Passenger sees Boeing 757-200 “wing coming apart” mid-air — United flight from San Francisco to Boston makes emergency landing in Denver::A United Airlines flight to Boston was diverted to Denver because of an issue with the plane’s wing.

7 points

This is the best summary I could come up with:


BOSTON - A United Airlines flight from San Francisco to Boston was diverted to Denver on Monday because of an issue with the plane’s wing - and a worried passenger on board captured the apparent problem on video.

“Just about to land in Denver with the wing coming apart on the plane,” Kevin Clarke says in a video shared with CBS News.

Clarke said the wing issue became apparent after takeoff from San Francisco.

The passengers were put on a different plane and landed in Boston early Tuesday morning.

Boeing has been under scrutiny since a door panel on a different kind of aircraft, a 737 Max 9, blew off during an Alaska Airlines flight in January.

Earlier this month, the head of the FAA pledged to use more people to monitor aircraft manufacturing and hold Boeing accountable for any safety rule violations.


The original article contains 286 words, the summary contains 143 words. Saved 50%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

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12 points
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212 points

Damn, imagine working in the marketing department of Boeing.

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16 points

Repeat after me:

“Everything’s fine. Nothing to see here. Move along.”

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111 points

“When it hasn’t been your day, your week, your month, or even your year.”

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86 points
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I’ll be there for youuu

When the plane starts to stall

I’ll be there for youuu

When the wing is no more

I’ll be there for youuu

To state the claims are untruuu-uuue

So no one ever known a flight could’ve ended up this waaay

The starboard wing has broke

Cabin door’s flying awaaay

You’re out of hope, you lost your landing geeear

But our stocks are the lowest they’ve been so far this fiscal yeeeear, so

I’ve a job to doooo

Get prepared for that bull

Remind all the neeews

It’s never happened before

I’ve a job to doooo

And I guess I’m pretty gooo-oood

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25 points

Should I send this to Airbus marketing team ? 😂

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3 points

Dude you nailed it

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27 points

Didn’t they cut all of those jobs recently? Wait. No. That was all their 900 QC door bolt retention confirmers that were ‘unnecessary’

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21 points
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Deleted by creator
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26 points

It was simply changed to, “If it’s Boeing, I’m not going.”

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53 points
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I know a guy who works at Boeing

He says right now it’s pretty rough due to recent events but things were finally cooling down

That was before this news broke

He’s probably going to have a shitty day tomorrow with more visits from the FAA and other regulators

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27 points

A believe there have been quite a few articles published with interviews from former Boeing execs with who were around when the company went from engineer ran to finance ran. One of them I remember the former executive said part of why they will continue to not trust Boeing is they are only grounding planes to solve one problem at a time after it’s caused massive failure and not trying to engineer and solve all the problems they can so these failures stop happening mid flight.

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1 point
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You take the population of vehicles in the field (A) and multiple it by the probable rate of failure (B), then multiply the result by the average cost of an out-of-court settlement ©.

A times B times C equals X. This is what it will cost if we don’t initiate a recall. If X is greater than the cost of a recall, we recall the cars and no one gets hurt. If X is less than the cost of a recall, then we don’t recall.

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6 points

I don’t feel bad for your friend. One bad day at work or 100+ people dying?

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36 points

“It landed didnt it”

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19 points

They always do!

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18 points

No, sometimes they water.

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-12 points

the last time I was on an airplane was december 31, 2000.

nothing since that time has encouraged me to break that boycott.

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40 points

Flying sucks, but not seeing the world sucks more.

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1 point

I respect the principles.

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22 points

I was about to say. There’s a million concerns over environmental and economic effects (that I’ll own up to ignoring when visiting family or exploring), but safety is still wayyy down the list. The statistic about being 20x more likely to die in a car crash on the way to the airport than the flight itself still holds very firmly true (and I’m being SUPER conservative about those numbers in case recent events tilt it, it’s still a ~800x per-mile ratio).

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8 points

Yeah I agree, despite all the recent events, I’m still not worried at all about flying. The number of car crash complications I watch on YouTube make me extra cautious while driving, but I’ve never felt in danger while flying, even in heavy turbulence

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12 points

Is that your alibi for 9/11?

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48 points

That’s a pretty old plane last produced in 2004.

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44 points
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Eh, idk if plane age really matters. They are completely disassembled and reassembled per standard every year to ensure that they are good to go.

Student planes are like 1960s, give or take.

E: I’m being told by comments that they do not do teardowns. Idk. I fly planes, not work on them. My CFIs have told me they do annual teardowns. So… Idk. Maybe, maybe not?

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30 points

It does matter. Shows this is more a maintenance issue than a defect in the model.

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17 points

They are absolutely not “completely disassembled every year.” Where do you people come up with this stuff?

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0 points

They’re just plain facts. Did you know that the pilots each have to take a shit before they board? The airlines force them to do it, to conserve on fuel.

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2 points

My FBO/CFIs said that they teardown the airplanes every annual to every nut and bolt. I applied that and assumed that meant the big ones, too.

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4 points

No the FUCK they’re not

There are inspections and flight worthiness manuals. Nobody is going to complete tear down a fucking jet and bolt it together again, that’s literally less secure.

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4 points
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You should read what’s done in an annual. For GA, aopa had a good article recently talking about doing the right maintenance because doing everything your AP suggests may be more intrusive and less healthy for the plane. It’s not as aggressive you’re claiming.

Also as others note, age matters in determining where the issue came from. Eg this almost certainly isn’t a Boeing issue.

As a new pilot I really recommend watching the show Mayday Aircraft Investigations, it’s very informative. The accidents are for commercial aircraft, but still I think seeing all the details and the root causes and breakdown in process is enlightening even as a private pilot.

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2 points

Thanks, I’ll check it out. My exp. with flying was… I was in school for commercial aviation. I think I made it 2 years in? Got my PPL and was making my way through instrument before I made a life decision to buy a house for my family. I could either afford school or the house, but not both.

I love aviation and flying is the single greatest thing in the world to me… Besides my family.

The air safety institute videos are a great watch, too. Also check out Lucaas, Captain Joe, or 74 gear for more aviation videos.

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19 points

But also, even though they’re older, they’re still loved by pilots and are good in difficult conditions because they’re pretty over-engined

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6 points

There are Douglas DC3s still flying in commercial service (not many, but a few). Those were built in the 1940s. 2004 is not all that old a plane.

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6 points

Point is, it’s a maintenance issue, the media is quick to shit on Boeing. I mean they earned that but try to have integrity while reporting.

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11 points

Still, it’s old enough that problems like this should be attributed to lack of maintenance on the airline’s part rather than an issue in the design or manufacture of the plane.

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4 points

This particular plane is 29 years old.

That said, commercial airliners can go for decades just fine as long as they are maintained properly. Newer planes will be more efficient and have some newer features, but a tried-and-true airframe that has been well maintained is worth keeping around.

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