Jumbo Jet Lands Fast With Hole In Fuselage
Flight To Australia From Hong Kong Makes Emergency Landing In Manila, 350 Passengers Safe
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Play CBS Video Video Plane Makes Emergency Landing Passengers felt a crack in midair, and after an emergency landing saw their plane had a 10-foot hole in the fuselage. Elizabeth Palmer reports.
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Video Close Call For Qantas 747 A Qantas jumbo jet was forced to make an emergency landing in the Philippines after something punched a massive hole in the fuselage as the plane reached cruising altitude. Nancy Cordes reports.
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This photo released by the Media Affairs Division of the Ninoy Aquino International Airport shows Qantas pilot Capt. John Francis Bartels looking at the right wing damaged fuselage of Qantas Airways Boeing 747-400 after it made an emergency landing July 25, 2008 in Manila, Philippines. (AP)
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This image taken from a passenger's cell phone video shows oxygen masks deployed in the cabin of a Qantas Air 747-400 as it makes an emergency landing in Manila, Philippines, July 25, 2008. (CBS)
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Airline mechanics look at the damaged right wing fuselage of a Qantas Airways Boeing 747-400 passenger plane following an emergency landing at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport, July 25, 2008 in Manila, Philippines. (AP Photo/Bullit Marquez)
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It wasn't until they were safely on the ground after an emergency landing that they realized how lucky they had been: A hole the size of a small car had been ripped into the Boeing 747-400's metal skin and penetrated the fuselage.
The eerie scene aboard Flight QF 30, captured on a passenger's cell phone video-camera, showed a tense quiet punctuated only by a baby's cries as passengers sat with oxygen masks on their faces. The jerky footage showed a woman holding tightly to the seat in front of her as rapidly approaching land appeared through a window. Loud applause and relieved laughter went up as the plane touched down.
There were no injuries and only a few cases of nausea, airline officials said. An official of the U.S. Transportation Security Administration said initial reports indicated no link to terrorism.
Investigators appeared to be focusing on a structural problem.
"From the pictures that we've seen out of Manila during the course of the day, it would seem that one of the panels to the outer skin of the aircraft has literally come away from the rest of the fuselage," Chris Yates, an aviation expert at Jane's Aviation, told The Associated Press.
"As a consequence of this, the aircraft experienced rapid decompression," he said.
While it is not uncommon for metal panels to be lost from aircraft in flight, he said: "It's relatively rare that when a bit falls off the airplane it causes the sort of instance that we saw in relation to Qantas. In other words that it causes the aircraft cabin to depressurize."
Yates said investigators will examine closely the fracture points that showed up on the skin of the aircraft to determine whether metal fatigue or manufacturing defect caused the panel to peel away.
David Learmount, operations and safety editor of Flight International magazine and an expert on aviation, told CBSNews.com after seeing photos of the Qantas aircraft that the actual hole in the fuselage was much smaller - about one yard across.
Learmount said there were two visible layers of damage to the 747 - a missing exterior layer of light-weight "filleting," which serves only to blend the shape of the fuselage with the base of the wing for aerodynamics, and the smaller area of damage, the hole, in the pressurized fuselage.
"Most of what's missing doesn’t really matter very much," said Learmount, adding that numerous passenger jets have landed safely with far more serious structural damage.
He said the most likely root of the incident was internal damage to the freight bay, caused by the inadvertent action of handlers or by corrosion from a leak that had gone unnoticed.
Learmount indicated to CBSNews.com that there was no evidence to suggest any explosion had occurred inside the plane's cargo hold, but there was "no way I'd rule that out."
Aviation expert Peter Goelz says the passengers are just lucky the tear happened exactly where it did.
"It's a pretty robust area of the plane where the wing connects in through the center wing tank and is really, probably one of the strongest areas of the aircraft," Goelz told CBS News correspondent Nancy Cordes.
Rigorous inspection for metal fatigue and corrosion have been required ever since an Aloha Airlines accident 20 years ago where saltwater corrosion caused the cockpit door and part of the roof to rip off the Boeing 737, killing one and injuring 65, reports Cordes.
The passengers, on a flight from London to Melbourne, had just been served a meal after a stopover in Hong Kong when they described hearing a loud bang, then their ears popping as air rushed out the hole. The pilots put the plane into a quick descent to 10,000 feet, where the atmosphere is still thin but breathable.
The Manila airport authority, quoting pilot John Francis Bartels, said the plane suffered an "explosive decompression."
"One hour into the flight there was a big bang, then the plane started going down," passenger Marina Scaffidi, 39, from Melbourne, told The Associated Press by phone from the airport. "There was wind swirling around the plane and some condensation."
She said a hole extended from the cargo hold into the passenger cabin.
After the pilots' initial rapid descent, "the plane kept going down, not too fast, but it was descending," Scaffidi said, adding the staff informed passengers they were diverting to Manila. TV screens on the backs of seats allowed them to track their route to the Philippine capital.
"No one was very hysterical," she said.
June Kane of Melbourne agreed, telling Australia's ABC radio: "It was absolutely terrifying, but I have to say everyone was very calm."
Amazingly calm, in fact.
Video footage showed people looking almost as if nothing was wrong as they glanced from side to side, their nearly untouched meals still in front of them. The cabin crew continued to work, smiling as they walked down the aisles to reassure nervous passengers.
After the plane touched down safely amid applause, one of the pilots could be heard saying over the intercom: "Fire vehicles and emergency vehicles are going to take a look at us."
What they found was a stunning sight. A 9-foot-wide hole gaped at the joint where the front of the right wing attaches to the plane. Luggage from the cargo hold strained against the webbing used to keep it from shifting during a flight.
A curved line of rivets was still visible on the plane's body at the front edge where the missing sheet once was; a straight line of rivets was along the other.
Boeing spokeswoman Liz Verdier said it was too soon to determine what caused the hole, but the company was providing technical assistance as part of an investigation led by the National Transportation Safety Board.
"We are dispatching four personnel from Boeing, an investigator and three engineers," who were leaving immediately, she said.
The probe into the 17-year-old aircraft was likely to be lengthy, Verdier said, and the Boeing team expects to interview the crew and examine the structure of the plane, among other things.
Geoff Dixon, the chief executive officer of Qantas, Australia's largest airline, praised the pilots and the rest of the 19-member crew for how they handled Friday's events.
"This was a highly unusual situation and our crew responded with the professionalism that Qantas is known for," he said.
The passengers were taken to several hotels in Manila, then left just before midnight on another plane to Melbourne.
Qantas boasts a strong safety record and has never lost a jet to an accident, although there were crashes of smaller planes, the last in 1951. Since then, there have been no accident-related deaths on any Qantas jets.
However, the airline has had a few scares in recent years.
In February 2008, a Qantas 717 with 84 passengers on board sustained substantial damage in a heavy landing in Darwin, Australia. And the year before, Qantas acknowledged that an unlicensed mechanical engineer had conducted safety checks on more than 1,000 international flights over a 12-month period at Sydney airport.
In September 1999, a Qantas Boeing 747-400 with more than 400 people on board overshot a runway in Bangkok, Thailand, during bad weather.
Union engineers - who have held several strikes this year to demand pay raises - say that safety is being compromised by low wages and overtime work.
As of December 2007, Qantas was operating 216 aircraft flying to 140 destinations in 37 countries, though in recent months it has announced it will retire some aircraft and cancel some routes - as well as cutting 1,500 jobs worldwide - due to skyrocketing fuel prices.
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- I''ve heard so many exaggerations about the conduct of the aircraft after the ''bang'' - ''diving'' ''plunging'' and other emotive terms while the actual event was scary but not something out of control. Congrats to the pilots and crew - textbook recovery from a rapid decompression scenario.
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- Officials from two U.S. transportation agencies said initial findings indicate that no act of terrorism was involved.
..."Our preliminary checks on this indicate that there was no corrosion anywhere near where this hole occurred in the aircraft," Geoff Dixon, Qantas'' CEO, said in Sydney.
And we all know, terrorist acts always leave a corrosive residue.
What are these people thinking???! - Reply to this comment
- Really makes you wonder what exactly happened inside the plane that caused this kind of damage... or at least in the cargo area or skin.
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- How could BUSH have allowed that hole to appear in that jet? It just goes to show you that the NEOCONS are good for nothing.
That does it!!! Im voting for Obama. HE wil do something to CHANGE that... - Reply to this comment
- Airbus WISHES it could build a plane strong enough to withstand a 9 ft depressurizing hole at 35K ft, and survive to land.
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- Double posted by accident
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Boeing says wrong rivets went into 27 747-400 jets
The Associated Press
Boeing has warned airlines and federal regulators that rivets reinforcing the structure of 27 of its jumbo jets must be replaced, the eighth instance of manufacturing and parts problems Boeing has faced since the start of the year.
A mechanic at Boeing''s Wichita, Kan., plant discovered that as many as 1,000 of the wrong kind of rivets had been installed on each of the 747-400s. Ten of the 27 jets have been delivered and are in service with airlines.
http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=20000414&slug=4015413- Reply to this comment
Boeing says wrong rivets went into 27 747-400 jets
The Associated Press
Boeing has warned airlines and federal regulators that rivets reinforcing the structure of 27 of its jumbo jets must be replaced, the eighth instance of manufacturing and parts problems Boeing has faced since the start of the year.
A mechanic at Boeing''s Wichita, Kan., plant discovered that as many as 1,000 of the wrong kind of rivets had been installed on each of the 747-400s. Ten of the 27 jets have been delivered and are in service with airlines.
http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=20000414&slug=4015413- Reply to this comment
- Remember folks,these 747''s are glued together not rivited as they used to be. Someone on the production line was scotch with the glue.
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- You guys wish for death for people who simply disagree with you politically? Sad.
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Posted by rafterman1 at 02:10 PM : Jul 25, 2008
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oh I am sure you know these guys..(McVet and SgtRDS and BrianBWB ) has more colorfull and more sinsiter ways of dealing with those who opposes them..
you should know..dont you guys sit around and watch ''oliver stone'' movies together and give each other cool ''army'' names? - Reply to this comment
"No one was very hysterical," she said
So some were hysterical?
What degree of hysterical were they?- Reply to this comment
"No one was very hysterical," she said
So some were hysterical?
What degree of hysterical were they?- Reply to this comment
- never understood why they use rivets anyway. Makes the plane look ugly.
Posted by donnie1044 at 02:52 PM : Jul 25, 2008
The use of rivets allows the skin of the plane to flex without tearing, Temperature changes inside the plane are different that those outside and the skeleton of the plane shrinks or expands at a different speed than the skin, I prefer rivets as opposed to welding because I don''t like to have pieces of the plane cracking and falling off because they cant slide when heated or cooled. - Reply to this comment
- I wonder how many suitcases got sucked out of the hole? Was anybody''s baggage missing?
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- Airbus should make a rivetless plane. Put Boeing under.
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- More of the great benefits to America under Criminal Corporate Control of our Nation.....
"Now you guys remember, we don''t need to look at those joints and rivets THAT hard"....."These Inspections are just Leftist, Lib, Hippy, Nonsense that have no real purpose except to harrass Honest Companies trying to make a buck"......."It''ll be fine, Trust me"..... - Reply to this comment
- ===And McVet and SgtRDS and BrianBWB were sucked out at 20,000 feet. And we all lived happily every after.
Posted by michaelt302 at 12:48 PM : Jul 25, 2008
oh if that were true!!! LOL===
Posted by jamesm12341
You guys wish for death for people who simply disagree with you politically? Sad.
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Posted by rafterman1 at 02:10 PM : Jul 25, 2008
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This is halarious, thier posting thier drivel on a story about airplanes so McVet and BrianBWB won''t give them another mental thrashing. What a hoot! - Reply to this comment
- I never understood why they use rivets anyway. Makes the plane look ugly.
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- I really, REALLY hope Ubama chooses Edwards as his VP (as some were requesting last week in these forums.) Democrats sure know how to pick winners. LOL
What''s congress'' approval rating these days.....9%???? Lowest in American history, you say? Way to go Nancy & Reid. - Reply to this comment
- Hey, for all you bedwetting libs who feel that this is an appropriate forum to bring up Bush and politics, how about that loverboy Edwards, huh??? LOL
Nailed at 2:30 in the morning with his ''ho''.....cheating on his wife with cancer.
Guess that''s a resume enhancer for democrats, though. Way to go, Johnny......didn''t know you liked girls! :) - Reply to this comment
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."




