BREAKING: Two Delta jets collide at Atlanta airport…

Two Delta jets collided this morning at the Atlanta airport while they were both taxiing on the runway. One was headed to Tokyo and the other Louisiana.

The tail section on the on of the planes looks like it was nearly broken off.

 
Here’s a video drive by of the damaged aircraft:

 
Here’s more from Fox News:

The Federal Aviation Administration says a Delta Airbus A350 and an Endeavor Bombardier CRJ900 jet clipped each other Tuesday morning on the tarmac at an Atlanta airport.

The FAA said in a statement to Fox News Digital that “while Delta Air Lines Flight 295 was taxiing for departure at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, its wingtip struck the tail of Endeavor Air Flight 5526.”

“The Delta Airbus A350 was headed to Tokyo. The Endeavor Bombardier CRJ900 was headed to Lafayette, Louisiana,” the agency added. “The FAA will investigate the incident, which occurred at the intersection of two taxiways around 10:10 a.m. local time on Tuesday, Sept. 10.”

Images being posted on social media show heavy damage to the tail of one of the planes, whose vertical stabilizer appears to have been severed from the aircraft.

“Well that was terrifying. Taxiing out for the flight from Atlanta to Louisiana and another plane appears to have clipped the back of our plane,” WFTS Meteorologist Jason Adams posted on X. “Very jarring, metal scraping sounds then loud bangs. We’re fine. No fire or smoke.”

Delta said in its own statement that “the wing of an Airbus A350 taxiing out as DL295 from Atlanta to Tokyo-Haneda made contact with the tail of an Endeavor Air CRJ-900, DL5526 to LaFayette, Louisiana, on an adjacent taxiway, resulting in damage to the tail of the regional jet and the wing of the A350.

“There have been no reported injuries at this time and customers are being transported back to the terminal where they will be reaccommodated on alternate flights,” the airline said. “There were 221 customers on DL295 and 56 customers on DL5526. At this time, no additional operational adjustments are expected. ”

“Delta is cooperating with the NTSB and other authorities on this incident,” the airline added.

I’m gonna go out on a limb and say it was probably not Boeing’s fault this time….but I guess we’ll find out at some point after an investigation is done.

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By Melinda Davies
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