26-12-2020 12:09 PM
The crew of the Montreal-bound 737 Max-8 received an engine alert and diverted to Tucson.
There were three crew and no passengers on board the ferry flight.
Airlines have repositioned aircraft for the jets to return to service after a nearly 2-year grounding.
A Montreal-bound Air Canada Boeing 737 Max ferry flight diverted in Arizona earlier this week due to an engine issue, the airline said Friday.
Pilots on Air Canada Flight 2358 received an engine alert shortly after takeoff from Marana, Arizona on Tuesday, the airline said. The carrier had been storing 737 Max jets there after the planes were grounded worldwide in March 2019 after two deadly crashes.
“As part of normal operating procedures in such situations, decided to shut down one engine” and diverted to Tucson, Air Canada said. The flight was carrying three crew members and no passengers. The plane remains in Tucson.
Boeing declined to comment and referred questions to the airline.
Belgian aviation site Aviation24.be said the plane had a “hydraulic low pressure indication.” Air Canada didn’t immediately respond to further request for comment.
U.S. authorities lifted the ban on the planes last month after Boeing made changes to software that was implicated in both crashes, and addressed other concerns. Canadian officials last week approved design changes to the planes.
*CNBC
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