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But "it's not like the aircraft is going to drop out of the sky," Ballantyne, Sydney-based chief correspondent at Orient Aviation Magazine, said by telephone from Brunei. He said the engine shutdown couldn't have caused a crash. The planes are designed to fly on just two engines, and pilots are trained to handle engine failures, he said. Rolls-Royce said it was aware of the situation, noting that the investigation was still at an early stage. Airbus said in a statement it was providing all necessary technical assistance to an investigation by Singaporean authorities. Consortium spokesman Martin Fendt declined to comment on Qantas' grounding of all its A380s, but he said no airworthiness directives were issued mandating a halt to flights by the superjumbo. Still, the incident is likely to raise safety questions about one of the most modern aircraft, which has suffered a series of minor incidents. In September 2009, a Singapore Airlines A380 was forced to turn around in mid-flight and head back to Paris after an engine malfunction. On March 31, a Qantas A380 with 244 people on board burst two tires on landing in Sydney after a flight from Singapore. Last August, a Lufthansa crew shut down one of the engines as a precaution before landing at Frankfurt on a flight from Japan, after receiving confusing information on a cockpit indicator. The other issues with the A380s have all been relatively minor, such as electrical problems, Ballantyne said. Qantas' safety record is enviable among major airlines, with no fatal crashes since it introduced jet-powered planes in the late 1950s. But there have been a run of scares in recent years across a range of plane types. The most serious -- when a faulty oxygen tank caused an explosion that blew a 5-foot hole in the fuselage of a Boeing 747-400 over the Philippines -- prompted aviation officials to order Qantas to upgrade maintenance procedures. Airbus has delivered a total of 37 A380s so far. Thirteen are in service with Emirates, 11 with Singapore Airlines, six with Quantas, four with Air France and three with Lufthansa. Emirates airlines, which has 13 A380s in operation, said all of them are flying as scheduled. It noted that its planes are powered by Engine Alliance GP7200 engines. Thursday's incident appeared unrelated to mail bombs sent recently on cargo planes, allegedly from Yemeni militants.
[Associated
Press;
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