Within one day, major mainstream media around the world reported the news of the Emirates Flight 411 crash.
Twenty-three years ago, in 1998, the Boeing 777 had just been launched for three years. Before the emergence of the McDonnell Douglas F485, it was the world's largest twin-engine wide-body passenger aircraft and was also known as the most perfect long-distance aircraft. Even the A340, which Airbus spent a lot of effort to design to compete with Boeing aircraft, could not shake its dominant position in the civil aviation industry.
The Emirates Flight 411 crash was the first Boeing 777 crash with casualties.
Because the cause of the Emirates Airline 411 crash was so strange, it took the investigation team more than a year to give an answer. At that time, the safety of the Boeing 777 was questioned worldwide. Everyone was wondering whether the perfect Boeing 777 had some undiscovered design loopholes, which also had a great impact on Boeing.
Today, the Emirates Flight 411 crash has been written into textbooks, and as a case, it is gradually disappearing from people's memory. But it suddenly reappears.
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