Josh F
7th August 2008, 05:31 PM
The media have gone out-of-control!
A QANTAS Boeing 737 has aborted a take-off at Melbourne Airport after noises were heard coming from the undercarriage.
The Canberra-bound plane returned to the terminal and passengers were transferred to another flight.
A Qantas spokeswoman says QF850 had problems with its air conditioning duct unit.
"It was a routine return to the terminal due to an air-conditioning fault," she said.
"Rather than delay passengers further a replacement aircraft was arranged and the flight took off just before 1pm."
The incident is the latest in a recent run of scares for Australia's national airline.
Qantas's problems started last month with an emergency landing at Manila after an explosion ripped a hole in a jet's fuselage enroute from Hong Kong to Melbourne.
Then a domestic flight was forced to return to Adelaide last week after a wheel bay door failed to close.
A Qantas Boeing 767 flight turned back for an emergency landing at Sydney airport on August 2 after a hydraulic fluid leak was discovered.
That was followed by a jet being grounded for almost three hours after a technical fault was discovered in a pre-flight inspection at Sydney airport on Monday.
Qantas chief executive Geoff Dixon admitted this week the airline's reputation had been tainted by the incidents and said Qantas had to work hard to retrieve its good name.
AAP
A QANTAS Boeing 737 has aborted a take-off at Melbourne Airport after noises were heard coming from the undercarriage.
The Canberra-bound plane returned to the terminal and passengers were transferred to another flight.
A Qantas spokeswoman says QF850 had problems with its air conditioning duct unit.
"It was a routine return to the terminal due to an air-conditioning fault," she said.
"Rather than delay passengers further a replacement aircraft was arranged and the flight took off just before 1pm."
The incident is the latest in a recent run of scares for Australia's national airline.
Qantas's problems started last month with an emergency landing at Manila after an explosion ripped a hole in a jet's fuselage enroute from Hong Kong to Melbourne.
Then a domestic flight was forced to return to Adelaide last week after a wheel bay door failed to close.
A Qantas Boeing 767 flight turned back for an emergency landing at Sydney airport on August 2 after a hydraulic fluid leak was discovered.
That was followed by a jet being grounded for almost three hours after a technical fault was discovered in a pre-flight inspection at Sydney airport on Monday.
Qantas chief executive Geoff Dixon admitted this week the airline's reputation had been tainted by the incidents and said Qantas had to work hard to retrieve its good name.
AAP