Airplane engines

Delta plane lands safely after engine blows up

CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- Ginger Heath and her husband were returning home Thursday from a business trip in Austin, Texas, when she says their plane started to shake violently.

The plane had just taken off from Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport in Atlanta, and hadn't been in the air more than 10 minutes.

Heath, who lives in Monroe, said she looked out the window, then heard a "huge explosion" coming from the other side of the plane.

George Edwin Lowe

George Edwin Lowe, born June 26, 1936, died Sunday, Sept. 4, 2011. Family and friends can share memories at Huntsville City Park at 1 p.m. Oct. 1. Cremation entrusted to Lindquist’s Ogden Mortuary, 3408 Washington Blvd. Post condolences at www.lindquistmortuary.com. See the complete obituary in the Standard-Examiner's e-edition.

Courtesy photo
A Weatherly 620B plane, based out of Ogden, made an emergency landing northwest of the Salt Lake City International Airport after a cylinder in the engine burst, spraying oil all over the windshield, says Salt Lake City Fire Capt. Mark Bednarik. Bednarik says the plane is owned by Thomas Helicopters in Ogden. The company contracts with Salt Lake County Mosquito Abatement. The pilot is 45 years old. His name has not been released.

Small plane makes emergency landing on dirt road

NORTH SALT LAKE -- A small single-engine plane's safe landing on a dirt road Wednesday was amazing, emergency personnel say.

The Weatherly 620B plane, based in Ogden, made the landing northwest of Salt Lake City International Airport after a cylinder burst in the engine, spraying oil all over the windshield, said Salt Lake City Fire Capt. Mark Bednarik.

F-35 engine work halted

NEW YORK -- The U.S. Department of Defense ordered General Electric Co. and its partner Rolls Royce Group PLC to stop development of the F136 jet engine, its first step to formally kill the controversial program to provide the F-35 warplane with an alternate engine.

Lasers threaten airplane safety

WASHINGTON -- Last year alone, more than 100 incidents occurred at Los Angeles International Airport in which the safety of planes was put at risk by people pointing at them with lasers, and nearly as many incidents took place at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport, federal officials said Wednesday.

Overall, the number of incidents nationally in which people pointed lasers at planes and helicopters nearly doubled last year, from 1,527 incidents in 2009 to 2,836 incidents in 2010, the Federal Aviation Administration said.

Many of the incidents involve airliners in the midst of takeoffs or landings, critical phases of flight in which pilots need to be at their most alert. Pointing lasers at cockpits can temporarily blind pilots or even permanently damage their eyesight. In some instances, pilots have had to relinquish control of their aircraft to another pilot.

Singapore Airlines pulls 3 planes due to engines

SYDNEY -- Tests uncovered oil stains in three Rolls-Royce engines on Singapore Airlines' A380 superjumbos, prompting the airline to yank the planes from service Wednesday just two days after Qantas announced troubling oil leaks on its A380s.

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