A British Airways airplane was accelerating for takeoff when it caught fire on the runway at the Las Vegas airport, forcing the pilot to hit the brakes.
The blaze, which happened on Wednesday sent smoke pouring from an engine and led passengers and crew to flee down emergency slides. The plane was leaving for a 10-hour flight to London with 157 passengers aboard.
READ MORE: British Airways flight catches fire at Las Vegas' McCarran International Airport
STEVE MARCUS/REUTERS
Fire officials said the blaze was confined to the left engine, and there was no wheel or brake fire.
The evacuation also took only minutes and appeared orderly, with some passengers even making it out with their luggage. Passengers slid off the plane and hurried across the tarmac as flames leaped from the Boeing 777-200 and dark black smoke billowed.
aftermath of british airways flight 2276 pic.twitter.com/mpHgcuiXMM
— CastroBelRico (@SuaveCastro) September 9, 2015
Meanwhile, officials have turned their attention to the cause of the British Airways Flight 2276 fire, though so far little has been said about how a plane speeding down a runway for takeoff could suddenly catch on fire, or whether it could happen again.
A team of investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board was travelling to Las Vegas from Washington, DC, agency spokesman Eric Weiss said. Preliminary reports usually are issued within about a week, and a complete investigation in unusual or precedent-setting cases can take more than a year.
"We're calling it an engine fire," Weiss said. "We're interested in the exact chain of events."
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READ MORE: Passengers slammed after British Airways plane catches fire
Passenger Karen Bravo, 60, of Las Vegas, said she happened to have her purse and some other passengers had carry-on luggage.
"It would be like if your whole house was on fire and you had to go out the door," she said.
The checked bags weren't damaged, but passengers hadn't gotten them back as of Thursday morning. They were told that another plane was on its way and they should be departing for London.
Jacob Steinberg, a Guardian journalist, tweeted this image of his friend running from the burning plane. Photo: JACOB STEINBERG/TWITTER
The Association of Flight Attendants which does not represent the British Airways crew, said the workers would have encouraged passengers to evacuate without their belongings for efficiency.
The crippled aircraft has been towed to an airport apron, away from terminals, and the runway that had been closed reopened about midnight, airport spokesman Chris Jones said.
Reggie Bugmuncher, of Philadelphia, was charging her phone and waiting at a gate Tuesday for her flight from McCarran International Airport when she heard people saying, "Oh, my God." She looked out and saw "bursts of flames coming out of the middle of the plane."
"Everyone ran to the windows and people were standing on their chairs, looking out, holding their breath with their hands over their mouths," Bugmuncher said.
Jones said passengers were taken by the airline to hotels but he had no additional information on their travel plans. British Airways said it is providing passengers with hotels and whatever else they may need, and added that the safety of its customers and crew is a top priority.
Smoke billows from the British Airways plane. Photo: TWITTER
One passenger on board, Guardian journalist Jacob Steinberg, shared on Twitter a letter of apology from British Airways.
Photo: @JACOBSTEINBERG/TWITTER
The Federal Aviation Administration delayed flights to Las Vegas from some airports for more than two hours after the fire to slow the flow of planes while the disabled Boeing 777 made two of the airport's four runways inaccessible. One of the runways reopened about 2½ hours after the fire.
Las Vegas' airport is the ninth-busiest in the US and had nearly 43 million passengers last year. The airport has been taking steps to accommodate more international travellers seeking direct flights to Europe and Asia, including adding new gates to accommodate wide-body double-decker jets.
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This is the fourth Boeing 777 to have been involved in a serious incident in just three years.
In 2013, Asiana Airlines Flight 214 crashed at San Francisco International airport, due to pilot error.
In 2014 Malaysia Airlines Flight 12 was shot down while flying over Ukraine. While the most controversial was the disappearance of flight MH370, which is believed to have crashed in the Indian Ocean.
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