Summary A United Airlines Boeing 737-900ER experienced a blown tire as it departed Denver on August 24. The aircraft safely landed at its destination airport, Seattle-Tacoma International Airport (SEA). However, the 737-900ER has stayed at SEA since the incident.

A United Airlines Boeing 737-900ER had lost a tire as it departed on a flight from Denver to Seattle, the United States, with the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) confirming the incident that happened on August 24. Blown tire In an FAA Aviation Safety Information Analysis and Sharing (ASIAS) entry, the regulator’s report said that a United Airlines 737-900ER, registered as N37427, experienced a blown landing gear tire on August 24. The filing, published on August 26, did not include the number of pilots, flight attendants, or passengers who were onboard the aircraft.

However, the FAA detailed that it happened during the takeoff phase, with the aircraft operating United Airlines flight UA759. The aircraft stayed on the ground at Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) for several hours after the incident. Landing in Seattle According to Flightradar24 data, the 737-900ER departed Denver International Airport (DEN) at 15:54 local time (UTC -6) on August 24.

After the aircraft left DEN, it climbed to a maximum altitude of 30,000 feet (9,144 m), descending to 26,000 ft (7,924 m) as it crossed Wyoming, and then climbed back up to the latter altitude as it was halfway through Idaho. However, just before the United Ai.