the most common one - foreign matter ingestion such as a large bird - inducing a compressor blade stall.

However, the bots continue to run rampant with their incessant google scraping.
 
It is not even a jet engine fire. It is an engine surge, which has many causes, including the most common one - foreign matter ingestion such as a large bird - inducing a compressor blade stall.

However, the bots continue to run rampant with their incessant google scraping.
You don't have to google it, it's on today's news, do you read news daily?
 
Wow! This company is allowed to run just to safeguard shareholder value at the cost of risk to human lives.
 

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