After a cockpit fire forced a United Airlines Boeing 757 to make an emergency landing in May at Dulles International Airport, the Federal Aviation Administration ordered airlines to either inspect or replace windows in their Boeing airplanes.
The agency issued an airworthiness directive Friday telling airlines to inspect the front-facing windows in their Boeing widebodies, their 747s, 757s and 767s. The problem is with improperly tightened screws in the heating elements that keep the windows from heating up.
There have been 11 cockpit fires related to the problem in 20 years.
The FAA hasn't exactly moved swiftly on this issue. In its press release it says that it first proposed the airworthiness directive more than two years ago.
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