Phatbob said:
I hope they take care of that guy... it's the yeast they could do.
Knowing United, they will issue a hollow apology and offer him 2-600 frequent flier miles.
Rgr...out.
Phatbob said:
I hope they take care of that guy... it's the yeast they could do.
IIIHorn said:javajaws said:BusterAg said:
That flight was bread on arrival.
Sounds like the pilot was baked!
He's on a roll.
flown-the-coop said:
Have I missed whether DEI was involved here?
In all seriousness, any indication as to how far below the glide slope they were? Did United hire the pilots from the Korean airline flight in San Fran? Captain Wei Tuya Lowe or similar?
TexasRebel said:flown-the-coop said:
Have I missed whether DEI was involved here?
In all seriousness, any indication as to how far below the glide slope they were? Did United hire the pilots from the Korean airline flight in San Fran? Captain Wei Tuya Lowe or similar?
The pilot was 12.5 feet off the ground.
The bakery truck was a dozen feet tall.
You do the math.
that's correct.Jock 07 said:
I thought I had read that the plane clipped the light pole and the pole is what actually hit the truck.
Tramp96 said:aggiehawg said:
If one had to drive I-35 in Austin when Mueller was still open, those jets would fly right over the road given the orientation of the runways Was unnerving until one got used to it..
One night I was driving back to my apartment in NW Austin on I-35 after an event downtown. I had the window rolled down and traffic was completely stopped due to construction having bottle-necked us down to one lane.
Next thing I know, I'm staring at the engine of an SWA coming in to land. I swear it felt like that thing was about to hit my truck.
txags92 said:IIIHorn said:javajaws said:BusterAg said:
That flight was bread on arrival.
Sounds like the pilot was baked!
He's on a roll.
But the truck is toast.
Big_Russ said:txags92 said:IIIHorn said:javajaws said:BusterAg said:
That flight was bread on arrival.
Sounds like the pilot was baked!
He's on a roll.
But the truck is toast.
Probably his fault for loafing around on the road.
TexasRebel said:flown-the-coop said:
Have I missed whether DEI was involved here?
In all seriousness, any indication as to how far below the glide slope they were? Did United hire the pilots from the Korean airline flight in San Fran? Captain Wei Tuya Lowe or similar?
The pilot was 12.5 feet off the ground.
The bakery truck was a dozen feet tall.
You do the math.
ThunderCougarFalconBird said:Jock 07 said:
I thought I had read that the plane clipped the light pole and the pole is what actually hit the truck.
that's correct.
The problem is there's no buffer between the road and the runway. And that runway is really short - like 6500 or 7000 feet. For a 767 I think you need something like 6000 feet to land. So they were probably trying to put the plane down as quick as possible and caught a gust of wind at the last second.
Also heard that the pilots and passengers on board had no clue what happened until well after the fact.
PigInABlanket said:
As a kid, I remember Dad driving us in to San Antonio and my siblings and I were convinced this was gonna happen to us on 281 next to SAT.
Quote:
Also heard that the pilots and passengers on board had no clue what happened until well after the fact.
Aggie Jurist said:
Four red lights on the PAPI - Four Red, you're dead.
Now it's Four Red, you hit bread-truck.
Aggie95 said:
can't imagine how this was possible....the pilot had to have multiple warnings he was too low.
This same setup exists at the Atlanta airport. I drive by it often and this type of incident never really crossed my mind, unless there was crazy windshear.
TexasRebel said:flown-the-coop said:
Have I missed whether DEI was involved here?
In all seriousness, any indication as to how far below the glide slope they were? Did United hire the pilots from the Korean airline flight in San Fran? Captain Wei Tuya Lowe or similar?
The pilot was 12.5 feet off the ground.
The bakery truck was a dozen feet tall.
You do the math.

eric76 said:
Here is a VASAviation video on the incident.
mullokmotx said:
Flightaware has the length of that runway as 6726 feet. Easterwood's main runway is 7000. I've seen smaller jets use that runway but this was a 767.
Yeah it’s real https://t.co/26bvypmHXJ
— tylerscott (@tylerscott) May 4, 2026
javajaws said:BusterAg said:
That flight was bread on arrival.
Sounds like the pilot was baked!
Rocky Rider said:
Fox News put up a tarmac file photo with a Southwest plane front and center when they told this story. I doubt Southwest was happy about that. Initially I thought it was Southwest that hit the truck.