A California-bound United Airlines emergency landing likely caused by collision with a weather balloon
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A California-bound United Airlines emergency landing likely caused by collision with a weather balloon
"A United Airlines plane appears to have collided with a weather balloon while cruising over Utah at 36,000 feet last week, fracturing layers of its windshield and forcing an emergency landing. A California company called Windborne Systems said it started looking into the situation Sunday, not long after the National Transportation Safety Board said it was investigating. Windborne quickly concluded that the Boeing 737 Max very likely ran into one of its balloons, despite the company's best efforts to prevent such collisions."
"The plane, which was flying from Denver to Los Angeles, did not lose cabin pressure and landed safely in Salt Lake City last Thursday. United said 134 passengers and six crew members were aboard. Windborne CEO John Dean said he was surprised at the extent of the damage to the plane's windshield because Windborne's balloons weigh only 2.4 pounds at takeoff with a simple bag of sand serving as ballast. The impact sent fragments of glass flying in the cockpit."
A United Airlines Boeing 737 Max appears to have collided with a weather balloon over Utah at 36,000 feet, fracturing layers of the windshield and forcing an emergency landing in Salt Lake City. The Denver-to-Los Angeles flight carried 134 passengers and six crew and did not lose cabin pressure. Windborne Systems, a California company that launches balloons to gather weather data, said one of its balloons likely struck the plane and that its location and altitude data aligned with the flight before the balloon stopped transmitting. Windborne said its balloons weigh about 2.4 pounds at takeoff and comply with FAA size and design rules. Windborne forwarded data to the NTSB, which will ultimately determine what happened.
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