View Single Post
  #26  
Old 1st April 2010, 01:16 AM
Greg McDonald Greg McDonald is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 723
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dan Hammond View Post
Just wait till this one hits the news reels. Anyone think we might see in a news report a passenger fearing for their life story?
Ask and ye shall receive.....

From NEWS.COM.AU

Quote:
FLAMES shot out from the undercarriage of a Qantas A380 last night when two tyres burst as it landed at Sydney Airport - the second emergency involving the airline in the past 48 hours.

A worker at the airport told The Daily Telegraph he heard a huge roar and then flames coming from under plane.

"I thought there was a serious crash, there were sparks and flames shooting out everywhere," he said.

"And the noise was deafening, like cannons going off.

"I really thought something catastrophic had happened."

The 241 passengers on board QF32 from London via Singapore were stranded on the tarmac for nearly two hours before being bussed to the terminal to meet anxious relatives.

"We saw from the observation deck and when it touched down the left wheel burst into flames and there were sparks and fire from the left-hand side and there was black smoke and when it went down the runway it stopped," said Mr Wayne Morris, 58, who was waiting for his wife Maria to arrive from a London holiday.
" The control tower said on the radio that all the tyres were blown.

"I was very concerned because you don't expect to see flames from a plane and after the engineers went on strike it makes you ask the question about safety."

The incident comes after a Singapore-bound Qantas 747 was forced to return to Sydney Airport on Tuesday evening due to engine troubles.

Passengers on last night's flight said the landing seemed routine at first.

Ramy Filo, 48 said it was only after the the landing that she realised that the situation could have been dangerous.

"At the time it happened I was not scared but in hindsight you realise anything could of happened," she said.


Michelle Coffman, 39, from London, was travelling with her two daughters to vist her parents in Sydney.

"It seemed like a safe landing then we heard the tyres went down to the metal," she said.
Reply With Quote