US | Southwest Airlines NTSB: Southwest Jet Had Fatigue Cracking Meanwhile, airline grounds 79 planes, cancels hundreds of flights By Polly Davis Doig Posted Apr 3, 2011 11:59 AM CDT Copied NTSB aerospace engineer Chris Babcock carries the flight recorders from Southwest flight 812 that made an emergency landing in Yuma, Ariz., Friday, April 1, 2011. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta) Fatigue cracking has been found along the entire 5-foot section of a Southwest Airlines jet that ripped open on Friday, forcing an emergency landing in Arizona. The NTSB says that mechanics will cut a 9-foot by 3-foot section of the plane and send it to Washington, DC, for testing. Southwest has responded by grounding at least 79 planes, reports the AP; at least 300 flights were canceled yesterday. And more cancellations were on the horizon today: "We don't at this time know what the impact will be, but it's possible that it could be in the 300-flight range again," a Southwest spokesman told Reuters. Read These Next Peggy Noonan: Kirk assassination starting to look 'epochal.' NFL star's routine drug test revealed a stunning diagnosis. Taylor Swift gets emotional over UK attack in new Disney+ docuseries. A White House press briefing got pretty heated Thursday. Report an error