Qantas oldest A380 is returning to service after a long period of storage

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Qantas' first Airbus A380, VH-OQA, in front of a crowd of spectators at its first visit to Adelaide Airport in South Australia, 27th September 2008.

Qantas oldest A380 is now back resuming flight operations after years of storage.

Qantas A380 registration VH-OQA flew back to Sydney to resume the airline operations.

The aircraft was stored since the pandemic then ferried to Abu Dhabi for over a year before it reached Sydney after more than 13 hours of flight on Friday, April 5 2024.

As it was flying without any passengers, the plane made a short landing on runway 16R Saturday, April 6 2024 by 13:35 AEDT.

Qantas VH-OQA finally returned to service in Qantas fleet only few hours later to operate flight #QF11 from Sydney to Los Angeles.

The aircraft was delivered to Qantas on September 2008 from Toulouse, via Singapore. The first flight was January, 25 2008 from Airbus factory.

On 4 November 2010, the aircraft operating the route, an Airbus A380, suffered an uncontained failure in one of its four Rolls-Royce Trent 900 engines during flight #QF32. The failure occurred over the Riau Islands, Indonesia, four minutes after takeoff from Singapore Changi Airport. After holding for almost two hours to assess the situation, the aircraft made a successful emergency landing at Changi.

Credit: AUSTRALIAN TRANSPORT SAFETY BUREAU

Both Qantas and Singapore Airlines, which uses the same Rolls-Royce engine in its A380 aircraft, temporarily grounded their A380 fleets after the occurrence and performed further inspections.

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