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Video: Air Canada Boeing 777 clips another company aircraft on tarmac
Toronto, Canada - An Air Canada Boeing 777 has clipped the tail of another Air Canada plane at the Toronto Pearson International Airport. The Boeing 777, which was being towed at the time of the incident, clipped the tail of an Air Canada Airbus A321. The incident happened on the last day of 2019. (airlinerwatch.com) Más...Sort type: [Top] [Newest]
Wing walkers anyone??? It would be interesting to have the “aviation specialist” reporter explain how it’s possible to crash a horizontal stabilizer into a parked aircraft. If it’s upside down and being towed backwards.....
I see there is a Job opening on the Tarmac for Air Canada
Looking at the Video posted online, it looks very clearly "Left Wingtip of the 777" hitting the A321.
News article is not correct ...it says "Horizontal Stabilizer of 777" ?????
News article is not correct ...it says "Horizontal Stabilizer of 777" ?????
The news media does not know the difference... LOL
Since when did JFK and YYZ become the #1 & 2 busiest airports in North America???
"Around 50 million passengers use Toronto Pearson International Airport each year and it is the second-busiest airport in North America after New York JFK."
"Around 50 million passengers use Toronto Pearson International Airport each year and it is the second-busiest airport in North America after New York JFK."
When I was working in Memphis, I got to fly in and out of the world's busiest* airport every week. KMEM (*freight, by weight). Or somethjing like that. So most daily landings, day with the most landings, most departures, day with the most departures, pax weight, pax cargo weight, luggage...could go on and on....
I agree -- but they used the Total PAX count.....My guess is that they meant to say 2nd Busiest in the North East of North America :)......But everyone knows that ATL is the craziest of them all :)
"horizontal stabilizer" - actually, the part of the 777 we see striking the tail of the A321 is known to us in the industry as a "wing".