Air India plane cabin hot before take-off, flight cancel of Bhubaneswar-Delhi

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Air India plane cabin hot before take-off, flight cancel of Bhubaneswar-Delhi


Air India.

A flight of Air India from Bhubaneswar to Delhi was canceled due to high temperature (high temperature) in the aircraft cabin just before the flight on Sunday. Air India did not give information about the number of people aboard the aircraft, the type of aircraft or even the closed flight from Bhubaneswar to fly from Bhubaneswar.

This is the second incident of technical fault in an Air India aircraft in a day. The step has been taken at a time when the aviation safety regulator DGCA has detected more than 100 violations during the audit of the private aviation company run by the Tata Group, some of which have been identified as a serious security risk.

Flight canceled due to technical problem

Apart from this, 241 people aboard the aircraft were killed on June 12, while 19 others were killed when the Boeing 787-8 aircraft flying on a medical college crashed within a few minutes of flying. Air India said in a statement, the flight AI500 from Bhubaneswar to Delhi on August 3 (Sunday) has been canceled due to a technical problem, due to which the temperature of the cabin was very high before the departure. Our airport team in Bhubaneswar is helping the affected passengers to make alternative arrangements to fly their destination to Delhi. We are sorry for the inconvenience.

According to the flight tracking website flightradar24.com, the flight was to be operated by Airbus A321 aircraft at 12.35 pm and reached Delhi at 2.55 pm. Earlier, Air India had said that its flight AI349, prescribed from Singapore to Chennai, was canceled due to a maintenance work identified before departure, which required additional time to fix.

Investigation found serious security risk

Sources said that the Directorate General of Civil Aviation had last week discovered about 100 violations and comments related to Air India training, crew comfort and duty period criteria and airport qualifications etc. Seven of these have been identified as Level-1 violation, which are considered a serious security risk and require immediate corrective action by the airline operator.

Companies spending more on publicity

Last month, an online All India survey found that about 76 percent of the respondents were of the opinion that many airlines in India are spending more on campaigning than security. The online survey conducted by LocalSarkils has shown that 64 percent of these respondents have experienced hard flight at least once in the last three years, including tough conditions during takeoff, landing, or flight.