Iron Maiden's own Boeing 747 slammed into a tow truck Saturday at an airplane terminal in Chile, bringing about real harm to the flying machine and harming two air terminal laborers on the ground, the band said.
The plane, named Ed Force One, was fastened to a truck at the Santiago International Airport and was being moved to be refueled and prepared for the following flight.
"On moving, the controlling pin that is a piece of the component that interfaces the ground pull to the flying machine apparently dropped out," the substantial metal band posted on its site. "On making a turn the flying machine had no directing and crashed into the ground pull, gravely harming the undercarriage, two of the air ship's motors and harming two ground pull administrators."
Ed Force One was harmed in Chile on Saturday.
Neither Iron Maiden nor its 20 tons of hardware were ready Ed Force One at the time.
The band posted a report on the state of the Chilean airplane terminal laborers who were harmed expressing that they "will make a complete recuperation."
Concerning the plane, it will require broad repairs and potentially two new motors, yet the show will go on.
The band is headed to Argentina, where it has a show planned for Sunday as a feature of its progressing South American visit.
"We anticipate that no interruption will the visit in any capacity and are searching for a substitution 747 Ed Force One while our ebb and flow magnificence is mended."
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