Horror new details of Delta plane that flipped upside down revealed as officials give second-by-second crash breakdown

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THE Delta Air Lines flight that crash landed belly-up on the tarmac in Toronto was descending at a high rate of speed before suffering a broken landing gear, according to a preliminary report.

The shocking caught-on-camera crash occurred on February 17 as the commercial flight, carrying 80 passengers and crew members, was touching down at Toronto Pearson International Airport in Canada.

Passengers evacuate a Delta Air Lines jet after it crashed on landing at Toronto Pearson International Airport in Mississauga, Ontario on February 17Reuters

An aerial view of the overturned Delta Air Lines plane at Toronto Pearson AirportAP:Associated Press

Passengers described how they were left ‘hanging like bats’ after the crash landing at the Toronto airportX

A drone view of the wreckage of a Delta Air LinesReuters

Upon impact with the runway, the main right landing gear broke, the undercarriage retracted, and the wing detached, before a “cloud of jet fuel” sparked a fire, a preliminary report by the Transportation Safety Board of Canada read.

“The exact sequence of these events is still to be determined by future examination of the fracture surfaces,” the report read.

About 3.6 seconds before touchdown, the speed of descent increased at approximately 2:12:40.

The Canadian safety board said a second later the plane’s safety warning system went off inside the aircraft about 2.6 seconds before landing.

The alarm cautioned the pilots they were descending quickly, according to the safety board’s findings.

Then, 1.6 seconds before touchdown, the plane was “slightly below the glide slope” – a system that guides an aircraft down to the runway during landing for a controlled descent.

At 2:12:43, the right main landing gear of the plane touched down on the runway.

Upon impact, the landing gear fractured causing the aircraft to flip and erupt into a fireball on the icy tarmac.

The report described how the cockpit door was jammed shut, which forced the pilots to climb through an emergency hatch located on the ceiling of the cockpit.

The official cause of the crash has not been determined.

At least 21 people were injured in the dramatic event, which showed passengers crawling and climbing out of the aircraft in frigid temperatures.

Nine Canadian passengers have filed a lawsuit against Delta Air Lines, claiming its crew members were “inadequately trained and supervised” by Delta and Endeavor Air.

“The crew failed to observe the most fundamental procedures for a landing approach into [Pearson], failed to appropriately monitor flight conditions on approach, and failed [to] communicate and react in the cockpit to those conditions,” the lawsuit read, according to CBC News.

The lawsuit claims the nine passengers continue to suffer from “extreme bodily and mental injuries.”

An investigator with Canada’s Transportation Safety Board examines the wreckageReuters

Passengers were seen crawling and jumping out of the aircraftReuters

‘HANGING LIKE BATS’

The suit was filed in a Minneapolis district courthouse on March 14.

Passenger Peter Koukov recalled how he did not see anything wrong with the descent until the plane hit the ground.

Koukov told CNN at the time that once the aircraft came to a standstill the strapped passengers “were upside down hanging like bats.”

“When we got finished, I was upside down, everybody else was there as well,” John Nelson, a second passenger on the aircraft, told the outlet.

“We tried to get out of there as quickly as possible.”

The Canadian Transportation Safety Board said further analysis would be done on the aircraft’s wing structure, hand landings, and the pilots’ training.

“This is a complex, investigation, with many areas still requiring a deeper dive before drawing a conclusion,” TSBC Chair Yoan Marier said on Thursday.

Delta said it would offer $30,000 USD to each passenger on the flight with no strings attached.

The airline company said it will continue to cooperate with investigators on the matter.

“For everyone at Endeavor Air and Delta, nothing is more important than the safety of our customers and our people,” Delta Air Lines said in a statement to CNN.

“That’s why we remain fully engaged as participants in the investigation led by the Transportation Safety Board of Canada.

“Out of respect for the integrity of this work that will continue through their final report, Endeavor Air and Delta will refrain from comment.”

More to follow… For the latest news on this story, keep checking back at The U.S. Sun, your go-to destination for the best celebrity news, sports news, real-life stories, jaw-dropping pictures, and must-see videos.

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