Almost a crash!
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Almost a crash!
What do you all say about this?
http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=ddb_1204404185
I think the pilot could have done better!
http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=ddb_1204404185
I think the pilot could have done better!
I mean it in terms of aligning the airplane with the runway. I was thought to lower the into-wind wing and use the rudder to remain aligned with the runway centerline. The pilot does it but much too late I think and when he does it the plane yaws much to the right... then finally the wing to the left ... or lets say.. too much to the left. Anyway... I dont say I would do better but I must say it wasnt certainly a good job.
Then maybe they shouldn't have commenced the flight at all. As the saying goes..."it's better to be on the ground wishing you were in the air than in the air wishing you were on the ground", as I'm sure that crew and pax were.khelm wrote:From what I heard on A.net, the all of Germany was engulfed in a severe storm that day, so their alternates may have had the same/worse. Great save with little damage from what I can see. Top notch.
If this was the wx at all available alternates the crew left themselves no "out" to the situation which is rule #1 for any aviator. They put themselves, their pax, and the aircraft at unnecessary risk just for the sake of completion factor. Poor planning in my opinion if what you say a.netters said is indeed true about the wx.
Justin Erickson, Captain #1040
Chief Executive Officer
Globe Cargo PIREP (GCP) Developer
ceo-at-globecargova.org
Vatsim ID: 871725
Chief Executive Officer
Globe Cargo PIREP (GCP) Developer
ceo-at-globecargova.org
Vatsim ID: 871725
Thats one huge difference between the airbus and boeing,the airbus flight control "laws" will not allow cross control.DOmiHausen wrote:I mean it in terms of aligning the airplane with the runway. I was thought to lower the into-wind wing and use the rudder to remain aligned with the runway centerline. The pilot does it but much too late I think and when he does it the plane yaws much to the right... then finally the wing to the left ... or lets say.. too much to the left. Anyway... I dont say I would do better but I must say it wasnt certainly a good job.
I think it's all very easy for us to sit here and speculate on what caused it and who was at fault. Ultimately the buck stops with the Captain, but we don't know what he did or didn't take into account in making the decision to make an approach and what other options he had available to him. However, I'm sure the report will make interesting reading. The incident has certainly made me think about my own personal limitations in my own flying.
it is very difficult to judge in a video distances and angles and conditions, airliners crab into airports all the time, so that is not unusual,
it appears to me that a gust of wind may have caught him as he came out of the crab, or maybe he came out of it a little early, hard to tell.
The important thing is the pilots did their job.
Reminds me of last october, my brother and I were flying into vancouver from toronto, the weather was not so good, could not see any mountains at all, just clouds till around 2500 feet or so on approch, you could see the ground. There must have been a windshear somewere because as we were decending on the glideslope, we suddenly dropped a considerable distance, 500' at least, feet or so, seems like the plane would not stop. People screamed and stuff fell out of the overheads....
We did a go around and a hold for 30 minutes out over the bay till things cleared up over the field. The second time we landed without incident.
My brother who is a retired air canada captain said that in all his years of flying, he never experienced a drop as bad as that.
I asked him why he had to wait until I was with him to experience that kind of a drop.... I also told him that if we were in a Boeing instead of an Airbus, we never would have dropped.
it appears to me that a gust of wind may have caught him as he came out of the crab, or maybe he came out of it a little early, hard to tell.
The important thing is the pilots did their job.
Reminds me of last october, my brother and I were flying into vancouver from toronto, the weather was not so good, could not see any mountains at all, just clouds till around 2500 feet or so on approch, you could see the ground. There must have been a windshear somewere because as we were decending on the glideslope, we suddenly dropped a considerable distance, 500' at least, feet or so, seems like the plane would not stop. People screamed and stuff fell out of the overheads....
We did a go around and a hold for 30 minutes out over the bay till things cleared up over the field. The second time we landed without incident.
My brother who is a retired air canada captain said that in all his years of flying, he never experienced a drop as bad as that.
I asked him why he had to wait until I was with him to experience that kind of a drop.... I also told him that if we were in a Boeing instead of an Airbus, we never would have dropped.