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The Black Box Aviation Podcast
The Black Box
60 episodes
5 days ago
Aviation related topics brought to you by airline pilots, military pilots and professional aviation experts. Discussions including personal experience involving life as a professional aviator, the airline industry and everything else that comes with the curiosity of flying. Contact us at: Email: theblackbox01@yahoo.com Instagram: the_black_box01 X: @the_black_box01
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Aviation
Leisure
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All content for The Black Box Aviation Podcast is the property of The Black Box and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Aviation related topics brought to you by airline pilots, military pilots and professional aviation experts. Discussions including personal experience involving life as a professional aviator, the airline industry and everything else that comes with the curiosity of flying. Contact us at: Email: theblackbox01@yahoo.com Instagram: the_black_box01 X: @the_black_box01
Show more...
Aviation
Leisure
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The 707 That Lost Two Engines in Flight — and Still Landed | Trans-Air-Service Flight 671
The Black Box Aviation Podcast
23 minutes 14 seconds
6 days ago
The 707 That Lost Two Engines in Flight — and Still Landed | Trans-Air-Service Flight 671

Welcome back to The Black Box Aviation Podcast — where we dive into aviation, travel, and the wild, unbelievable stories from the world of flying that you need and want to know. Hosted by Tom & Mike, two pilots who love airplanes and aren't afraid to get technical.

On March 31st, 1992, a 28-year-old Boeing 707-321C departed Luxembourg carrying 70,000 lbs of freight. What should have been a routine climb turned into one of the most incredible saves in aviation history.

⚠️ At 32,000 feet, the crew encountered severe turbulence and a double bang.
💥 Not one — but two engines detached from the right wing mid-air.
🔥 A fire warning blared.
🛑 Systems failed.
👨‍✈️ Control of the aircraft became almost impossible.

With no engines on one wing, limited flight controls, and an unfamiliar runway ahead, Captain Berglund, First Officer Emery, and Flight Engineer Boone pulled off a textbook demonstration in crew resource management, airmanship, and problem solving under extreme pressure.

They landed the aircraft in flames — and every person on board survived without injury.

We break down:

  • The technical factors that caused the catastrophic engine separation

  • The exact decision-making that saved the flight

  • What investigators discovered about metal fatigue and pylon integrity

  • How aviation inspections changed after this accident

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✉️ Email: Theblackbox01@yahoo.com
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✈️ Today’s Episode: Trans-Air-Service Flight 671⭐ Support the Show📩 Contact the Show🎧 Listen now on:

The Black Box Aviation Podcast
Aviation related topics brought to you by airline pilots, military pilots and professional aviation experts. Discussions including personal experience involving life as a professional aviator, the airline industry and everything else that comes with the curiosity of flying. Contact us at: Email: theblackbox01@yahoo.com Instagram: the_black_box01 X: @the_black_box01