Because of the malfunctioning app, pilots could not view their navigational charts, forcing the carrier to delay 24 flights Tuesday and 30 flights Wednesday morning, American Airlines spokesman Casey Norton said.
"We've identifed the problem and the solution," he said.
The app was created by Jeppesen, an aviation navigation company based in Englewood, Colo.
A spokesman for Jeppesen said the problem was caused by a redundant navigation map for Ronald Reagan National Airport included in the app. To fix the problem, pilots had to uninstall the app and return to an airport gate to connect to the Internet to reinstall the app, spokesman Mike Pound said.
American switched to the iPad app for navigational maps in 2013.
Other airlines have also made the transition. Delta equipped 11,000 pilots with Microsoft Surface 2 tablets in 2013, and United began using iPads with Jeppesen's Mobile FliteDeck app in 2011.
Pound said Jeppesen makes navigational apps for many of the nation's largest airlines, but the latest problem was in an app that was developed specifically for American Airlines.
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