WASHINGTON: Two flight attendants on a Southwest Airways flight departing Burbank, California, had been injured on Friday (Jul 25) after pilots took evasive motion to dodge one other plane on takeoff, the airline stated.
Southwest Flight 1496 sharply descended almost 500 toes, in accordance with flight monitoring web sites, marking the second time in per week {that a} US business jet was pressured to make abrupt flight manoeuvres to keep away from a possible mid-air collision.
The incident additionally seemed to be the fourth involving navy plane since March.
The airline and the Federal Aviation Administration stated the Southwest pilots took motion after receiving cockpit alerts of different plane visitors being dangerously shut. The Southwest Boeing 737 continued on to Las Vegas, the place it landed uneventfully.
Flight-tracking service Flightradar24 recognized the opposite plane as a Hawker Hunter fighter jet – a British-built plane – that crossed in entrance of the Southwest flight.
The planes got here inside 7.82km of one another laterally and 350 toes (107m) vertically. The US Air Drive and Protection Division didn’t instantly reply to inquiries relating to the navy jet’s presence close to Burbank.
The FAA was investigating.
Two flight attendants had been handled for accidents, the airline stated, with out offering particulars.
No accidents had been instantly reported by passengers, in accordance with Southwest. However one passenger informed Fox Information Digital the sharp descent stirred panic onboard.
“It was terrifying. We actually thought we had been plummeting to a aircraft crash,” Caitlin Burdi stated in an on-camera interview. After the incident, “the pilot got here on (the intercom), and he informed us we nearly collided with one other aircraft”.
In accordance with a press release from Southwest, the incident started when its crew responded to “two onboard visitors alerts” whereas taking off from the Hollywood Burbank Airport north of Los Angeles, “requiring them to climb and descend to adjust to the alerts”.
