Window cracks ground Qantas jumbo

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JS50557
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Window cracks ground Qantas jumbo

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Qantas's horror run of technical problems continued today, with a Boeing 747-400 jumbo jet grounded in Melbourne after a cockpit window cracked on a flight from Los Angeles.

It's the second occurrence for Qantas of a cracked pane this month, the other occurring on a Boeing 737 domestic flight.

The plane's first officer noticed the crack on the outside pane of the cockpit window of flight QF 94, which landed at 8.40am.

"During the flight the first officer noticed a cosmetic mark on one of the windows on his side of the cockpit," a Qantas spokesman said.

"The engineers went out and had a look at the aircraft and determined that it needed a window change," he said.

There was no risk of depressurisation, the spokesman said.

"It was the outer layer of the window, which are pretty dense structures. There was no safety risk during the flight," he said.

The 239 passenger booked on the plane's return leg to Los Angeles were put up in Melbourne hotels and given dinner vouchers, ahead of their expected delayed departure at 1am.

The airline said the recent spate of aircraft problems was not due to the industrial action imposed by members of the professional engineers' union, who have slapped bans on responding to out-of-hours calls.

'The engineers' strike hasn't really had an impact," the spokesman said.

"There are only 190 of them [professional engineers] out of 5700 engineers, and the professional engineers aren't actually rostered on weekends and public holidays. So the only thing they do over the Easter weekend is on-call work ... but we have enough people to cover that."

Last Tuesday, in the lead up to the busy Easter period, a Qantas 747 suffered an engine failure enroute to Singapore and was forced to turn back to Sydney.

That plane had its engine replaced but a wiring problem meant it was unable to return to the Brisbane-LA run as anticipated. This was followed by two tyres on a flagship A380 Airbus bursting on landing on Wednesday.
Telecommunication s manager Peter Csorba was on that flight and said Qantas' recent problems had rattled his wife's confidence in the airline, with which she is booked to fly internationally.

"Two days go with an engine failure, and now these tyres, and every month something happens with Qantas, this you dont hear from other airline companies," he said. "It's just getting too much, every month, something."

Qantas yesterday said there was no pattern to the problems. "It's just a case of unfortunate timing, theyve all been separate issues, different problems," its spokesman said.

"I wouldn't...couldn't...really say it was anything systemic, but it's certainly and unfortunate series [of incidents] and were obviously not happy about it and we're very apologetic about it to our customers."

http://www.canberratimes.com.au/news/na ... 94367.aspx#" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
SpotterNL
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Re: Window cracks ground Qantas jumbo

Post by SpotterNL »

slow newsday me thinks?
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Re: Window cracks ground Qantas jumbo

Post by flying_kiwi »

SpotterNL wrote:slow newsday me thinks?
That, plus the Australian media loves to hate QF :lol:
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Re: Window cracks ground Qantas jumbo

Post by streep »

JS50557 wrote: "During the flight the first officer noticed a cosmetic mark on one of the windows on his side of the cockpit," a Qantas spokesman said.

"The engineers went out and had a look at the aircraft and determined that it needed a window change," he said.
How does the timeline work here ?
Lets hope they first landed the plane and then send the engineer out.
JS50557 wrote:
"There are only 190 of them [professional engineers] out of 5700 engineers, and the professional engineers aren't actually rostered on weekends and public holidays.
Whaw, I would like this !!
JS50557 wrote: ....
"Two days go with an engine failure, and now these tyres, and every month something happens with Qantas, this you dont hear from other airline companies," he said. "It's just getting too much, every month, something."
Whow the job gets better and better,
Two days for an engine change and then the next day just a few tyres....and that with 190 professional engineers !
A true dream job !

If the professional journalist who wrote this, finds out this happens to most large carriers on the course of one day, or even just in one shift, I think he never flies again !
(Lets hope so !)



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