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Flames shoot from Air Canada Boeing jet moments after take-off: ‘We’ve got an engine fire —holy s–t!’

It catches fire CANADA TERRIFYING video footage shows the moment an Air Canada Boeing 777 suffered a compressor stall, and its tail caught on fire moments after departure from Toronto. The incident happened on Wednesday, June 5, when Air Canada Flight AC872 was taking off from Toronto Airport at 21:21 local time to Paris CDG. Reports said that the aircraft specifically involved in the compressor stall after departure was C-FIUV, a 16.3-year-old Boeing 777-300ER that was delivered to the airline in March 2008. Air Canada has 19 of those aircraft, all of which are in active service. As the video shows, the flight suffered a compressor stall/engine failure moments after departure when the flashing right appeared from the right engine. From there, the crew turned back to YYZ, landing around 30 minutes after initial departure. Further reports stated: âData from RadarBox shows C-FIUV, the Air Canada Boeing 777, is still grounded in Toronto following the engine failure. âIt is unclear when the aircraft will be fixed. âIt ultimately depends on the scale of the damage received during the compressor stall. âFor now, all eyes will be on how much longer the aircraft will be grounded before it can return to commercial service.â No further information on the incident is available as of yet. ENDs

Terrifying video shows flames shooting from an Air Canada Boeing jet as it took off, forcing it to abruptly turn around for an emergency landing.

The caught-on-camera terror unfolded after Flight AC872 took off from Toronto en route to Paris late Wednesday.

“Holy crap!” someone recording the takeoff gasped as flames shot from the tail end of the plane just after it left the runway.

“We’ve got an engine fire — holy s–t!” the man gasped as the flames continued to spark, at times seemingly stretching the length of the jet, as it continued to climb.

The flames came from the plane suffering an unspecified “engine issue” immediately after taking off with 389 passengers onboard, Air Canada said in a statement.

It quickly turned around and made an emergency landing back at the Toronto airport, where it was met by fire crews. No injuries were reported.

“After the aircraft landed, it was inspected by airport response vehicles as per normal operating processes, and it taxied to the gate on its own,” the airline said.

However, the passengers were rebooked onto another fight later that night, and the plane “taken out of service” to be evaluated by its maintenance staff and engineers.

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