News

Another Tragedy Almost Happened! Asiana Airlines Plane Triggered Low Altitude Alarm During Approach!

Feb 26, 2025 Leave a message

Another tragedy almost happened! Asiana Airlines plane triggered low altitude alarm during approach!

 

slope precision light price,
airport flash light factory,
LED siderow light suppliers,
low price LED siderow light.

 

 

news-1-1

 

 

Civil Aviation Resources Network, February 25, 2025: According to AirlineGeeks, on February 23, local time, an Asiana Airlines passenger plane triggered a low altitude alarm while approaching the runway of San Francisco Airport, and then the passenger plane took off and finally landed safely.

According to reports, the passenger plane involved was an A350-900 (registration number HL8382), which flew the Seoul-San Francisco OZ212 flight that day.

According to AvHerald, before the crew performed a go-around, the aircraft was only more than 3 nautical miles away from the runway entrance, and the flight altitude at that time was only 325 feet, far below the safe altitude of 1,000 feet.

At the time, the pilot did not seem to be aware of any problems and continued to descend to a low altitude of 275 feet until the San Francisco Airport control tower sounded a low altitude warning. The air traffic controller quickly noticed the abnormality and decisively ordered the aircraft to take off. In the end, the flight landed safely on Runway 28L.

On July 6, 2013, when Asiana Airlines flight OZ214 was landing at San Francisco International Airport in the United States, the landing gear hit the protective embankment in front of the runway, causing damage to the tail of the plane and starting a fire. At the time of the accident, there were 291 passengers and 16 crew members on board. The accident caused 3 deaths, 29 serious injuries, and 138 minor injuries. According to public reports, there were 141 Chinese passengers on the flight at the time, most of whom were flying from Shanghai to South Korea and then to the United States. The three dead were students from a middle school in Zhejiang who were studying in the United States. The investigation by the National Transportation Safety Board of the United States showed that the three pilots on the plane did not notice that the speed was too low, causing the plane to descend too quickly. The crew's misoperation caused the autopilot system to shut down. At the same time, part of the instrument landing system at San Francisco Airport was under maintenance and was not started, causing the pilots to fail to operate according to the procedures they were most familiar with.

Send Inquiry