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Aviogenex Tu-134 undergoing
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Global A320-familly fleet hit by major Airbus software recall

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The European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA), issued an urgent instruction yesterday evening to operators of the Airbus A320-family aircraft to carry out immediate software modifications following a recent mid-air incident which raised concerns over the type’s flight control systems. The move affects a significant number of A319, A320 and A321 jets in service worldwide, potentially leading to short-term operational disruptions for airlines. It comes after analysis of a recent event involving an A320 aircraft revealed that intense solar radiation may corrupt data critical to the functioning of flight controls. It becomes one of the biggest recalls Airbus has faced in its 55-year history

The European manufacturer confirmed the directive relates to the aircraft’s elevator and aileron control computer, which under rare conditions may process corrupted data, resulting in uncommanded flight-control inputs, including abrupt nose-down movements. Airbus has recommended reverting to an earlier software version until a permanent fix is validated. Most aircraft are expected to be returned to service within hours once the update is completed, although a smaller portion of the fleet may require hardware checks, prolonging the grounding. "Airbus acknowledges these recommendations will lead to operational disruptions to passengers and customers. We apologise for the inconvenience caused and will work closely with operators, while keeping safety as our number one and overriding priority", the manufacturer said.

The incident which has led to the recall involved an A320 experiencing an uncommanded and limited pitch down event. The autopilot remained engaged throughout the event, with a brief and limited loss of altitude.

The former Yugoslavia’s two national carriers, Air Serbia and Croatia Airlines, both operate A320-family aircraft. Air Serbia has said all its flights are operating as planned and that none of its aircraft require the update. "All of our aircraft are fully operational and our flight schedule is running as planned", the carrier noted. On Saturday afternoon, Croatia Airlines also confirmed that none if its aircraft required software updates. 
 
 The region’s largest airline, Wizz Air, is an all-Airbus operator. The carrier’s spokesperson confirmed that some of its aircraft are among those requiring a software update flagged by Airbus. The airline says necessary actions were performed overnight on all impacted frames and all flights should be operating normally throughout the weekend. Lufthansa warned that a small number of flight cancellations or delays may occur over the weekend and confirmed it is fully complying with all manufacturer and regulatory requirements, having already begun implementing the measures prescribed by Airbus. On the other hand, Turkish Airlines said only eight of its aircraft are impacted and will be safely returned to service after completing the required actions

Today, a total of 281 flights in the former Yugoslavia are scheduled to be operated by the A320-family fleet or 54.8% of all operations in the region.


November 29, 2025
Air Serbia bosnia and herzegovina croatia croatia airlines Feature Fleet Kosovo macedonia montenegro safety serbia slovenia
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Comments

  1. Anonymous09:03

    Wizz Air just can't catch a break with Airbus. First the engine groundings, now this.

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  2. Anonymous09:04

    How long would such an inspection take?

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    1. Anonymous09:06

      Software update takes around 2-3 hours. The issue is that this update has to be done on affected aircraft immediately. EASA is only letting aircraft fly without the update for repositioning purposes without passengers.

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    2. Anonymous09:08

      Thank you.

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    3. Anonymous11:03

      From the looks of things Wizzair at Budapest which have 15 or departures from 6-7am all look on time and operating normally. I don't think this is going to have much impact.

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    4. Anonymous11:07

      ^You could, of course, actually read the article where it says what Wizz has done

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  3. Anonymous09:14

    I have no doubt OU will somehow use this as an explanation for their losses this year.

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    1. Anonymous09:15

      😅😅😅😅😅

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    2. Anonymous12:22

      Lol

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  4. Anonymous09:14

    Crazy

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  5. Anonymous09:15

    On which airline this incident happened?

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    1. Anonymous09:17

      Jet Blue flight in October. 15 people were actually injured

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    2. Anonymous13:39

      Scary

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  6. Anonymous09:15

    "Today, a total of 281 flights in the former Yugoslavia are scheduled to be operated by the A320-family fleet or 54.8% of all operations in the region."

    That's very interesting. Wonder what percentage is on B737s

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    1. Anonymous09:28

      all of TKs flights I've been on were B737s

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    2. Anonymous09:41

      There are by my calculation 24 flights to the former Yugoslavia operated by boeing 737s today.

      LJ - Dubai/Istanbul
      ZG - Istanbul x3 Dubai x1
      SA - Dubai/Brussel south/Istanbul/Girona/ London Stansted
      PG - Istanbul/London Stansted
      PR - Basel/Dusseldorf/Oslo/
      Munich/Istanbul/Berlin
      SK - Istanbul x2
      BG - Dubai x2
      BL - Goteborg

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    3. Anonymous17:50

      Here's more understandable info with actual airport codes:
      BEG- flyDubai 2x, Turkish x1, Norwegian x1, GotoFly x1,
      SKP- AJet x1, Turkish x1,
      PRN- Enter Air x2, GPAviation x4, Norwegian x1,
      TGD- Turkish x1, Ryanair x1,
      SJJ- Ryanair x4, flyDubai x1, Turkish x1,
      BNX- Ryanair x1,
      ZAG- Turkish x3, Pegasus x1, flyDubai x1,
      LJU- Turkish x1, flyDubai x1.
      In total only 30.

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    4. Anonymous02:07

      First one was equally understandable but thanks.

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    5. Reply
  7. Anonymous09:24

    There are some serious disruptions around the world because of this.

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    1. Anonymous10:15

      Can you give some examples? I can't find any cancellations in Europe

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    2. Anonymous10:31

      In Australia over 80 flights operated by Qantas' low cost subsidiary Jetstar were cancelled as they have an all Airbus fleet. More than half of American Airlines' A320 family fleet is also impacted and they are the largest A320 operator in the world.

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    3. Anonymous13:41

      It didn't help that in Australia this occurred in the morning.

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  8. Anonymous09:25

    Well, my WK Flight to SKP got cancelled yesterday evening, so that's that

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    1. Anonymous09:26

      Did they offer you guys any alternative?

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    2. Anonymous09:35

      of course, but via VIE

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    3. Anonymous10:16

      I can't find any cancellations to Skopje yesterday. What flight was it?

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    4. Anonymous10:27

      The only flight that was cancelled yesterdays seems to from Athens operated by an ATR so perhaps the 09:25 is feeling a bit confused.

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    5. Anonymous10:30

      Sorry, my cancelled flight is for next week and I got the info last evening.
      It may not be connected to this at all.

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    6. Anonymous12:13

      @10:30 Where were you flying to?

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    7. Anonymous13:40

      He said Zurich-Skopje.

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    8. Reply
  9. Anonymous09:51

    Bring back Aviolet.

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    1. Anonymous10:29

      or Aviogenex and its trusty Tu134! There is more computer tech in a microwave than in those babies.

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  10. Anonymous10:28

    It seems to affect only newer aircraft of the family. As such JU and OU are unaffected whilst Wizz is at the highest risk.

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    1. Anonymous17:53

      OU has only 5 A320 family jets, JU has 15 while WizzAir has 250+.

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  11. Anonymous11:29

    @ex-yu aviation
    If Air Serbia, Croatia Airlines and Wizz are mentioned in the article, don't you think Lauda/Ryanair, based and operating out of ZAG with A320 was also worth mentioning?

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    1. EX-YU Aviation11:49

      The airline had not issued an update at the time of publication or since. As the recall was issued on Friday evening European time, it is difficult to obtain statements from airlines at this point.

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    2. Anonymous12:34

      OU - seems like only 9A-CTN isnt flying today. All other A320 family aircraft that were in service yesterday are also in service today.

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    3. Anonymous12:38

      Lauda flights from Zagreb are operating as planned this morning.

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  12. Anonymous14:12

    Good thing they remembered to issue this warning more than a month and half after the actual incident that caused it....

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    1. Anonymous17:07

      At least they are more transparent than Boeing.

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    2. Anonymous17:36

      That's not setting the bar very high.

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    3. Anonymous21:10

      It takes a while to investigate what went wrong with complex issues such as this.

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  13. Anonymous19:23

    Looks like that everything is cooling down by reverting to the older version of the ELAC software.
    The improvement to prevent upsets seems to have generated the JetBlue upset.....
    Never rush to update a software that works 😉

    ReplyDelete
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