Cockpit Windshield Breaks Off Sichuan Airlines Jet in China

Cockpit Windshield Breaks Off Sichuan Airlines Jet in China
A Sichuan Airlines A320 jet inside a hangar at the Airbus Tianjin factory in Tianjin City, northern China on April 21, 2009. (Frederic J. Brown/AFP/Getty Images)
Reuters
5/14/2018
Updated:
5/14/2018

SHANGHAI—A Sichuan Airlines flight made an emergency landing in the southwest Chinese city of Chengdu on May 14 after a windshield on the right side of the jet’s cockpit broke off, China’s aviation authority said.

No passengers were injured in the incident but the pilot sitting in the right seat, who is usually the first officer, suffered scratches and a waist sprain, the Civil Aviation Administration of China’s (CAAC) Southwest Regional Administration said on its website.

A cabin crew member was also injured in the descent, it added, without providing details on what had caused the windshield to break off.

The flight, Sichuan Airlines 3U8633, left the central Chinese municipality of Chongqing on May 14 morning and was bound for the Tibetan capital of Lhasa, the authority said.

According to flight tracking website FlightRadar24, the aircraft was an Airbus A319. A spokeswoman for Airbus said that the planemaker would provide all necessary support upon request by the CAAC and Sichuan Airlines.

Sichuan Airlines said on its official Weibo account that the flight had experienced a “mechanical failure” without providing further details. It said it had switched the flight’s passengers to another aircraft to carry on their journey to Lhasa.

Pictures published by state-run newspaper Chengdu Economic Daily showed the plane missing one of its cockpit windows and damage to its cockpit controls.

Sichuan Airlines, a regional airline headquartered in Chengdu, operates mostly domestic flights but also flies internationally to countries such as Japan, Canada, and the Czech Republic.

Incidents involving cracked windshields do happen on a regular basis due to occurrences such as bird or lightning strikes but ones involving entire windshields coming off are rare.

In 1990, one of the pilots on British Airways Flight 5390 was blown partially out of the cabin window after its windshield blew out at 23,000 feet. He survived the incident, which occurred on a BAC-111 jet.

An engine on a Southwest 737 in April ripped apart in flight and shattered a cabin window, killing a female passenger in the first U.S. airline passenger fatality since 2009. On May 3, another Southwest Airlines flight made an emergency landing after a cabin window pane cracked in flight.

Reporting by Brenda Goh

Recommended video:

Southwest Pilot Calls for Emergency Landing in Audio Recording