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China Eastern Plane Lands At Sydney With Hole In Engine


Flashermac
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A China Eastern Airlines plane has had to turn back to Sydney airport after a technical failure which left a hole in an engine casing.

 

Flight MU736 was heading from Sydney, Australia to Shanghai, but the pilot reported problems with the engine about one hour after taking off.

 

Passengers, who had to spend the night in Sydney, told media they smelt something burning inside the aircraft.

 

The Airbus A330 landed safely and there were no reports of injuries.

 

Images circulating on social media showed a large hole in the engine casing.

 

Several passengers said they had heard a loud sound coming from the left engine shortly after take-off.

 

One passenger told Australia's Seven News network: "All of a sudden we heard this noise... it kind of smelt like burning".

 

"I was really scared. Our group was terrified."

 

One woman on the flight told news agency Reuters: "The cabin crew went out and told us to fasten our seatbelts and tried to calm us down, but we were actually very panicked because we had no idea what was happening."

 

Passengers said the crew cleared the seats near the affected engine.

 

China Eastern Airlines said in a statement to the media that the crew had "observed the abnormal situation of the left engine and decided to return to Sydney airport immediately".

 

It added that all passengers would be placed on flights leaving on Monday.

 

Aviation safety authorities are now investigating.

 

Aviation expert Greg Waldron of consulting firm FlightGlobal told the BBC that it would be "difficult to say at this early juncture what caused such extensive damage" to the China Eastern plane.

 

He said investigators would likely look all possible factors and examine maintenance records of the aircraft and engine. "They will also carefully assess whether a foreign object may have played a role in this," he said.

 

Last month, industry websites The Aviation Herald and Aero.de published pictures from social media appearing to show a similar hole in another aeroplane's engine casing.

 

Mr Waldron added it would be "too early" to say whether the Sydney incident was linked to other cases, but it would be something investigators would consider.

 

 

http://www.bbc.com/n...d-asia-40243766

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The only time that I've ever flown them was last December; LAX-CNX, through Shanghai. The only reason that I flew them was the $540 round trip price (I had enough credit on Southwest Airlines that was due to expire on December 20). I'm not sure that I would ever want to fly through China airspace again, unless China was my destination. In the case of the damaged engine, I wonder if the decisions made would be the same if the plane had left from a Chinese airport, since they would have greater control over the situation?

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