SFGate: Bombardier Orders Turboprops Grounded

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Wednesday, September 12, 2007 (AP)
Bombardier Orders Turboprops Grounded
By ROB GILLIES, Associated Press Writer


   (09-12) 10:59 PDT TORONTO, Canada (AP) --

   Planemaker Bombardier called for the grounding of all Q400 turboprop
planes with least 10,000 flights Wednesday after failed landing gear on a
Scandinavian Airlines aircraft sent it skidding off a runway in Lithuania,
the second such incident in three days.

   None of the 52 passengers and crew on board were injured. However, the
incident closely resembled a crash landing late last week in which another
SAS aircraft experienced landing gear failure. Five people were slightly
injured in that incident.

   The SAS, turboprop carrying 73 people caught fire Sunday after its right
landing gear collapsed during an emergency landing at Aalborg's airport in
western Denmark.

   The grounding Wednesday forced the cancellation of at least 200 flights
worldwide. Both SAS and Horizon Air, a regional carrier operated by Alaska
Air Group Inc., each canceled more than 100 flights to inspect their
turboprop aircraft.

   Bombardier said the grounding would affect 60 of the 160 Q400 aircraft
that have been delivered worldwide.

   SAS grounded its 27 Bombardier turboprops of the same make, Horizon
grounded 19, and Austrian Airlines Group said it grounded eight.
Bombardier Inc. would not comment on who operates the remaining six of the
60 aircraft that should be grounded.

   Bombardier sent representatives to assist European authorities, saying
"Bombardier cannot speculate or comment as to the cause of these
incidents."

   "We decided to go ahead and to inform all our operators that there was a
problem and that they should inspect all aircraft with more than 10,000
cycles as a precautionary measure," Bombardier spokesman Marc Duchesne
said.

   Bombardier, the world's No. 4 plane maker said Canadian regulators has
been briefed on the situation and could recommend further "corrective
actions."

   "We believe our aircraft are absolutely safe and reliable," said Duchesn=
e.

   U.S. and Canadian aviation regulators recently ordered Montreal-based
Bombardier to address wing malfunctions on certain jets flown by regional
carriers in North America.

   The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration's directive, which went into
effect Sept. 5, covers 684 airplanes in the U.S. fleet that were built by
Bombardier and used by carriers such as Air Wisconsin and SkyWest Inc.

   The airplanes have experienced flap failures over several years, accordi=
ng
to Transport Canada, a regulatory body, which issued its own safety order
affecting 87 jets last month.

   On Wednesday, SAS pilots attempted to land the 80-passenger plane at on
its front and left landing gear when the right set of wheels failed to
extend, authorities said.

   Passengers were ordered to move to the left side of the plane as it
approached the runway for fear that the right propeller might shred upon
landing and send shards into the cabin, said Kestutis Auryla, head of the
Lithuanian Civil Aviation Administration.

   On the Sunday crash landing in Denmark, shards of the propeller could be
seen flying high into the air after the plane struck the runway.

   The right wing struck the ground in Lithuania on Wednesday, causing a
shower of sparks but no fire, Auryla said.

   The Q400 turboprop eventually came to a stop in a patch of grass next to
the airport's main landing strip after turning 90 degrees. All 48
passengers and four crew were evacuated safely, he said.

   The plane had taken off from Copenhagen's international airport for a
short flight across the Baltic Sea to Palanga, a resort town in western
Lithuania. The pilots noticed a failure in the landing gear during the
flight and decided to land at Vilnius because the airport has a long, wide
runway.

   Denver-based Frontier Airlines is buying Q400 turboprops for a regional
service, which is still awaiting Federal Aviation Administration approval.

   The airline will work closely with Bombardier to determine if any changes
are required as a result of its inquiry, Frontier spokesman Joe Hodas
said.

   Bombardier shares fell more than three percent, or 21 cents, to $6.19
Wednesday.

   ___

   Associated Press Writer Liudas Dapkus in Lithuania contributed to this
report --------------------------------------------------------------------=
--
Copyright 2007 AP

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