homeaviation NewsWatch: IndiGo plane catches fire during take off at Delhi airport

Watch: IndiGo plane catches fire during take off at Delhi airport

The take-off was aborted and all 184 crew and passengers aboard the plane suffered no injuries.

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By CNBCTV18.com Oct 29, 2022 12:37:29 PM IST (Updated)

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Watch: IndiGo plane catches fire during take off at Delhi airport
Passengers aboard IndiGo flight 6E-2131 were in for a shock when one of the engines of the plane caught fire during take-off. While taking off from Delhi’s Indira Gandhi International Airport, the Airbus A320’s engine caught fire just seconds before taking off for Bengaluru.

The take-off was aborted and all 184 crew and passengers aboard the plane suffered no injuries. The incident was captured by one of the passengers on the plane. The video showed that the fire went out within moments, possibly from the use of fire extinguishers present in the engines.
 
"The flight would have taken off in five to seven seconds. Suddenly, I saw massive sparks coming off the wings, and it turned into a major fire. And the plane was stopped immediately. The pilot informed us there was some malfunction with the engine," Priyanka Kumar told NDTV.
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The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) stated that a preliminary investigation revealed that the fire occurred after some sort of engine malfunction for which the pilot used the engine fire extinguishers. The aircraft has been grounded for further investigation.
“An aircraft operating flight 6E2131 from Delhi to Bangalore experienced an engine stall during the take-off roll. The take-off was aborted, and the aircraft safely returned to the bay,” IndiGo said in a statement.
The incident refreshes conversation around the recent spate of incidents in multiple budget airline flights across the country. Earlier in the year, airlines like SpiceJet, GoFIRST, IndiGo, Air India, Vistara, and Air India Express recorded incidents of engine glitches, windshield cracks, smoke in the cabin, and equipment malfunction among others. The incidents prompted the DCGA to ramp up hiring for flight safety surveillance across the country. The agency would be conducting around 3,700 checks in 2022.
 

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