Qantas A380 flights to resume after engine blast
Australia's Qantas Airways will put one of its airbus A380 superjumbos back in the skies Saturday, three weeks after a mid-air engine blast grounded the fleet for intensive safety checks.
Chief executive Alan Joyce will join passengers for the first leg of flight QF31 to London via Singapore as the airline, which enjoys an impeccable safety record, tries to reassure the public about the giant, double-decker craft.
Qantas suspended its six A380s, which fly long-haul routes to London and Los Angeles, after a superjumbo's engine blew up on November 4, forcing an emergency landing in Singapore.
Checks revealed problems with 16 of the total 24 Rolls-Royce Trent 900 engines powering Qantas's A380s — four per plane — meaning the turbines would have to be replaced or modified.
"The decision to restore A380 services follows an intensive trent 900 engine inspection program carried out in close consultation with rolls-royce and airbus," it said in a statement this week.
"Together with the engine and aircraft manufacturers and the civil aviation safety authority, Qantas is now satisfied that it can begin reintroducing A380s to its international network progressively."
Only two of Qantas's A380s will initially return to service, with the airline taking delivery of two new superjumbos before the year's end and another two in early 2011.
The planes remain barred from trans-pacific flights to Los Angeles because of the extra engine thrust required.
Qantas, which has never suffered a fatal crash in the jet age, had visiting english football star David Beckham pose on an A380 for the media this week, while airbus ran full-page newspaper ads for the plane on Saturday.
A Qantas spokeswoman said the 450-seat A380 was virtually full for the flight, which leaves at 5:30 pm
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