Posted on 02/22/2007 3:08:57 AM PST by billorites
Safety officials remain mystified why windshields cracked on at least 14 planes at Denver International Airport on Friday.
"We are not discounting anything," said Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Allen Kenitzer, whose agency is among those investigating the incidents. "We believe it is very remarkable to have this number of events in the same area at the same time."
The National Transportation Safety Board will have a glass specialist from its structures division examine 22 damaged front and side windshields that were removed from the affected planes, said NTSB air-safety investigator Jennifer Kaiser.
The cracking occurred over a 1 1/2 hour period on Friday afternoon, Kaiser said. Some planes were taking off, some were landing and some were parked at various locations on DIA's airfield.
DIA was experiencing highly variable weather at the time of the incidents, with high winds, rapid temperature changes and some snow, Kaiser said.
NTSB is looking at whether a pressure change may have contributed, she said.
DIA spokesman Chuck Cannon said airport operations and maintenance employees could offer no explanation for the windshield problems.
"It's baffling," he said.
Commuter carrier SkyWest Airlines reported nine of its planes suffered windshield cracks, and Frontier Airlines officials said four of its aircraft suffered similar damage.
One plane from Great Lakes Airlines encountered the problem as well, Kaiser said.
SkyWest, which operates about 152 departures a day from Denver, halted its DIA operations for 1 1/2 hours after the windshield cracks were discovered.
DIA was buffeted by winds that exceeded 50 mph at times on Friday, officials said. Initial reports suggested the windshield damage might have been caused by chunks of ice or other blowing debris.
Yet that would likely have damaged other parts of a plane's exterior, and SkyWest spokeswoman Marissa Snow said no additional damage was found on her company's aircraft.
The NTSB's Kaiser confirmed that there were no reports of impact from flying debris.
Frontier reported that cracks were noticed by employees on two of the company's planes while they were parked at gates and hooked up to an airport power source, leading to speculation that a power surge might have led to the unusual cracking of the windshields, which have electronic heating elements.
However, the SkyWest planes that suffered windshield cracks were never hooked up to a DIA power source, and the planes were in the process of taking off or landing when the problem developed, Snow said.
The FAA's Kenitzer said the airlines handled the windshield problem "in a proper manner and there were no safety problems with the incident."
He added: "We will find an answer."
very bizzare
I'm scratching my head, as I'm sure a lot of people are.
Several years ago we had a real winter here, with (for us) extremely cold weather. I had noticed a very small pin head size pit in my windshield, but thought it was no big thing. After the windshield had defrosted I went my way. When I arrived at the gym I turned off the engine and the windshield began to rapidly cool down and freeze up. A small amount of moisture in the very small pit froze and as I watched a crack slowly extended from there to both sides of the windshield.
From that day on I made it a point to immediately fill in any pits I find.
Sounds like a combination of a bad batch of glass and bad weather.
Sounds like a combination of a bad batch of glass and bad weather.
I still think it was due to an extremely rapid temperature change.
Some kind of UFO hovering above the airport pointing a lazer gun.
Twilight Zone stuff here.
I still think it was due to an extremely rapid temperature change.
Bingo you get a cigar. Its called thermal inversion and has happened to me once in my life.
A thermal inversion caused you to crack?
Is it possible this is an attempt at terrorism? Denver always has rapidly changing weather so, it seems this would have happened in the past.
No my patio door window, my bad huh?
Let me guess, glass bought @ walmart? You can figure where I'm going with that statement. Blackbird.
I think they were just following too closely behind planes hauling gravel. :)
I saw a similar incident a number of years ago when I was living in Iowa. A strong micro wind burst occurred almost directly over an office complex. The downdraft, estimated at 75+ mph, picked up the pea gravel used as a cover for the building's roofing and produced a shotgun like blast on cars in the parking lot breaking scores of windows. My home was about a mile from the epicenter and a large tree in my neighbor's front yard was blown over on to their house. The incident happened on a warm spring day with hardly a cloud in the sky and affected less than a one mile radius of the office complex.
Clean your windshield Mister?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.