
Former Terry tozer pilot responded strongly to Air India’s Air India crash in Ahmedabad 12 June. The Air India, which crashed in Ahmedabad’s Meghani Nagar, carried 242 people on board, including 230 passengers and 12 crew members. Former Minister Gujarat Vijay Rupani was also on board the aircraft that met a terrible air accident.
According to reports, there were also approximately 53 British nationals on board.
“It is very unusual for such a modern aircraft to have a great technical failure,” Terry tozer heard, and said GB News.
“It is very difficult to know what the reasons would be at this point. All public transport aircraft are able to maintain the main engine failure. It’s very unusual,” the tozer said.
“Public transport aircraft are strongly regulated and should be. It is too early to speculate what it could do. As I said, the aircraft should be able to take premature significant failure and continue safety. It’s a puzzle …” He continued.
When the tozer asked for further anchor knowledge, he said, “You know that it (aircraft) would probably climb 1000 feet or more, and there could be many reasons (for an accident), but it is pure speculation for now.”
Did there be any “external” interference?
The former pilot also emphasized rare cases where there are chances of external interference that could lead to an accident. “You would normally expect or consider the possibility of external interference, although it is very, very rare. We really will not know until further information comes,” the tozer quoted as GB News.
(Tagstotranslate) Air India Air Flying Crash (T) Ahmedabad Flying Crash (T) Terry Terry (T) Modern Technical Failure of Aircraft (T) Airplane Motor Failure (T) Air India (T)