'Was that airliner meant to be underneath me?' Harrison Ford, 74, nearly crashes his plane AGAIN, this time into a Boeing 737 with 110 passengers on board

  • Actor Harrison Ford was involved in a near miss with a Boeing 737 full of passengers in California on Monday
  • Hollywood legend was flying his single engine plane Husky when he mistakenly aimed for the taxiway at John Wayne Airport rather than the runway
  • He barely missed the American Airlines 737 loaded with 110 passengers, flying just over the top
  • Ford was captured on air traffic control recordings asking: 'Was that airliner meant to be underneath me?'
  • Star Wars actor has been in a number of crashes in his vintage aircraft over the years 
  • In 2015 he was flying a vintage plane in Venice, California when the engine failed and he made a crash landing on a local golf course, suffering head injuries and a broken arm

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Harrison Ford had a near miss on Monday when he almost crashed his single-engine Husky plane into a Boeing 737.

The actor, who was in a serious plane crash in 2015, had been instructed to land on runway 20-L at John Wayne Airport in Orange County, California.

But the 74-year-old mistakenly aimed for a taxiway, just passing over an American Airlines 737 loaded with more than 100 passengers and a six-person crew.

'Was that airliner meant to be underneath me?' he asked Air Control.

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Harrison Ford (pictured inside his Husky Aviat A-1C before a take off from Santa Monica airport on Monday) nearly crashed his single-engine Husky plane into a Boeing 737 

Harrison Ford (pictured inside his Husky Aviat A-1C before a take off from Santa Monica airport on Monday) nearly crashed his single-engine Husky plane into a Boeing 737 

He was spotted inspecting the small, single engined aircraft before take off, shortly before his near miss

He was spotted inspecting the small, single engined aircraft before take off, shortly before his near miss

He was captured on air traffic control recordings asking: 'Was that airliner meant to be underneath me?' (pictured flying over Santa Monica Monday before the incident)

He was captured on air traffic control recordings asking: 'Was that airliner meant to be underneath me?' (pictured flying over Santa Monica Monday before the incident)

Ford mistakenly aimed for a taxiway, just passing over an American Airlines 737 loaded with more than 100 passengers

Ford mistakenly aimed for a taxiway, just passing over an American Airlines 737 loaded with more than 100 passengers

The Federal Aviation Administration say that controllers had given Ford clear instructions to land on the runway, as landing on a taxiway is a safety violation. They say the actor read the instructions back yet still somehow ended up aiming for the taxiway.

The American Airlines flight 1546 was still able to take off for Dallas just minutes after the incident, NBC News reports.

The FAA has now launched an investigation which could result in anything from a warning letter to Ford losing his licence.

Ford's reps had no official comment on the incident.  

Ford, a vintage plane collector, has been involved in a number of crashes over the years.

Most famously, in 2015 he crash-landed a World War II-era airplane after the engine failed. The aircraft plummeted into a Santa Monica golf course during the crash in which Ford suffered head injuries and a broken arm. 

But Ford was actually praised for keeping his cool and managing to glide his airplane into the crash landing. Moments before the crash, in audio of his conversation with air traffic control, an unemotional Ford was heard asking for an emergency landing because his engine had failed.

He said he was not going to be able to make the runaway at Santa Monica Airport so he picked a long green at the nearby Penmar golf course to land out of the way of the congested neighborhood.

After plunging 3,000ft and hitting a tree on the way down, Ford was rushed from the scene bleeding heavily from a head wound. 

Ford was spotted carrying out checks on the Husky Aviat A-1C - believed to be the same plane that crash - before take-off yesterday 

Ford was spotted carrying out checks on the Husky Aviat A-1C - believed to be the same plane that crash - before take-off yesterday 

Actor and producer Harrison Ford is a collector of vintage aircraft and private planes which he keeps at the airport

Actor and producer Harrison Ford is a collector of vintage aircraft and private planes which he keeps at the airport

Ford's publicist Ina Treciokas said the actor had no other choice but to make an emergency landing. 

'Harrison's been a great pilot. You can see by the fact that he survived this forced landing that he is a skilled aviator,' Paul Mitton, who produced a documentary about Ford's love of flying, told CNN

Aviation expert Rick Dake told People that Ford's landing was amazing considering the unforgiving nature of the World War II-era plane.

'Everything he did was perfect,' Dake, of Aviation Consulting Experts, told People.

He says less-experienced pilots training on the plane during World War II would often crash because the plane tended to flip when the engine fails.

'That alone is testament to the great ability Harrison Ford had. He made a 180-degree turn with the engine seizing up on him. He almost made it to the runway,' Dake said.

'He was able to keep that plane away from the houses and land it with the least impact on the community. That was the best place he could have landed it. He was 100 per cent doing exactly what an excellent aviator would do.'

He also crash-landed a helicopter in 1999 and was forced to perform an emergency landing the following year in a Beechcraft Bonanza at Nebraska's Lincoln Municipal Airport. 

The accident-prone actor has also injured himself on the ground too. While filming 'Star Wars: Episode VII', the door of Solo's Millennium Falcon spacecraft fell and broke the actor's leg.

 Ford (pictured at Santa Monica airport Sunday) just missed the passenger jet after he accidentally landed on the taxiway

 Ford (pictured at Santa Monica airport Sunday) just missed the passenger jet after he accidentally landed on the taxiway

Ford stands on his helicopter during a serious check of his aircraft before a take off from Santa Monica airport on Sunday

Ford stands on his helicopter during a serious check of his aircraft before a take off from Santa Monica airport on Sunday

Injury prone: Thursday's crash comes just months after Ford, 72, was airlifted from the set of the new Star Wars movie for an ankle injury
A file picture dated 02 March 2014 shows US actor Harrison Ford (L) and his wife US actress Calista Flockhart (R) arriving for the 86th annual Academy Awards ceremony at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, California, USA.

Monday's near miss comes two years after he crashed his plane into a golf course, breaking his arm. Pictured on the left at a film premiere in October 2013, and with wife Calista Flockhart at the 2014 Academy Awards on the right

He discovered a passion for flying somewhat late in life but Ford embraced it with gusto and flew his collection of planes as much as he drove his collection of vintage cars.

The actor was 52 when he started taking flying lessons and over the years the Indiana Jones star has amassed an impressive aviation collection.

He keeps the aircraft at the Santa Monica Airport which is where he was where he had taken off from in his two-seater PT- 22 shortly before he crashed on a nearby Venice golf course in 2015.

Now 74, Ford would be too old to fly a commercial aircraft who have a mandatory retirement age of 65.

However, the FAA have no age limit on private pilots. The only additional requirement is that pilots above the age of 40 must pass medical exams every two years instead of every five. 

In an interview with The Mail On Sunday back in 2010, the Blade Runner and Star Wars actor talked about some of the planes in his collection and the reasons he loves flying so much.

'Flying is like good music: it elevates the spirit and it's an exhilarating freedom.' he said. 'It's not a thrill thing or an adrenaline rush; it's engaging in a process that takes focus and commitment.

Ford has a long range jet, a Citation Sovereign, a turboprop aircraft capable of operating on unimproved airstrips; and a de Havilland DHC-2 Beaver single engine bush plane.

He also has a 1929 Waco Taperwing open-top biplane, an Aviat Husky, which is a two-seat fabric-covered bush plane, and a Bell 407 helicopter.

In 1999, Ford was flying his helicopter along the Lake Piru riverbed, north-east of Los Angeles, when it went down in a hard landing during a training session.

The actor, who was in a serious plane crash in 2015, had been instructed to land on runway 20-L at John Wayne Airport in Orange County, California (pictured is the damaged remains of his plane from his 2015 crash)

The actor, who was in a serious plane crash in 2015, had been instructed to land on runway 20-L at John Wayne Airport in Orange County, California (pictured is the damaged remains of his plane from his 2015 crash)

The 74-year-old had mistakenly aimed for a taxiway, passing just over an American Airlines 737 loaded with 110 passengers and a six-person crew (his 2015 crash)

The 74-year-old had mistakenly aimed for a taxiway, passing just over an American Airlines 737 loaded with 110 passengers and a six-person crew (his 2015 crash)

Neither the actor nor his instructor were hurt although the helicopter was severely damaged.

He later said the incident gave him the opportunity to buy a new helicopter.

He once described crashing a plane as being like scraping a bumper and said he used his planes as much he used his cars.

'I'm so passionate about flying, I often fly up the coast for a cheeseburger,' he said in 2010.

The Hollywood star often flies to and from his ranch in Wyoming and has used his helicopter there to aid Search and Rescue crews locate missing hikers.

With his need for speed, Ford collects vintage cars and motorbikes,

He has about a dozen motorcycles including several BMWs, a couple of Harleys, Hondas and a Triumph.

He has vintage cars too including a rare 1955 forest green convertible Jaguar XK 140 worth about $150,000.

Ford is married to actress Calista Flockhart and they have a teenage son Liam.

HARRISON'S BRAVADO EQUALS THAT OF HAN SOLO AND INDIANA JONES

Harrison Ford is as much the daredevil in real life as Han Solo, Indiana Jones or the other larger-than-life characters he's played on the screen.

While his fictional adventures in 'Star Wars' and as bold archaeologist Jones have thrilled audiences, the star has run into real-life danger - and sometimes pain - while indulging in his love of aviation, fast driving and the unpredictability of filmmaking.

On Thursday, the actor's vintage plane crash-landed on a golf course in Los Angeles shortly after taking off from a nearby airport. Ford, 74, who had reported engine failure to air-traffic controllers, suffered moderate injuries and was taken by ambulance to a hospital.

Beyond joy-riding in the skies, Ford also employs his skills as a pilot, acquired in his mid-50s, to help in search-and-rescue efforts.

Harrison Ford is as much the daredevil in real life as Han Solo (pictured) Indiana Jones or the other larger-than-life characters he's played on the screen

Harrison Ford is as much the daredevil in real life as Han Solo (pictured) Indiana Jones or the other larger-than-life characters he's played on the screen

Here are a few of his closer brushes, some more dramatic than others, as well as heroic moments:

  • The scar on his face that lends him a rakish look was earned, he's said, in 'a mundane way.' In 1964, he was speeding to a job at a department store in Orange County, California, when his car veered off the road and into a telephone pole as he fumbled for his seat belt.
  • In 1999, Ford crash-landed his helicopter during a training flight in which he and an instructor were practicing auto rotations in Ventura County, northwest of Los Angeles. Ford and the instructor were unhurt.
  • He used his helicopter in 2000 to pluck an Idaho Falls, Idaho, hiker off 11,106-foot Table Mountain in Teton County, Wyoming, and fly her to a hospital.
  • One year later, Ford and another searcher helped find a missing Boy Scout in a forest south of Yellowstone National Park. 'Boy, you sure must have earned a merit badge for this one,' said Ford told the cold and hungry teenager after whisking him to safety by chopper.
  •  Ford was at the helm of a Beechcraft Bonanza in 2000 when wind shear forced him to make an emergency landing at Lincoln Municipal Airport in Nebraska. Ford and his passenger were uninjured when the plane clipped the runway and its wing tips were damaged, officials said. 
  • In 2014, he was filming 'Star Wars: Episode VII' in a studio outside London when a door of Solo's Millennium Falcon spacecraft fell and broke the actor's leg, requiring surgery on it. He recovered and returned to complete his work on the movie.
  • In 2015, he suffered his most serious crash at the helm of the Ryan PT-22 Recruit vintage plane which he managed to crash land on a Santa Monica golf course.
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