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Boeing 777 Crashes At San Francisco Airport

Asiana Flight 214 from Seoul crashed while landing at San Francisco Airport today. Early reports suggest the plane was unstable as it touched down, which led to the tail of the plane breaking off. There are no official casualty reports yet, but passengers were seen walking off the plane. Preliminary estimates say one or two dead and 75 being transported to area hospitals. (Others are reporting two dead and several dozen injured.) Eyewitness report: "You heard a pop and you immediately saw a large, brief fireball that came out from underneath the aircraft," Anthony Castorani said on CNN. "At that moment, you could see that that aircraft was again starting to lift and it began to cartwheel [Ed: he likely means spinning horizontally, like a top]. The wing broke off on the left hand side. You could see the tail immediately fly off of the aircraft. As the aircraft cartwheeled, it then landed down and the other wing had broken." The media has estimated about 290 people were on board the plane. The top of the cabin was aflame at one point, but it's not known yet whether that affected the passengers. "Federal sources told NBC News that there was no indication of terrorism." Some images from the news make it look like the plane may have tried to touch down too early, hitting the seawall just before the runway.

2 of 506 comments (clear)

  1. Why always mention "terrorism?" by Sir+Holo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    TFA: ...there was no indication of terrorism..."

    Why is this still included in any US media article about any aviation accident, or similar event, in the news?

    As an ordinary citizen, the question of terrorism is not anywhere near the top of my list of questions regarding "how" or "why" an accident may have occurred. Not at all. Now, the question of "who screwed up? Maintenance, pilot, management, etc.?" is the kind of question that springs to mind.

    Or, perhaps, maybe the problem is with me? Should I learn to be more afraid?

  2. Re:Open airplanes by evilviper · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Unfortunately, most airplane accidents and incidents are due to pilot error

    Repeat after me: "human factors"

    Almost any accident can be prevent by a prescient pilot always making PERFECT decisions.

    Passing accidents off as pilot error in all but the most egregious cases, is massively disingenuous, and something airlines and manufacturers like to do to shield themselves from all liability that they deserve.

    Airlines trained pilots to do something stupid? Pilot error.
    Airlines failed to train pilots on the new systems? Pilot error.
    Counter-intuitive controls resulted in a pilot throttling down instead of up, and crashing? Pilot error.
    Stall warning systems were non-functional, and the pilot wasn't fastidiously checking sensors? Pilot error.
    Airline was juggling pilot schedules around, making them work with little sleep? Pilot error.

    --
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