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On December eighteenth two thousand twenty two, a United Airlines Boeing 777 departing Kahului Airport in Maui nearly plunged into the Pacific Ocean just seconds after takeoff. What started as a routine commercial aviation flight to San Francisco quickly became a high-stakes cockpit emergency. Severe weather. Wind shear warnings. A critical flap miscommunication during climb. In less than ten seconds, the wide-body aircraft descended to just 748 feet above the ocean — at a rate exceeding 8,600 feet per minute. Inside the cabin, passengers saw nothing but water outside their windows. On the Boeing 777 flight deck, the Ground Proximity Warning System sounded as the pilots had only seconds to execute a terrain escape maneuver. This is the full story of United Airlines Flight 1722 — what went wrong during this airline operations event, how crew resource management played a role, and what the NTSB aviation safety investigation later revealed about pilot training, aircraft systems, and modern flight procedures. Moments like this show how small communication errors inside a highly automated commercial aircraft can escalate instantly — and how training, systems knowledge, and split-second decision making can prevent catastrophe. Watch until the end to see how close this Boeing 777 came to disaster. Music: “Cylinder Five” by Chris Zabriskie Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Source: http://chriszabriskie.com/cylinders/ Artist: http://chriszabriskie.com/ #Aviation #CommercialAviation #Boeing777 #UnitedAirlines #Flight1722 #AviationSafety #PilotTraining #NTSB #AirlineIndustry