JetBlue Plane’s Tires Catch Fire On Landing In Sacramento

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Posted on 27th August 2010 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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A JetBlue plane’s tires caught on fire Thursday during a tough landing in Sacramento, leaving 15 people with minor injuries, according to the Associated Press.

http://www.nj.com/newsflash/index.ssf/story/tires-of-plane-catch-fire-during-landing/2803b6de32d04a179bb6ba9e144f9e63

The scary incident sent some passengers fleeing from the plane through the aircraft’s emergency slides.

The JetBlue flight was traveling from Long Beach, Calif., to Sacramento, and apparently had trouble with its brakes when it landed. The plane hit the runway with a big thud, one passenger told AP, and then the crew yelled for everyone to leave in a hurry via the inflatable slides.

The plane’s 87 passengers were driven to the terminal in buses, and five people were taken to the hospital.

 

  

 

  

 

Prompted By The Travis Barker Plane Crash, Federal Officials Order Frequent Learjet Tire Checks

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Posted on 9th June 2010 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Underinflated tires not only cause car accidents, they can cause planes to crash. 

That’s why federal regulators have established stricter rules regarding the tire pressure on Learjets. It’s an attempt  to prevent a fatal plane crash like the one involving Blink 182 drummer Travis Barker and the disc jockety DJ AM in 2008.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703302604575294072660453954.html?KEYWORDS=Learjet

The Federal Aviation Administration put out a directive Tuesday that orders U.S. operators of more than 200 model 60 Learjet business aircraft to do landing-gear inspections more often.

Underinflated tires have proven to be dangerous, and were cited as one of the causes of a crash of a charter Learjet carrying Travis and DJ AM in Columbia, S.C., as it tried to take off in September 2008. Travis and DJ AM were hurt, and four people died in the accident.

An investigation by the National Transportation Safety Board determined that the tires on the jet’s main landing gear were underinflated, and that the tires fell apart during the takeoff. Their pressure hadn’t been checked in three weeks.   

    http://car-accident-rain.com/blog/2010/04/federal-authorities-blame-tires-pilot-for-travis-barker-jet-crash-that-killed-four-people.html?preview=true&preview_id=360&preview_nonce=ea7f96952f

Shards from the tires struck the Learjet’s brakes and hydraulic lines, disrupting other systems in the jet. That resulted in the pilot being unable to stop the plane, and it sped off the runway and crashed.

Under the new FAA rules, the tires on Learjet 60 model will have to be checked every four days.

The federal agency was aware that underinflated tires posed a safety hazard. A year ago the FAA put out a safety  alert that told pilots to pay attention to tire pressure.