How to Crash a Plane Perfectly
Mar 6, 2026•Channel
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Video Details
Published3 months ago
Duration5:12
Video ID6rJzYs9xPyg
Languageen
CategoryScience & Technology
PrivacyPublic
Made for KidsNo
Video TypeRegular Video
Performance Metrics
Views225
Likes13
Comments1
Engagement Rate6.22%
Likes per 100 views5.78
Comments per 1K views4.44
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Description
On 15th January 2009, US Airways Flight 1549 lifted off from LaGuardia like countless flights before it – calm, routine, unremarkable. Just 100 seconds later, everything changed. A flock of Canada geese struck the Airbus A320 with devastating force, silencing both engines at once and turning the aircraft into a powerless glider over New York City. Captain Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger and First Officer Jeff Skiles had mere minutes to save 155 lives.
With the plane losing altitude fast, Sully activated the auxiliary power unit and scanned the horizon. LaGuardia was out of reach. Teterboro was out of reach. The only remaining option was a long, icy stretch of water running between Manhattan and New Jersey. When air traffic control offered runways, Sully’s voice remained steady: “We’re going to be in the Hudson.”
As flight attendants shouted brace commands, Sully guided the aircraft toward the river with extraordinary precision. Too early a flare would stall the jet; too late would drive the nose into the water. At 150 knots, the A320 struck the Hudson in a controlled ditching so improbable that investigators would later call it one of the greatest feats in aviation history. The aircraft stayed intact. It floated. And every single passenger and crew member survived.
What followed became known worldwide as The Miracle on the Hudson – a moment where training, teamwork, and unshakable calm turned near-certain tragedy into one of the most heroic outcomes ever recorded in flight.
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