12-24-2014, 06:19 AM
Today two jets belonging to American Airlines and Southwest scraped together at LaGuardia Airport in NYC today. It appears that Southwest Flight WN0449, taxiing under its own power, clipped the horizontal stabilizer (the small "wing" near the tail) of American Airlines Flight 1104 (which was at or approaching a gate) with its port winglet, which snapped off. The winglets, vertical fins at the wingtips, are a somewhat recent innovation that help with fuel efficiency. The plane can fly safely without it, but it would affect handling, and the flight was scrubbed.
The central terminal at LGA is notoriously cramped and outdated; it was designed in the 1950s and supports much more traffic than it can easily accommodate, both airplanes and people.
I love reading articles after something like this many of which are cobbled together by people who have no knowledge of aviation and contain important information like tweets from teenagers on board. You see things like "two planes collided on the runway and our wing fell off. I don't think we can take off now." Pro tip: you're not on the runway until you're actively taking off or landing, and if a collision happened there, you would not likely have time to tweet about it.
The central terminal at LGA is notoriously cramped and outdated; it was designed in the 1950s and supports much more traffic than it can easily accommodate, both airplanes and people.
I love reading articles after something like this many of which are cobbled together by people who have no knowledge of aviation and contain important information like tweets from teenagers on board. You see things like "two planes collided on the runway and our wing fell off. I don't think we can take off now." Pro tip: you're not on the runway until you're actively taking off or landing, and if a collision happened there, you would not likely have time to tweet about it.