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IND vs ENG 2nd Test: Shubman Gill's statement ton, Jaiswal misses out & Karun Nair at No.3?
IND vs ENG 2nd Test: Shubman Gill's statement ton, Jaiswal misses out & Karun Nair at No.3?

Time of India

time03-07-2025

  • Climate
  • Time of India

IND vs ENG 2nd Test: Shubman Gill's statement ton, Jaiswal misses out & Karun Nair at No.3?

Air India Flight Faces Stall, GPWS Warnings After Takeoff From Delhi In Second Near-miss An Air India Boeing 777 flight from Delhi to Vienna narrowly avoided disaster after receiving stall and ground proximity warnings shortly after takeoff on June 14. The aircraft, operating as AI 187, lost 900 feet during climb in stormy weather. The pilots recovered control and continued safely to Vienna. The DGCA has grounded both pilots and summoned Air India's head of safety for an investigation. Watch#airindia #aviationalert #flightincident #dgca #airsafety #ai187 #boeing777 #indiaaviation 20.6K views | 1 day ago

Putin's War Pushes Ukraine Army Chief To Ban Troop Camps
Putin's War Pushes Ukraine Army Chief To Ban Troop Camps

Time of India

time01-07-2025

  • Climate
  • Time of India

Putin's War Pushes Ukraine Army Chief To Ban Troop Camps

Air India Flight Faces Stall, GPWS Warnings After Takeoff From Delhi In Second Near-miss An Air India Boeing 777 flight from Delhi to Vienna narrowly avoided disaster after receiving stall and ground proximity warnings shortly after takeoff on June 14. The aircraft, operating as AI 187, lost 900 feet during climb in stormy weather. The pilots recovered control and continued safely to Vienna. The DGCA has grounded both pilots and summoned Air India's head of safety for an investigation. Watch#airindia #aviationalert #flightincident #dgca #airsafety #ai187 #boeing777 #indiaaviation 2.6K views | 6 hours ago

Air India suspends two pilots on Delhi-Vienna Boeing flight after take-off incident
Air India suspends two pilots on Delhi-Vienna Boeing flight after take-off incident

New Indian Express

time01-07-2025

  • General
  • New Indian Express

Air India suspends two pilots on Delhi-Vienna Boeing flight after take-off incident

NEW DELHI: Within two days of the horrific Ahmedabad plane crash, there was another near mishap of an Air India flight during take-off from Delhi to Vienna in bad weather. The First Captain and co-pilot managed to land the Boeing -777 safely at Vienna airport. The duo has been suspended by the airline and the aviation regulator, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA), is now probing the incident. A DGCA official confirmed to TNIE that an inquiry into an incident involving an Air India flight was on. According to a flight tracker website, AI 187 took off from Terminal 3 of the Indira Gandhi International Airport around 3 am on June 14. The flight is said to have lost altitude while taking off due to the turbulent weather and the cockpit had received numerous warning messages. The pilots though managed to steer the aircraft safely to Vienna. A source said, 'The pilots reported the matter to the airline and they alerted the DGCA about it, which is a mandatory requirement. The internal probe has been completed,' said a source. An Air India spokesperson said, 'Upon receipt of the pilot's report, the matter was disclosed to DGCA in accordance with regulations. Subsequently, upon receipt of data from the aircraft's recorders, further investigation was initiated. The pilots have been off-rostered pending the outcome of the investigation.' Air India refused to share details citing the ongoing inquiry. On June 12, AI-171, a Boeing-787 flight crashed just outside the Ahmedabad airport killing 275 people including 241 on board the plane.

Hours after AI171 crash, another Air India flight dropped 900 feet mid-air; DGCA orders probe, pilots taken off duty
Hours after AI171 crash, another Air India flight dropped 900 feet mid-air; DGCA orders probe, pilots taken off duty

Mint

time01-07-2025

  • General
  • Mint

Hours after AI171 crash, another Air India flight dropped 900 feet mid-air; DGCA orders probe, pilots taken off duty

The 12 June Air India plane crash in Ahmedabad had taken the world by shock, with over 270 people — including 241 on board — losing their lives. While the country was still recovering from the fatal crash, another Air India wide-body aircraft came close to a presumably serious accident. According to a report by The Times of India, within 38 hours of the Ahmedabad plane crash, a Delhi-Vienna Boeing 777 aircraft operating as AI187 received multiple critical warnings shortly after its takeoff. Officials aware of the matter and cited by the newspaper confirmed that the Delhi-Vienna Air India aircraft dropped approximately 900 feet during its initial climb. During this time, the wide-body aircraft, registered as VT-ALJ, got a stall warning, as well as two 'don't sink' cautions from the Ground Proximity Warning System (GPWS). The warnings alerted the crew about an unusual loss in altitude. 'The aircraft was involved in an inflight occurrence of stick shaker and GPWS caution. Soon after takeoff, stick shaker warning and GPWS don't sink caution appeared. Stall warning came once and GPWS caution came twice. There was an altitude loss of around 900 feet during climb,' officials quoted by TOI said. Luckily, the pilots were able to recover the aircraft and it landed safely in Vienna. "Subsequently, the crew recovered the aircraft and continued the flight to Vienna,' the officials were quoted as saying. Stick shaker warning refers to when the control column on the flight deck shakes and makes noise to summon urgent attention of the pilot, detecting something is not right. As per data from flight tracking websites, the incident happened on June 14 amid a bad weather as the Delhi-Vienna aircraft took off at 2:56 am. At that moment, a thunderstorm was engulfing Delhi, TOI reported. Officials said initial Air India flight report showed that the pilots received 'stick shaker due turbulence after takeoff mentioned and not the other occurrences in detail'. However, when authorities probed the B777's flight data recorder (DFDR), perhaps following the DGCA's orders to enhance safety, it was found that there were other warning like GPWS don't sink caution and stall warning in play. An Air India spokesperson quoted by TOI said that a probe has been initiated and the pilots have been taken off duty. 'Upon receipt of the pilot's report, the matter was disclosed to DGCA in accordance with regulations. Subsequently, upon receipt of data from the aircraft's recorders, further investigation was initiated. The pilots have been off-rostered pending the outcome of the investigation,' the spokesperson said.

Air India Crash: Air India Aircraft Plunges 900 Feet After AI 171 Crash; DGCA Launches Urgent Investigation, ET Infra
Air India Crash: Air India Aircraft Plunges 900 Feet After AI 171 Crash; DGCA Launches Urgent Investigation, ET Infra

Time of India

time01-07-2025

  • General
  • Time of India

Air India Crash: Air India Aircraft Plunges 900 Feet After AI 171 Crash; DGCA Launches Urgent Investigation, ET Infra

Advt 'Stick shaker' alert triggered urgent pilot response Advt DGCA takes stern view as scrutiny intensifies post-crash Join the community of 2M+ industry professionals. Subscribe to Newsletter to get latest insights & analysis in your inbox. Get updates on your preferred social platform Follow us for the latest news, insider access to events and more. In a second serious safety scare within 38 hours of the June 12 crash of Air India flight AI 171 in Ahmedabad, a Delhi-Vienna Boeing 777 aircraft operating as AI 187 experienced multiple critical inflight warnings shortly after incident occurred at 2:56 am on June 14, as the plane flew through severe thunderstorm conditions over the national capital, according to a report by wide-body aircraft, registered VT-ALJ, received a stall warning, along with two 'don't sink' cautions from the Ground Proximity Warning System (GPWS), alerting the crew to an abnormal loss in altitude. Officials aware of the matter confirmed that the aircraft dropped approximately 900 feet during initial the flight ultimately landed safely in Vienna after 9 hours and 8 minutes, the near-disaster has triggered a probe by the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA). Both pilots have been taken off flying duty, and the airline's head of safety has been summoned for to officials, the crew received a stick shaker alert — a severe warning that violently shakes the flight controls and warns of an impending aerodynamic stall. This system is designed to immediately draw the pilots' attention and demand corrective action.'The aircraft was involved in an inflight occurrence of stick shaker and GPWS caution. Soon after takeoff, stick shaker warning and GPWS don't sink caution appeared. Stall warning came once and GPWS caution came twice. There was an altitude loss of around 900 feet during climb. Subsequently, the crew recovered the aircraft and continued the flight to Vienna,' officials familiar with the incident told flight data, reviewed after the incident, revealed that the onboard systems issued multiple alerts — including those not fully reflected in the initial pilot report. The original flight report is said to have only mentioned "stick shaker due turbulence after takeoff," while omitting the ground proximity and stall warnings. It was only after flight data recorder (FDR) analysis that the full extent of the occurrence was incident came just days after the AI 171 tragedy, which left several people dead and raised urgent questions about Air India's operational safety. In response, the DGCA had launched enhanced oversight of the airline's fleet and safety Air India spokesperson said: 'Upon receipt of the pilot's report, the matter was disclosed to DGCA in accordance with regulations. Subsequently, upon receipt of data from the aircraft's recorders, further investigation was initiated. The pilots have been off-rostered pending the outcome of the investigation.'As part of the fallout from the June 14 occurrence, both pilots were immediately off-rostered, and Air India's head of safety was summoned by the June 17, the DGCA had formally expressed concern about 'recent maintenance-related issues' and instructed the airline to enhance coordination across departments — engineering, operations, and ground handling — while reinforcing its focus on insiders say the perception of safety at Air India has changed dramatically. 'Old Air India (PSU time) did not have comfortable planes running on time but safety was never an issue. Now planes, at least the narrow body fleet, are better but passengers are apprehensive about safety after the terrible AI 171 crash. The new management and the new owner need to win back passenger and employee trust at the earliest by doing all it takes,' said one airline Vienna-bound aircraft continued onward to Toronto with a fresh crew after its stop in Europe. An investigation into the incident is underway.

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