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- <text id=89TT0634>
- <title>
- Mar. 06, 1989: Blowout Over The Pacific
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Mar. 06, 1989 The Tower Fiasco
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 28
- Blowout over the Pacific
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Another Boeing passenger plane "peels" in midair
- </p>
- <p> Everything appeared normal on United Airlines Flight 811. En
- route from Honolulu to Auckland, New Zealand, the Boeing 747,
- carrying 336 passengers and a crew of 18, had climbed to 22,000
- ft. over the Pacific. As the flight attendants were preparing
- to roll out the beverage carts, passengers in the forward
- section heard a hissing noise. Within seconds came a loud thump
- of bursting metal and a roar of cold air. "It was like a dream,"
- said passenger Gary Garber later. "A section of the plane wasn't
- there any longer."
- </p>
- <p> In its place was an immense hole, open to the cold night
- sky. A 10 ft.-by-40 ft. section of the right forward fuselage
- had simply blown away, and nine passengers who had been seated
- in three rows in the business-class section were swept out to
- their deaths.
- </p>
- <p> A howling wind cascaded through the cabin so fast that one
- woman's earrings were pulled from her ears. Oxygen masks popped
- free (some people later complained that several oxygen
- compartments failed to open). "It was a nightmare," said
- passenger Dalenya Poliszcuk. A shower of ice cubes from the
- beverage carts and all sorts of personal possessions filled the
- air. "There were shoes blown back from the front of the plane,"
- reported passenger Andrew Gannon. "A stewardess went flying,
- and another one tried to calm everybody down."
- </p>
- <p> New Zealand schoolteacher Beverley Nisbet, summoning a
- remarkable presence of mind, unleashed her camera and snapped
- photos of her fellow passengers as they crouched and prepared
- for the worst. Remembers Roger White, who was seated in Row 18,
- not far from the business-class section: "The walls seemed to be
- popping in on everybody. I kind of got resigned to the fact that
- I was going to die. I put my head down and told my wife I loved
- her. She told me she loved me." Said Jack Kennedy: "I thought
- everything was going up pretty quickly, I tell you. I had my two
- sons on board, one just in front of me and the other separated
- just a little away. He said, `Well, it looks as though this is
- it, Dad.'" Added David Birrell, who was sitting about 10 ft.
- from the hole: "You're watching the clouds and the moon and the
- stars, and you're waiting for the sea."
- </p>
- <p> Miraculously, the plane never hit the sea. Though both
- starboard engines were disabled, probably by debris, veteran
- pilot David Cronin, 58, skillfully reduced altitude and nudged
- his crippled craft along the 100-mile journey back to Honolulu
- International Airport. As he touched down at 2:33 a.m., one hour
- after the plane had taken off, everybody aboard burst into
- applause and then slid swiftly down the escape chutes. Said
- passenger Bruce Lampert: "I can tell you that was a long flight
- back." Afterward, a dozen people were hospitalized.
- </p>
- <p> Investigators were not ready to dismiss the possibility that
- Flight 811 was the target of a terrorist bombing, especially
- when it was recalled that in January a Honolulu radio station
- received a call from a man threatening to plant a bomb on a U.S.
- plane unless a member of the Japanese Red Army was released from
- a U.S. jail. The immediate speculation, however, was that a
- cargo door had simply been whipped off in flight, taking a large
- portion of the fuselage with it. If that was the case, the
- incident was one more in a series of mishaps in which commercial
- aircraft have lost huge sections of their fuselage in midair.
- Last April a flight attendant was killed and 61 people were
- injured when a sizable piece of the fuselage of a Boeing 737
- peeled off on an Aloha Airlines flight from Hilo, on Hawaii
- Island, to Honolulu, on Oahu. A subsequent inspection of all
- 737s ordered by the Federal Aviation Administration turned up
- tiny stress cracks in nearly half the planes. In December an
- Eastern Airlines Boeing 727 was forced to land in Charleston, W.
- Va., after a 14-in. hole blew open in the plane's body.
- </p>
- <p> The tragedy of Flight 811 was a further setback for Boeing,
- which in recent weeks had to acknowledge that some of its new
- planes were rolled out of the factory with faulty -- and
- potentially dangerous -- electrical wiring. In today's
- atmosphere of rough competition fostered by airline
- deregulation, a number of U.S. carriers have been accused of
- pushing their aging fleets to the limit and disregarding
- manufacturers' maintenance recommendations.
- </p>
- <p> At the same time, individual planes are making more flights
- and longer ones. A chief measure of wear and tear in an aircraft
- fuselage is the "pressurization cycle" -- one takeoff, one
- landing -- which requires that the cabin be pressurized for
- high-altitude flight and then depressurized during descent.
- This places stress on the airframe; over time, repeated
- expansion and contraction weaken the plane. Like a balloon that
- has been inflated too many times, the plane's skin becomes
- vulnerable to tearing. But while the Flight 811 jet has been in
- service for 19 years and is one of the oldest in United's fleet,
- it had racked up only 15,021 cycles, considered middle-aged for
- a 747 but not dangerous.
- </p>
- <p> This week the Air Transport Association, the airlines' trade
- group, is expected to recommend some 200 changes in federal
- regulations that govern maintenance. One especially significant
- proposal: to remove airliners from service after a specified
- level of wear and tear, perhaps 80,000 cycles, and rebuild the
- planes from the wheels up. Says A.T.A. Vice President William
- Jackman: "It's a first step in a series of safety measures . .
- . a major effort by the airlines and planemakers to assure the
- airworthiness of passenger aircraft." With planes falling to
- pieces in the sky, passengers will appreciate that.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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