Vertigo
Flash Airlines 604 crashes into the Red Sea minutes after take off. Was it terrorism or a mechanical failure?
Flash Airlines 604 crashes into the Red Sea minutes after take off. Was it terrorism or a mechanical failure?
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The pilots are bound for Phoenix Arizona, but first they have to find their runway.
Ripped Apart revisits some of the most spectacular aviation disasters of the last fifty years.
British Airways Flight #38 is preparing to land. Then, the aircraft is inexplicably crippled.
Torrential rain. Baseball-sized hail. Why did Southern Airways Flight 242 enter this severe storm?
It's one of the most alarming disasters in the history of aviation, and not just because of the crash.
Minutes after take off from Tokyo en route to Osaka, the tailfin blows off the huge Boeing 747.
A short island hop from Maui to Honolulu quickly turns into a nightmare for the crew and passengers.
A business jet is shaken by a massive hit over the Amazon rainforest.
United Airlines Flight 811 opens at an altitude of 33,000 feet, ripping a huge hole.
Shortly after takeoff, the three man crew of the DHL A300 is thrown into the fight of their lives.
Air France Flight 358 bursts into flames when it skids off the runway during a raging thunderstorm.
A series of small mistakes causes China Airlines Flight 006 to fall 30,000 feet (10 kms) in just two minutes.
Flash Airlines 604 crashes into the Red Sea minutes after take off. Was it terrorism or a mechanical failure?
Shortly after Air Alaska Flight 261 takes off from Puerta Vallarta, the stabilizer malfunctions.
During British Airways Flight 009's flight to Australia, smoke starts filling the cabin of a passenger jet.
Crossair Flight #3597 is on its final approach to Zurich. But the pilots cannot find the runway.
The pilots of TACA Flight #110 manage one of the most remarkable landings in the history.
As the aircraft is accelerating, a loud ‘thud' emanates from the fuselage, and the pilots abandon takeoff.
Korean Airlines Flight #007 is high above the Sea of Japan with 269 people on board.
On August 21, 1995, Flight ASA 529 loses one of its four propellers on its way to Gulfport, Mississippi.
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