A ‘miracle’ more weren’t killed in Air Canada plane crash, expert says
MONTREAL — As experts assess the aftermath of a fatal Air Canada Express plane crash at LaGuardia Airport, some have expressed surprise the tragedy wasn’t far worse.
Commercial aircraft are constructed for flight, not for withstanding head-on collisions with fire trucks that can weigh more than 45 tonnes, said Benoit Gauthier, a retired pilot who flew with Air Canada for 37 years. A fully loaded Bombardier CRJ-900 — the jet that collided with the truck late Sunday night — weighs about 38 tonnes.
“Airplanes are basically built to deal with air. And cockpit domes, especially the bottom part, most of it is fibreglass or some sort of composite plastic,” Gauthier said.
“There’s not that much metal in there. If you hit anything solid … it would basically destroy it, which is what happened.”

