Aviation experts have said airport authorities in South Korea should face serious questions over the concrete wall that a plane collided with killing 179 people. Leading air safety expert David ...
A Boeing 737-800 slammed into a mound of dirt and a concrete wall at the end of the runway. The area housed a localizer that guides planes on the runway. Some aviation experts say the fatalities ...
Remarkably, the pilot managed to control the plane’s high-speed slide along the runway, offering passengers a glimmer of hope. However, that hope vanished when the plane struck the concrete wall at ...
But in the days ahead, “investigators will be looking at that wall,” said ... on a base made of a hard concrete rather than a more standard metal tower or pylon installation.
South Korea said Tuesday it was examining regulations around a concrete wall at Muan airport, after a Jeju Air flight crashed into the barrier and burst into flames, killing 179 people. When asked ...
Aviation experts are raising serious questions about a curious concrete wall near the end of an airport ... Times that the structure was built to install the so-called localizer antenna, which ...
The Jeju Air plane burst into flames after smashing into a concrete wall (Chris Jung/NurPhoto via Getty Images) Aviation experts have also been questioning why the 'unusual' concrete wall was ...