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Asiana Airlines is a full-service airline member of Star Alliance with two subsidiary low-cost carriers Air Busan and Air Seoul. It is the largest shareholder of Air Busan , a regional carrier that the airline established as joint venture with Busan Metropolitan City . [ 6 ]
Asiana gave flights to San Francisco to the families of the victims. [122] Asiana Airlines announced on July 29, 2013, that it would retire flight numbers 214 and 213 on August 12, 2013. Flights from Incheon to San Francisco and the return leg would thenceforth operate as OZ212 and OZ211, respectively. [123]
On 14 April 2015, Asiana Airlines Flight 162, an Airbus A320-232 registered as HL7762 with 82 people on board, lost height on final approach to Hiroshima Airport in Mihara, Japan, struck an instrument landing system localizer antenna and skidded onto the runway on its tail, spinning 180 degrees before coming to a stop. Its main landing gear ...
Asiana Airlines Flight 733; Asiana Airlines Flight 991 This page was last edited on 17 February 2021, at 06:19 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
Korean Air Cargo Flight 8509, 1999, which crashed shortly after takeoff from London; Korean Air Flight 801 (KE801, KAL801), 1997, a charter flight from South Korea to Guam which crashed on landing approach; Asiana Air Flight 733 (OZ733, AAR733), 1993 a flight between Seoul and Mokpo, South Korea that crashed into Mt. Ungeo
Two minutes later, Flight 162 was cleared for an RNAV approach to runway 28. At 20:00, Flight 162 was transferred to the tower controller, who cleared the flight to land. The landing gear was then lowered, the flaps were extended to full, and the landing checklist was carried out.
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Asiana Airlines Flight 991 was a cargo flight operated by Asiana Airlines. On 28 July 2011, the Boeing 747-400F flying from Seoul, South Korea, to Shanghai, China, crashed into the sea off Jeju Island after suffering an in-flight cargo fire. Both pilots, the only two people on board, were killed. [1]