British Airways is to speed implementation of a fix to prevent a repeat of the nose-gear retraction incident that damaged one of the carrier’s Boeing 787-8s on the ground at London Heathrow, in the aftermath of two similar events in the previous five years. UK investigators have yet to complete their assessment of the factors which led to the 18 June event, but have attributed it to a nose-gear locking pin being inserted in the wrong location before the landing-gear was cycled on the parked aircraft as part of a maintenance check. The risk of such an error had been highlighted on other occasions. One of Ethiopian Airlines’ 787-8s suffered an inadvertent nose-gear retraction at Addis Ababa in March 2016, as the aircraft was preparing for a flight. Passengers were on board the aircraft at the time, according to the US FAA, and some received minor injuries, while the aircraft received “substantial” damage. Lack of clarity surrounded the Ethiopian incident. Boeing acknowledged the retraction to the US FAA but believed the event was not caused by a wrongly-inserted lock pin, but was “specifically due to there being no ground lock in installed at all” – which technically amounted to a different issue. But the FAA, in a December 2019 directive, said it had received “conflicting information” over the probable cause of the incident, suggesting that it might have occurred as a result of wrong insertion. Story has more.<br/>
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American has become the first international airline to pull out of Australia following the government’s decision to lower arrival caps from 6,070 passengers a week to just 3,035. An update to the business’ schedule published this morning, and obtained by Executive Traveller, reveals LA-Sydney flight AA73 would be suspended from 31 August until 29 October. The 787-9 return, AA72, has also been withdrawn from 3 September until 31 October. The developments follow national cabinet’s decision earlier this month to halve the caps in a bid to reduce leakages of COVID out of hotel quarantine. The move was widely expected given American confirmed last week it would be flying 20 empty aircraft from LA to Sydney over the next two months. In April 2021, 45 international airlines operated scheduled services to or from Australia, with international passenger traffic down 96.8% on the corresponding month in 2019. BARA had earlier warned 18,000 Australians would be bumped off flights due to the country’s arrival caps lowering.<br/>