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On 7 February 1980, the aircraft was flying from Stockholm Arlanda Airport to Taoyuan International Airport via King Abdulaziz International Airport and Kai Tak International Airport as China Airlines Flight 009 (Callsign CAL009, pronounced Dynasty 009). While landing in Hong Kong, part of the plane's tail had scraped along the runway.
China Airlines Flight 006; China Airlines Flight 120; China Airlines Flight 140; China Airlines Flight 204; China Airlines Flight 206; China Airlines Flight 334; China Airlines Flight 358; China Airlines Flight 605; China Airlines Flight 611; China Airlines Flight 642; China Airlines Flight 676
Flight 611 may refer to: United Air Lines Flight 611, first incident involving the Boeing 737, failure during takeoff, 1970; Southwest Air Lines Flight 611, landing accident, 1982 – pilot error, runway overrun; China Airlines Flight 611, crashed 2002, with 225 deaths – poor repairs
China Airlines Flight 006 (call sign "Dynasty 006") was a daily non-stop flight from Taipei to Los Angeles International Airport. On February 19, 1985, the Boeing 747SP operating the flight was involved in an aircraft upset accident , following the failure of the No. 4 engine, while cruising at 41,000 ft (12,500 m).
Video showed the plane, a Boeing 737-800, sliding on its belly at high speed, hitting an earthen embankment and erupting in a fireball. ... The transport ministry said the head pilot on the flight ...
Middle East Airlines Flight 304, tailstrike on landing at Cairo International Airport. 14 years later it would crash in Egypt as Metrojet Flight 9268. Air India Express Flight 611, severe tailstrike on takeoff following the collapse of the captain's backrest resulting in collision with the localizer antenna and perimeter wall. Air Transport ...
China Airlines Flight 358; China Airlines Flight 605; China Airlines Flight 611; D. Dawson's Field hijackings; E. El Al Flight 1862; F. Flying Tiger Line Flight 66; H.
Duggan served as a fighter pilot and flight instructor during his 13 years in the military before retiring in 2022. He moved to Australia in 2005 and then to Beijing in 2014.