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Why chickens are thrown into aircraft engines?

This test, known formally as a bird strike simulation, is neither a myth nor an exaggeration. It is a mandatory, globally recognized certification process.

December 17, 2025 / 09:26 IST
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Are chickens really thrown into aircraft engines?
Are chickens really thrown into aircraft engines?

For lakhs of Indian air passengers, the journey begins and ends at bustling hubs like Delhi, Mumbai, and Bengaluru. While the focus is often on flight schedules and fares, a critical safety procedure, decades in the making, plays a silent role in ensuring every take-off and landing is secure. This procedure involves a surprising element: the deliberate firing of dead chickens at jet engines using a specialized cannon.

This test, known formally as a bird strike simulation, is neither a myth nor an exaggeration. It is a mandatory, globally recognized certification process. Its singular purpose is to guarantee that if an aircraft collides with birds during flight—a genuine and increasing risk—its most vital components, the engines and the cockpit windshield, can survive the impact without failing catastrophically.

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The origins of this practice trace back to the 1950s and the British aerospace company de Havilland. As jet engines became more common, so did the serious threat posed by bird collisions. Engineers needed a reliable way to simulate these high-impact events on the ground. Their solution was to create a large compressed-air cannon, dubbed the "chicken gun." They loaded it with whole, dead chickens, whose mass and density closely mimic many common bird species, and fired them directly at test engines and aircraft canopies at speeds replicating those of take-off and landing.