747 Air Cargo Plane Loses Engine Over
Michigan
Kalitta Air Cargo Plane Lands Safely in Detroit After Losing
Engine
October 21, 2004
03:29 PM US Eastern Timezone
YPSILANTI, Mich.--(BUSINESS
WIRE)--Oct. 21, 2004--On October 20, 2004, Kalitta Air operating a Boeing 747 N709CK left Chicago's
O'Hare International Airport bound for New York's
Kennedy International
Airport when it experienced
mechanical difficulties with one of the four engines. Five crewmembers were
aboard the airplane when it landed safely at Detroit
Metropolitan Airport.
No injuries were sustained. It is believed that one of the four engines
separated from the airplane while in flight over Lake Michigan.
The airplane originally departed Hong Kong
with a full load consisting of general merchandise cargo. From Hong
Kong the airplane stopped in Khabarovsk, Russia
for fuel and then continued to Anchorage, Alaska
for fuel before stopping at O'Hare International Airport in Chicago,
Illinois bound for Kennedy
International Airport
in New York.
Kalitta Air received Part 121 Air
Carrier Certification by the Federal Aviation Administration in November 2000. Kalitta Air is based in Ypsilanti,
Michigan at Willow
Run Airport
and flies cargo internationally. Kalitta Air operates
eleven (11) Boeing 747 airplanes to transport cargo worldwide. The Boeing 747
is equipped with four Pratt and Whitney JT9D engines and they are recognized
for their safety and reliability record.
The Company is working with the FAA officials and National
Transportation Safety Board to determine the cause of the incident. The
Company's Safety Department is diligently inspecting all maintenance and
airplane records and will continue to investigate the cause of this incident.
The Director of Operations for Kalitta
Air would like to commend the actions of Detroit
Metropolitan Airport
in handling this emergency. The Company appreciates the support and swift
response of the Detroit Metropolitan
Airport and all of those who
assisted in the safe landing of the aircraft. Their actions and the well
trained experienced crewmembers ensured that the airplane landed safely and no
one was injured.
747 crew lands to check
engine only to find it gone
Herald news services
Published: Friday,
October 22, 2004
CHICAGO - Even
minus a little engine that could, this Boeing 747 did.
The Kalitta Air cargo plane from Chicago
landed safely at Detroit Metropolitan
Airport after dropping an engine
somewhere over Michigan.
The jet took off from O'Hare International Airport late
Wednesday and was bound for New York's
Kennedy International
Airport when it reported mechanical
problems with one of its engines, a Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman
said.
The 747 was able to fly but was diverted as a safety
precaution to Detroit, where it
landed without incident, FAA officials said. No one was injured.
After the landing, airline personnel found that the engine,
one of four Pratt and Whitney JT9D models, was completely gone, FAA officials
said.
Michigan
authorities searched Thursday for the missing engine, which may have fallen
into Lake Michigan, the FAA said.
Kalitta Air operates 11 Boeing 747
airplanes to transport cargo worldwide.
Plane lands in Detroit after engine falls off
Associated Press
Published October
22, 2004
ROMULUS - A
cargo plane landed safely at Detroit Metropolitan
Airport early Thursday after losing
an engine that may have landed in Lake Michigan.
Federal Aviation Administration officials say a Kalitta Air LLC jet took off from O'Hare International
Airport late Wednesday.
It was bound for New York's
Kennedy International
Airport when it reported mechanical
problems with one of its four engines when it was about 15 miles east of Battle
Creek.
The Boeing 747 was diverted to Detroit Metro in Romulus,
where it landed without incident. No members of the five-person crew were
injured.
When the plane landed, flight officials discovered the
engine not only was a mechanical loss but was physically gone, the FAA said.
It was believed to have been lost over Lake
Michigan, but law enforcement officials were searching the Battle
Creek area as well.
The National Transportation Safety Board was leading the
investigation, and the FAA was lending support.
Kalitta is based in Ypsilanti
and offers worldwide air freight service.
Cargo plane loses engine over
Michigan
Detroit, MI,
Oct. 21 (UPI) –
Authorities are searching a corridor from Lake
Michigan to Battle Creek
for a jet engine that fell off a Kalitta Air cargo
plane early Thursday.
The Boeing 741-R was flying from Chicago's
O'Hare International Airport to John F.
Kennedy International
Airport in New
York when it declared an emergency and landed safely
at Detroit Metropolitan
Airport.
The flight crew had reported engine trouble after one of the
freighter's four engines apparently fell off its wing mount.
Michigan State Police had received no reports of debris on
the ground, WDIV-TV, Detroit, said.
A Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman said there
were unconfirmed reports the engine fell into Lake Michigan.
A team from the National Transportation Safety Board was to
inspect the plane on the ground in Detroit.