Loud noise aboard U.S. flight investigated
A Miami-based captain opted not to return to Dallas-Fort Worth after flight attendants heard a loud noise from underneath the plane.
Posted on Thu, May. 08, 2008
Photo of air conditioner compartment on a Boeing 767 American Airlines flight from Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport to Paris.
The Federal Aviation Administration is investigating an incident onboard an American Airlines flight from Dallas to Paris, in which a Miami-based captain continued flying after crew members heard what they believed to be an explosion in the cargo hold shortly after take-off.
Unknown until the plane landed in Paris: the access panel to the air conditioner had ripped off during the flight.
If the pilots had known, ''they obviously would have returned'' to Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport,'' Jim Kaiser, American's manager of flight operations quality control and Chuck Harman, American's 757/767 fleet captain, wrote in an e-mail to American's pilots Wednesday, defending the captain's actions. ''This captain did exactly what we want our captains to do,'' they wrote.
About 10 to 14 minutes after American flight 48 departed DFW April 20, and had climbed about 10,000 feet, ''the crew in the back of the plane felt a very strong vibration from underneath,'' and notified the cockpit, according to an e-mail from an unnamed flight attendant. About six minutes later, the flight attendants, along with the passengers, heard ''a loud explosion,'' according to the e-mail.
A crew member told the Miami-based captain, Steve Kantlehner, what they had heard and felt.
The captain called dispatch, and decided it was most likely an inside cargo door that was left open, therefore allowing bags to shift, according to the flight attendant's e-mail. The captain decided to fly the 10 hours to Paris, rather than return to Dallas-Fort Worth to check out what the noise was, the flight attendant said.
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