|
Zentai
Apr 6, 2011 1:29:58 GMT -5
Post by Zentai on Apr 6, 2011 1:29:58 GMT -5
Two U.S. jetliners made emergency descents and landed at unscheduled airports in separate incidents Friday, Zentai with some passengers apparently becoming dizzy or fainting due to lack of oxygen. Zentai Suit The unrelated incidents—involving Southwest Airlines and American Airlines jets—ended without any serious injuries. lycra zentai But they show that improper cabin pressurization and structural problems still crop up occasionally despite decades of safety advances in both areas, according to safety experts. bustier A Federal Aviation Administration spokesman said that while Southwest Flight 812 was cruising at 36,000 feet from Phoenix to Sacramento, sexy costumes a hole ripped open in the fuselage that resulted in a rapid decompression. Zentai Clothes Preliminary eyewitness reports indicated a tear in the aluminum skin, lycra spandex perhaps several feet long, on top of the aircraft. spandex catsuit
|
|
|
Zentai
Apr 6, 2011 1:30:59 GMT -5
Post by ray ban on Apr 6, 2011 1:30:59 GMT -5
The FAA and Southwest Airlines Co. ray ban said the pilots of the Boeing 737 made an emergency descent to 11,000 feet and then landed safely at a military airfield in Yuma, Ray Ban Sunglasses Arizona. Emergency oxygen masks deployed, ray ban rb but "there were some people that were passing out because they weren't getting the oxygen," ray ban glasses one passenger told the Associated Press. Also on Friday, ray ban sales a 737 operated by the American Airlines unit of AMR Corp. lentes ray ban diverted after its cabin apparently didn't pressurize properly, new ray ban resulting in some flight attendants' and passengers' feeling faint. An airline spokesman said Flight 547, ray ban original an early-morning trip bound for Chicago from Washington's Reagan National Airport with 132 people aboard, was passing through 28,000 feet when two flight attendants alerted the captain that they felt dizzy.
|
|