Passenger plane nearly hit drone over central London, report says amyloid

Author : subbranched1902
Publish Date : 2021-04-09 00:05:49


The A320 plane was descending toward Heathrow Airport in July when the drone was spotted from the cockpit window, according to the UK Airport Board report.

The plane was flying at an altitude of 4,600 feet (1,402 meters) near the Shard skyscraper in central London when the 50-centimeter (19-inch) drone was spotted.

A 'very near-miss'



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The pilot said the risk of collision was 'high' in the report released last Friday. The authors of the report also classified the incident as a 'very near-miss' and said that 'chance had played a major part.'

They added that the drone operator could not be traced.

The incident is one of dozens of near-misses reported to the UK Airport Board each month.

In a separate incident, also in July, a drone came within five meters (16 feet) of an A319 passenger plane taking off from Britain's Liverpool Airport.

A 'very near-miss' A 'very near-miss' The pilot said the risk of collision was 'high' in the report released last Friday. The authors of the report also classified the incident as a 'very near-miss' and said that 'chance had played a major part.' In a separate incident, also in July, a drone came within five meters (16 feet) of an A319 passenger plane taking off from Britain's Liverpool Airport. The incident is one of dozens of near-misses reported to the UK Airport Board each month. The plane was flying at an altitude of 4,600 feet (1,402 meters) near the Shard skyscraper in central London when the 50-centimeter (19-inch) drone was spotted. A 'very near-miss' The A320 plane was descending toward Heathrow Airport in July when the drone was spotted from the cockpit window, according to the UK Airport Board report. The pilot said the risk of collision was 'high' in the report released last Friday. The authors of the report also classified the incident as a 'very near-miss' and said that 'chance had played a major part.' The A320 plane was descending toward Heathrow Airport in July when the drone was spotted from the cockpit window, according to the UK Airport Board report. In a separate incident, also in July, a drone came within five meters (16 feet) of an A319 passenger plane taking off from Britain's Liverpool Airport. In a separate incident, also in July, a drone came within five meters (16 feet) of an A319 passenger plane taking off from Britain's Liverpool Airport. The plane was flying at an altitude of 4,600 feet (1,402 meters) near the Shard skyscraper in central London when the 50-centimeter (19-inch) drone was spotted. The plane was flying at an altitude of 4,600 feet (1,402 meters) near the Shard skyscraper in central London when the 50-centimeter (19-inch) drone was spotted. The pilot said the risk of collision was 'high' in the report released last Friday. The authors of the report also classified the incident as a 'very near-miss' and said that 'chance had played a major part.' The plane was flying at an altitude of 4,600 feet (1,402 meters) near the Shard skyscraper in central London when the 50-centimeter (19-inch) drone was spotted. They added that the drone operator could not be traced. The pilot said the risk of collision was 'high' in the report released last Friday. The authors of the report also classified the incident as a 'very near-miss' and said that 'chance had played a major part.' The A320 plane was descending toward Heathrow Airport in July when the drone was spotted from the cockpit window, according to the UK Airport Board report. The pilot said the risk of collision was 'high' in the report released last Friday. The authors of the report also classified the incident as a 'very near-miss' and said that 'chance had played a major part.' The incident is one of dozens of near-misses reported to the UK Airport Board each month. In a separate incident, also in July, a drone came within five meters (16 feet) of an A319 passenger plane taking off from Britain's Liverpool Airport. They added that the drone operator could not be traced. The A320 plane was descending toward Heathrow Airport in July when the drone was spotted from the cockpit window, according to the UK Airport Board report. The pilot said the risk of collision was 'high' in the report released last Friday. The authors of the report also classified the incident as a 'very near-miss' and said that 'chance had played a major part.' The pilot said the risk of collision was 'high' in the report released last Friday. The authors of the report also classified the incident as a 'very near-miss' and said that 'chance had played a major part.' In a separate incident, also in July, a drone came within five meters (16 feet) of an A319 passenger plane taking off from Britain's Liverpool Airport. A 'very near-miss' The plane was flying at an altitude of 4,600 feet (1,402 meters) near the Shard skyscraper in central London when the 50-centimeter (19-inch) drone was spotted. In a separate incident, also in July, a drone came within five meters (16 feet) of an A319 passenger plane taking off from Britain's Liverpool Airport. The A320 plane was descending toward Heathrow Airport in July when the drone was spotted from the cockpit window, according to the UK Airport Board report.

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Catagory :travel