Bangkok Post

Delta flight loses emergency slide during takeoff

- ISABELLA KWAI ©2024 THE NEW YORK TIMES

LONDON: A Boeing 767 plane flown by Delta Air Lines lost an emergency slide Friday, prompting it to return to New York not long after taking off, officials said.

The flight, Delta Air Lines 520, had left Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport in New York and was headed to Los Angeles when its crew discovered an issue related to the aircraft’s right wing emergency exit slide. Crew members also detected an unusual sound near the wing, Delta Air Lines said.

Pilots declared an emergency to air traffic controller­s and the flight returned to Kennedy and landed safely, the airline said.

After the plane landed, it became apparent that the aircraft’s emergency slide had “separated” from the plane, Delta Air Lines said. The plane was removed from service and the airline said it would “thoroughly evaluate the aircraft.”

“Delta flight crews enacted their extensive training and followed procedures to return to JFK,” the company said in a statement, adding that it would “fully cooperate” with retrieval efforts and investigat­ions.

It was not clear Saturday what caused the slide to detach or where it had fallen.

The Federal Aviation Administra­tion said Friday that it would investigat­e what happened.

The flight, which had been scheduled to take off at 7:15 am, returned to the airport at 8:35 am after its crew reported “a vibration,” the FAA said in a statement. The 176 passengers disembarke­d and travelled to Los Angeles on a different plane.

Slides have previously fallen from planes while in midair. In July, an emergency slide from a United Airlines-operated plane crashed into a home near O’Hare Airport in Chicago. In 2019, a slide from a Delta plane fell into a yard in Massachuse­tts.

A spokespers­on for Boeing referred inquiries about the plane that lost its slide Friday to Delta Air Lines. That plane, a version of the Boeing 767, was manufactur­ed in 1990.

With travel shut down in 2020, American Airlines announced at the time that it had moved forward with plans to retire its 767 fleet.

Boeing has also faced heightened scrutiny recently over the manufactur­ing of its Boeing 737 Max jets. Two crashes in 2018 and 2019 that killed nearly 350 people raised safety concerns about the planes.

In January, a fuselage panel tore off an Alaska Airlines flight, exposing passengers to a frightenin­g ordeal as winds whipped through the cabin.

Nobody was injured, but the pilots were forced to make an emergency landing, and the FAA grounded some 170 Boeing 737 Max 9 planes as a precaution.

Since then, Boeing has said it would make changes to its quality control processes, and regulators have pushed the manufactur­er to make improvemen­ts to safety.

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