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J.F.
January 18th 08, 12:41 AM
Jan. 17 (Bloomberg) -- A British Airways Plc jumbo jet arriving from China
crashed on landing at London's Heathrow airport, injuring 19 people and
forcing the cancellation of more than 200 flights.

Flight BA038 from Beijing, a Boeing Co. 777 carrying 152 passengers and
crew, touched down at 12:42 p.m. local time today, airport owner BAA Ltd.
said in a statement. The cause of the accident is under investigation.

Television pictures showed the 777 at the edge of the runway apron with the
grass behind it torn up for several hundred yards where the aircraft had
scraped along. Escape chutes were deployed and fire trucks sprayed the plane
with foam. One wing and much of the landing gear appeared damaged.

``It would be inappropriate for me to speculate as to the likely cause of
this incident,'' British Airways Chief Executive Officer Willie Walsh said
in a statement. ``We are very proud of the way our crew safely evacuated all
136 passengers on board with only minor injuries.''

The Associated Press said hospitals reported receiving 19 people with crash
injuries.

Heathrow's southern runway was closed for almost two hours after the
accident, BAA said. U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown's plane was among
departures that were delayed, with the pilot informing those aboard that a
``significant incident'' had occurred at the airport, Europe's busiest.

`Out of Our Window'

``We saw it out of our window,'' said Peter Morris, chief economist at
Ascend Worldwide, an aviation data provider and consulting company with
offices just outside the Heathrow airfield. ``There's no official report but
it appears that the aircraft undershot the runway -- it landed too soon.''

The plane suddenly lost power as it approached the runway, CNN quoted the
pilot as saying.

Today's event appears to be the first major incident involving a Boeing 777,
Morris said. Like most planes landing at Heathrow, it approached the airport
over the heavily populated suburbs of west London, western Europe's biggest
city.

The 777-200ER, registration G-YMMM, was built in 2001 and is one of 43 in
the British Airways fleet. It's powered by two Rolls-Royce Group Plc Trent
895 engines and had accumulated 23,476 flying hours as of Dec. 31, 2006,
according to data on the Web site of the U.K. Civil Aviation Authority.

Maintenance Check

The plane's last maintenance check was in December and it was piloted by an
experienced captain who has been with British Airways for almost 20 years,
said the company, whose shares closed up 1.4 percent today at 293.5 pence.

The incident will be investigated by the Air Accidents Investigation Branch
of the U.K. Department for Transport.

``All we can say at this point is, we look forward to helping with the
investigation as we are invited to participate,'' said Jim Proulx, a Boeing
spokesman in Seattle.

Heathrow is operating at 99 percent of its government- permitted flight
capacity. The tightly packed take-off and landing schedule means even minor
glitches at the airport can have a domino effect on its operations.

BAA, owned by Spanish builder Grupo Ferrovial SA, has been criticized by
politicians, airlines and business leaders for the standards of services and
facilities at Heathrow, which handles 67 million passengers a year in
buildings meant for 45 million.

The airport's southern runway was later reopened for take- offs only, with
the northern runway operating for arriving aircraft. As of 5:30 p.m., 222
out of 1,300 flights had been canceled, with 24 switched to other airports.

Poor weather may have been a factor in the incident, which didn't appear to
be a premeditated emergency landing, said Robert Cullemore, a consultant
with Aviation Economics in London.

Bird Strike

Other aviation experts said the plane's engines may have sucked in a flock
of Canada geese, causing power to fail. The geese are known to frequent the
many reservoirs around Heathrow. The British Broadcasting Corp. cited an
airport worker it didn't identify as saying the plane had lost power on its
approach.

``From all sources, it would seem that something must have happened in the
minutes or seconds prior to touching down,'' Cullemore said. ``Windshear, a
sudden burst of wind, is one possible culprit, as is the possibility that
the aircraft lost power to its crucial functions.''

BMI, the second-biggest operator at Heathrow, is flying ``as near-a-normal
schedule as possible'' following the incident, it said in a statement today.
Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd. said all of its services were proceeding as
planned.

`Good Spirits'

Passengers from the British Airways flight were taken to an employee lounge
to be cared for and were ``generally in good spirits'' CEO Walsh said. The
carrier will most likely have to write off the damaged aircraft and may
consequently face operational difficulties, Cullemore of Aviation Economics
said.

``BA's safety record is exemplary and the rapid evacuation of the passengers
without loss of life is a tribute to their safety commitment,'' he said.

Prime Minister Brown, leading a U.K. trade delegation of 30 executives to
China and India, took off almost an hour late on a British Airways Boeing
747. Also on the aircraft was billionaire Richard Branson, who controls
Virgin Atlantic.

Frank from Deeeetroit
January 18th 08, 03:30 AM
"J.F." > wrote in message
. net...
> Jan. 17 (Bloomberg) -- A British Airways Plc jumbo jet arriving from China
> crashed on landing at London's Heathrow airport, injuring 19 people and
> forcing the cancellation of more than 200 flights.
>
> Flight BA038 from Beijing, a Boeing Co. 777 carrying 152 passengers and
> crew, touched down at 12:42 p.m. local time today, airport owner BAA Ltd.
> said in a statement. The cause of the accident is under investigation.
>
> Television pictures showed the 777 at the edge of the runway apron with
> the grass behind it torn up for several hundred yards where the aircraft
> had scraped along. Escape chutes were deployed and fire trucks sprayed the
> plane with foam. One wing and much of the landing gear appeared damaged.
>
> ``It would be inappropriate for me to speculate as to the likely cause of
> this incident,'' British Airways Chief Executive Officer Willie Walsh said
> in a statement. ``We are very proud of the way our crew safely evacuated
> all 136 passengers on board with only minor injuries.''
>
> The Associated Press said hospitals reported receiving 19 people with
> crash injuries.
>
> Heathrow's southern runway was closed for almost two hours after the
> accident, BAA said. U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown's plane was among
> departures that were delayed, with the pilot informing those aboard that a
> ``significant incident'' had occurred at the airport, Europe's busiest.
>
> `Out of Our Window'
>
> ``We saw it out of our window,'' said Peter Morris, chief economist at
> Ascend Worldwide, an aviation data provider and consulting company with
> offices just outside the Heathrow airfield. ``There's no official report
> but it appears that the aircraft undershot the runway -- it landed too
> soon.''
>
> The plane suddenly lost power as it approached the runway, CNN quoted the
> pilot as saying.
>
> Today's event appears to be the first major incident involving a Boeing
> 777, Morris said. Like most planes landing at Heathrow, it approached the
> airport over the heavily populated suburbs of west London, western
> Europe's biggest city.
>
> The 777-200ER, registration G-YMMM, was built in 2001 and is one of 43 in
> the British Airways fleet. It's powered by two Rolls-Royce Group Plc Trent
> 895 engines and had accumulated 23,476 flying hours as of Dec. 31, 2006,
> according to data on the Web site of the U.K. Civil Aviation Authority.
>
> Maintenance Check
>
> The plane's last maintenance check was in December and it was piloted by
> an experienced captain who has been with British Airways for almost 20
> years, said the company, whose shares closed up 1.4 percent today at 293.5
> pence.
>
> The incident will be investigated by the Air Accidents Investigation
> Branch of the U.K. Department for Transport.
>
> ``All we can say at this point is, we look forward to helping with the
> investigation as we are invited to participate,'' said Jim Proulx, a
> Boeing spokesman in Seattle.
>
> Heathrow is operating at 99 percent of its government- permitted flight
> capacity. The tightly packed take-off and landing schedule means even
> minor glitches at the airport can have a domino effect on its operations.
>
> BAA, owned by Spanish builder Grupo Ferrovial SA, has been criticized by
> politicians, airlines and business leaders for the standards of services
> and facilities at Heathrow, which handles 67 million passengers a year in
> buildings meant for 45 million.
>
> The airport's southern runway was later reopened for take- offs only, with
> the northern runway operating for arriving aircraft. As of 5:30 p.m., 222
> out of 1,300 flights had been canceled, with 24 switched to other
> airports.
>
> Poor weather may have been a factor in the incident, which didn't appear
> to be a premeditated emergency landing, said Robert Cullemore, a
> consultant with Aviation Economics in London.
>
> Bird Strike
>
> Other aviation experts said the plane's engines may have sucked in a flock
> of Canada geese, causing power to fail. The geese are known to frequent
> the many reservoirs around Heathrow. The British Broadcasting Corp. cited
> an airport worker it didn't identify as saying the plane had lost power on
> its approach.
>
> ``From all sources, it would seem that something must have happened in the
> minutes or seconds prior to touching down,'' Cullemore said. ``Windshear,
> a sudden burst of wind, is one possible culprit, as is the possibility
> that the aircraft lost power to its crucial functions.''
>
> BMI, the second-biggest operator at Heathrow, is flying ``as near-a-normal
> schedule as possible'' following the incident, it said in a statement
> today. Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd. said all of its services were
> proceeding as planned.
>
> `Good Spirits'
>
> Passengers from the British Airways flight were taken to an employee
> lounge to be cared for and were ``generally in good spirits'' CEO Walsh
> said. The carrier will most likely have to write off the damaged aircraft
> and may consequently face operational difficulties, Cullemore of Aviation
> Economics said.
>
> ``BA's safety record is exemplary and the rapid evacuation of the
> passengers without loss of life is a tribute to their safety commitment,''
> he said.
>
> Prime Minister Brown, leading a U.K. trade delegation of 30 executives to
> China and India, took off almost an hour late on a British Airways Boeing
> 747. Also on the aircraft was billionaire Richard Branson, who controls
> Virgin Atlantic.
>
>
>

Wonder if the pilot left China with enough fuel?

flybywire
January 18th 08, 07:12 PM
investigations of b box show complete engine failure just outside of lhr

seems similar to crash at ema some years ago

co pilot was landing it

cp did a great job

M
"Frank from Deeeetroit" > wrote in message
. ..
>
> "J.F." > wrote in message
> . net...
>> Jan. 17 (Bloomberg) -- A British Airways Plc jumbo jet arriving from
>> China crashed on landing at London's Heathrow airport, injuring 19 people
>> and forcing the cancellation of more than 200 flights.
>>
>> Flight BA038 from Beijing, a Boeing Co. 777 carrying 152 passengers and
>> crew, touched down at 12:42 p.m. local time today, airport owner BAA Ltd.
>> said in a statement. The cause of the accident is under investigation.
>>
>> Television pictures showed the 777 at the edge of the runway apron with
>> the grass behind it torn up for several hundred yards where the aircraft
>> had scraped along. Escape chutes were deployed and fire trucks sprayed
>> the plane with foam. One wing and much of the landing gear appeared
>> damaged.
>>
>> ``It would be inappropriate for me to speculate as to the likely cause of
>> this incident,'' British Airways Chief Executive Officer Willie Walsh
>> said in a statement. ``We are very proud of the way our crew safely
>> evacuated all 136 passengers on board with only minor injuries.''
>>
>> The Associated Press said hospitals reported receiving 19 people with
>> crash injuries.
>>
>> Heathrow's southern runway was closed for almost two hours after the
>> accident, BAA said. U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown's plane was among
>> departures that were delayed, with the pilot informing those aboard that
>> a ``significant incident'' had occurred at the airport, Europe's busiest.
>>
>> `Out of Our Window'
>>
>> ``We saw it out of our window,'' said Peter Morris, chief economist at
>> Ascend Worldwide, an aviation data provider and consulting company with
>> offices just outside the Heathrow airfield. ``There's no official report
>> but it appears that the aircraft undershot the runway -- it landed too
>> soon.''
>>
>> The plane suddenly lost power as it approached the runway, CNN quoted the
>> pilot as saying.
>>
>> Today's event appears to be the first major incident involving a Boeing
>> 777, Morris said. Like most planes landing at Heathrow, it approached the
>> airport over the heavily populated suburbs of west London, western
>> Europe's biggest city.
>>
>> The 777-200ER, registration G-YMMM, was built in 2001 and is one of 43 in
>> the British Airways fleet. It's powered by two Rolls-Royce Group Plc
>> Trent 895 engines and had accumulated 23,476 flying hours as of Dec. 31,
>> 2006, according to data on the Web site of the U.K. Civil Aviation
>> Authority.
>>
>> Maintenance Check
>>
>> The plane's last maintenance check was in December and it was piloted by
>> an experienced captain who has been with British Airways for almost 20
>> years, said the company, whose shares closed up 1.4 percent today at
>> 293.5 pence.
>>
>> The incident will be investigated by the Air Accidents Investigation
>> Branch of the U.K. Department for Transport.
>>
>> ``All we can say at this point is, we look forward to helping with the
>> investigation as we are invited to participate,'' said Jim Proulx, a
>> Boeing spokesman in Seattle.
>>
>> Heathrow is operating at 99 percent of its government- permitted flight
>> capacity. The tightly packed take-off and landing schedule means even
>> minor glitches at the airport can have a domino effect on its operations.
>>
>> BAA, owned by Spanish builder Grupo Ferrovial SA, has been criticized by
>> politicians, airlines and business leaders for the standards of services
>> and facilities at Heathrow, which handles 67 million passengers a year in
>> buildings meant for 45 million.
>>
>> The airport's southern runway was later reopened for take- offs only,
>> with the northern runway operating for arriving aircraft. As of 5:30
>> p.m., 222 out of 1,300 flights had been canceled, with 24 switched to
>> other airports.
>>
>> Poor weather may have been a factor in the incident, which didn't appear
>> to be a premeditated emergency landing, said Robert Cullemore, a
>> consultant with Aviation Economics in London.
>>
>> Bird Strike
>>
>> Other aviation experts said the plane's engines may have sucked in a
>> flock of Canada geese, causing power to fail. The geese are known to
>> frequent the many reservoirs around Heathrow. The British Broadcasting
>> Corp. cited an airport worker it didn't identify as saying the plane had
>> lost power on its approach.
>>
>> ``From all sources, it would seem that something must have happened in
>> the minutes or seconds prior to touching down,'' Cullemore said.
>> ``Windshear, a sudden burst of wind, is one possible culprit, as is the
>> possibility that the aircraft lost power to its crucial functions.''
>>
>> BMI, the second-biggest operator at Heathrow, is flying ``as
>> near-a-normal schedule as possible'' following the incident, it said in a
>> statement today. Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd. said all of its services
>> were proceeding as planned.
>>
>> `Good Spirits'
>>
>> Passengers from the British Airways flight were taken to an employee
>> lounge to be cared for and were ``generally in good spirits'' CEO Walsh
>> said. The carrier will most likely have to write off the damaged aircraft
>> and may consequently face operational difficulties, Cullemore of Aviation
>> Economics said.
>>
>> ``BA's safety record is exemplary and the rapid evacuation of the
>> passengers without loss of life is a tribute to their safety
>> commitment,'' he said.
>>
>> Prime Minister Brown, leading a U.K. trade delegation of 30 executives to
>> China and India, took off almost an hour late on a British Airways Boeing
>> 747. Also on the aircraft was billionaire Richard Branson, who controls
>> Virgin Atlantic.
>>
>>
>>
>
> Wonder if the pilot left China with enough fuel?
>

Grumpy AuContraire[_2_]
January 18th 08, 07:52 PM
This has all the symptoms of running out of fuel.

• Both engines fail
• No fire on impact
• Very similar to a B-707 incident a few years ago near JFK

JT




J.F. wrote:

> Jan. 17 (Bloomberg) -- A British Airways Plc jumbo jet arriving from China
> crashed on landing at London's Heathrow airport, injuring 19 people and
> forcing the cancellation of more than 200 flights.
>
> Flight BA038 from Beijing, a Boeing Co. 777 carrying 152 passengers and
> crew, touched down at 12:42 p.m. local time today, airport owner BAA Ltd.
> said in a statement. The cause of the accident is under investigation.
>
> Television pictures showed the 777 at the edge of the runway apron with the
> grass behind it torn up for several hundred yards where the aircraft had
> scraped along. Escape chutes were deployed and fire trucks sprayed the plane
> with foam. One wing and much of the landing gear appeared damaged.
>
> ``It would be inappropriate for me to speculate as to the likely cause of
> this incident,'' British Airways Chief Executive Officer Willie Walsh said
> in a statement. ``We are very proud of the way our crew safely evacuated all
> 136 passengers on board with only minor injuries.''
>
> The Associated Press said hospitals reported receiving 19 people with crash
> injuries.
>
> Heathrow's southern runway was closed for almost two hours after the
> accident, BAA said. U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown's plane was among
> departures that were delayed, with the pilot informing those aboard that a
> ``significant incident'' had occurred at the airport, Europe's busiest.
>
> `Out of Our Window'
>
> ``We saw it out of our window,'' said Peter Morris, chief economist at
> Ascend Worldwide, an aviation data provider and consulting company with
> offices just outside the Heathrow airfield. ``There's no official report but
> it appears that the aircraft undershot the runway -- it landed too soon.''
>
> The plane suddenly lost power as it approached the runway, CNN quoted the
> pilot as saying.
>
> Today's event appears to be the first major incident involving a Boeing 777,
> Morris said. Like most planes landing at Heathrow, it approached the airport
> over the heavily populated suburbs of west London, western Europe's biggest
> city.
>
> The 777-200ER, registration G-YMMM, was built in 2001 and is one of 43 in
> the British Airways fleet. It's powered by two Rolls-Royce Group Plc Trent
> 895 engines and had accumulated 23,476 flying hours as of Dec. 31, 2006,
> according to data on the Web site of the U.K. Civil Aviation Authority.
>
> Maintenance Check
>
> The plane's last maintenance check was in December and it was piloted by an
> experienced captain who has been with British Airways for almost 20 years,
> said the company, whose shares closed up 1.4 percent today at 293.5 pence.
>
> The incident will be investigated by the Air Accidents Investigation Branch
> of the U.K. Department for Transport.
>
> ``All we can say at this point is, we look forward to helping with the
> investigation as we are invited to participate,'' said Jim Proulx, a Boeing
> spokesman in Seattle.
>
> Heathrow is operating at 99 percent of its government- permitted flight
> capacity. The tightly packed take-off and landing schedule means even minor
> glitches at the airport can have a domino effect on its operations.
>
> BAA, owned by Spanish builder Grupo Ferrovial SA, has been criticized by
> politicians, airlines and business leaders for the standards of services and
> facilities at Heathrow, which handles 67 million passengers a year in
> buildings meant for 45 million.
>
> The airport's southern runway was later reopened for take- offs only, with
> the northern runway operating for arriving aircraft. As of 5:30 p.m., 222
> out of 1,300 flights had been canceled, with 24 switched to other airports.
>
> Poor weather may have been a factor in the incident, which didn't appear to
> be a premeditated emergency landing, said Robert Cullemore, a consultant
> with Aviation Economics in London.
>
> Bird Strike
>
> Other aviation experts said the plane's engines may have sucked in a flock
> of Canada geese, causing power to fail. The geese are known to frequent the
> many reservoirs around Heathrow. The British Broadcasting Corp. cited an
> airport worker it didn't identify as saying the plane had lost power on its
> approach.
>
> ``From all sources, it would seem that something must have happened in the
> minutes or seconds prior to touching down,'' Cullemore said. ``Windshear, a
> sudden burst of wind, is one possible culprit, as is the possibility that
> the aircraft lost power to its crucial functions.''
>
> BMI, the second-biggest operator at Heathrow, is flying ``as near-a-normal
> schedule as possible'' following the incident, it said in a statement today.
> Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd. said all of its services were proceeding as
> planned.
>
> `Good Spirits'
>
> Passengers from the British Airways flight were taken to an employee lounge
> to be cared for and were ``generally in good spirits'' CEO Walsh said. The
> carrier will most likely have to write off the damaged aircraft and may
> consequently face operational difficulties, Cullemore of Aviation Economics
> said.
>
> ``BA's safety record is exemplary and the rapid evacuation of the passengers
> without loss of life is a tribute to their safety commitment,'' he said.
>
> Prime Minister Brown, leading a U.K. trade delegation of 30 executives to
> China and India, took off almost an hour late on a British Airways Boeing
> 747. Also on the aircraft was billionaire Richard Branson, who controls
> Virgin Atlantic.
>
>
>

Grumpy AuContraire[_2_]
January 18th 08, 07:54 PM
Frank from Deeeetroit wrote:

> "J.F." > wrote in message
> . net...
>
>>Jan. 17 (Bloomberg) -- A British Airways Plc jumbo jet arriving from China
>>crashed on landing at London's Heathrow airport, injuring 19 people and
>>forcing the cancellation of more than 200 flights.
>>
>>

snip


>>
>>Prime Minister Brown, leading a U.K. trade delegation of 30 executives to
>>China and India, took off almost an hour late on a British Airways Boeing
>>747. Also on the aircraft was billionaire Richard Branson, who controls
>>Virgin Atlantic.
>>
>>
>>
>
>
> Wonder if the pilot left China with enough fuel?
>
>


Yep, no fire and dual engine failure...

JT

Al G[_1_]
January 18th 08, 08:51 PM
"Grumpy AuContraire" > wrote in message
...
> This has all the symptoms of running out of fuel.
>
> • Both engines fail
> • No fire on impact
> • Very similar to a B-707 incident a few years ago near JFK
>
> JT
>
http://news.bbc.co.uk:80/2/hi/uk_news/england/london/7196962.stm

The report noted that: "A significant amount of fuel leaked from the
aircraft but there was no fire."



Al G

Herman
January 20th 08, 01:04 AM
Running out of fuel 50 yards short of the runway?
I don't think so. No aircrew would ever operate that close to the edge and
even large jet-powered airliners can glide for considerable distances
without power. Remember the 747 whose engines failed after flying through a
cloud of volcanic ash and then became the worlds largest glider?
I think it is a simple (?) case of undershooting the runway.
The pilot will have some explaining to do and possibly his next job will be
sweeping the streets of London.

Regards,
Herman


"Grumpy AuContraire" > schreef in bericht
...
> This has all the symptoms of running out of fuel.
>
> • Both engines fail
> • No fire on impact
> • Very similar to a B-707 incident a few years ago near JFK
>
> JT
>
>
>
>
> J.F. wrote:
>
>> Jan. 17 (Bloomberg) -- A British Airways Plc jumbo jet arriving from
>> China crashed on landing at London's Heathrow airport, injuring 19 people
>> and forcing the cancellation of more than 200 flights.
>>
>> Flight BA038 from Beijing, a Boeing Co. 777 carrying 152 passengers and
>> crew, touched down at 12:42 p.m. local time today, airport owner BAA Ltd.
>> said in a statement. The cause of the accident is under investigation.
>>
>> Television pictures showed the 777 at the edge of the runway apron with
>> the grass behind it torn up for several hundred yards where the aircraft
>> had scraped along. Escape chutes were deployed and fire trucks sprayed
>> the plane with foam. One wing and much of the landing gear appeared
>> damaged.
>>
>> ``It would be inappropriate for me to speculate as to the likely cause of
>> this incident,'' British Airways Chief Executive Officer Willie Walsh
>> said in a statement. ``We are very proud of the way our crew safely
>> evacuated all 136 passengers on board with only minor injuries.''
>>
>> The Associated Press said hospitals reported receiving 19 people with
>> crash injuries.
>>
>> Heathrow's southern runway was closed for almost two hours after the
>> accident, BAA said. U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown's plane was among
>> departures that were delayed, with the pilot informing those aboard that
>> a ``significant incident'' had occurred at the airport, Europe's busiest.
>>
>> `Out of Our Window'
>>
>> ``We saw it out of our window,'' said Peter Morris, chief economist at
>> Ascend Worldwide, an aviation data provider and consulting company with
>> offices just outside the Heathrow airfield. ``There's no official report
>> but it appears that the aircraft undershot the runway -- it landed too
>> soon.''
>>
>> The plane suddenly lost power as it approached the runway, CNN quoted the
>> pilot as saying.
>>
>> Today's event appears to be the first major incident involving a Boeing
>> 777, Morris said. Like most planes landing at Heathrow, it approached the
>> airport over the heavily populated suburbs of west London, western
>> Europe's biggest city.
>>
>> The 777-200ER, registration G-YMMM, was built in 2001 and is one of 43 in
>> the British Airways fleet. It's powered by two Rolls-Royce Group Plc
>> Trent 895 engines and had accumulated 23,476 flying hours as of Dec. 31,
>> 2006, according to data on the Web site of the U.K. Civil Aviation
>> Authority.
>>
>> Maintenance Check
>>
>> The plane's last maintenance check was in December and it was piloted by
>> an experienced captain who has been with British Airways for almost 20
>> years, said the company, whose shares closed up 1.4 percent today at
>> 293.5 pence.
>>
>> The incident will be investigated by the Air Accidents Investigation
>> Branch of the U.K. Department for Transport.
>>
>> ``All we can say at this point is, we look forward to helping with the
>> investigation as we are invited to participate,'' said Jim Proulx, a
>> Boeing spokesman in Seattle.
>>
>> Heathrow is operating at 99 percent of its government- permitted flight
>> capacity. The tightly packed take-off and landing schedule means even
>> minor glitches at the airport can have a domino effect on its operations.
>>
>> BAA, owned by Spanish builder Grupo Ferrovial SA, has been criticized by
>> politicians, airlines and business leaders for the standards of services
>> and facilities at Heathrow, which handles 67 million passengers a year in
>> buildings meant for 45 million.
>>
>> The airport's southern runway was later reopened for take- offs only,
>> with the northern runway operating for arriving aircraft. As of 5:30
>> p.m., 222 out of 1,300 flights had been canceled, with 24 switched to
>> other airports.
>>
>> Poor weather may have been a factor in the incident, which didn't appear
>> to be a premeditated emergency landing, said Robert Cullemore, a
>> consultant with Aviation Economics in London.
>>
>> Bird Strike
>>
>> Other aviation experts said the plane's engines may have sucked in a
>> flock of Canada geese, causing power to fail. The geese are known to
>> frequent the many reservoirs around Heathrow. The British Broadcasting
>> Corp. cited an airport worker it didn't identify as saying the plane had
>> lost power on its approach.
>>
>> ``From all sources, it would seem that something must have happened in
>> the minutes or seconds prior to touching down,'' Cullemore said.
>> ``Windshear, a sudden burst of wind, is one possible culprit, as is the
>> possibility that the aircraft lost power to its crucial functions.''
>>
>> BMI, the second-biggest operator at Heathrow, is flying ``as
>> near-a-normal schedule as possible'' following the incident, it said in a
>> statement today. Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd. said all of its services
>> were proceeding as planned.
>>
>> `Good Spirits'
>>
>> Passengers from the British Airways flight were taken to an employee
>> lounge to be cared for and were ``generally in good spirits'' CEO Walsh
>> said. The carrier will most likely have to write off the damaged aircraft
>> and may consequently face operational difficulties, Cullemore of Aviation
>> Economics said.
>>
>> ``BA's safety record is exemplary and the rapid evacuation of the
>> passengers without loss of life is a tribute to their safety
>> commitment,'' he said.
>>
>> Prime Minister Brown, leading a U.K. trade delegation of 30 executives to
>> China and India, took off almost an hour late on a British Airways Boeing
>> 747. Also on the aircraft was billionaire Richard Branson, who controls
>> Virgin Atlantic.
>>
>>

RustY©
January 20th 08, 11:11 AM
"Herman" > wrote in message
b.home.nl...
> Running out of fuel 50 yards short of the runway?
> I don't think so.

Here is the Times report of the incident.....
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article3216746.ece

Netko
January 20th 08, 11:47 AM
On Sun, 20 Jan 2008 11:11:58 +0000, RustY© wrote
(in message >):

> Here is the Times report of the incident.....
> http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article3216746.ece

The Initial Report of the Air Accidents Investigation Branch is at:

http://tinyurl.com/36t535


Flight International has some interesting pictures at:

http://tinyurl.com/2mu9rp


And the Hangar King angle ("...licking chocolate off his naked
body") is provided, courtesy of Rupert Murdoch, at:

http://www.newsoftheworld.co.uk/2001_hero_pilot_romp.shtml

--

Grumpy AuContraire[_2_]
January 20th 08, 06:33 PM
Al G wrote:

> "Grumpy AuContraire" > wrote in message
> ...
>
>>This has all the symptoms of running out of fuel.
>>
>>• Both engines fail
>>• No fire on impact
>>• Very similar to a B-707 incident a few years ago near JFK
>>
>>JT
>>
>
> http://news.bbc.co.uk:80/2/hi/uk_news/england/london/7196962.stm
>
> The report noted that: "A significant amount of fuel leaked from the
> aircraft but there was no fire."
>
>
>
> Al G
>
>


"Significant" is kind of an ambiguous term. Surely, some fuel would
remain but maybe not enough for a "draw."

OTOH, this is speculation by a casual individual, (me), who has no
official info but just opines based on seat of pants experience...

JT

Grumpy AuContraire[_2_]
January 20th 08, 06:35 PM
You have a great talent for twisting words...

JT





Herman wrote:

> Running out of fuel 50 yards short of the runway?
> I don't think so. No aircrew would ever operate that close to the edge and
> even large jet-powered airliners can glide for considerable distances
> without power. Remember the 747 whose engines failed after flying through a
> cloud of volcanic ash and then became the worlds largest glider?
> I think it is a simple (?) case of undershooting the runway.
> The pilot will have some explaining to do and possibly his next job will be
> sweeping the streets of London.
>
> Regards,
> Herman
>
>
> "Grumpy AuContraire" > schreef in bericht
> ...
>
>>This has all the symptoms of running out of fuel.
>>
>>• Both engines fail
>>• No fire on impact
>>• Very similar to a B-707 incident a few years ago near JFK
>>
>>JT
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>J.F. wrote:
>>
>>
>>>Jan. 17 (Bloomberg) -- A British Airways Plc jumbo jet arriving from
>>>China crashed on landing at London's Heathrow airport, injuring 19 people
>>>and forcing the cancellation of more than 200 flights.
>>>
>>>Flight BA038 from Beijing, a Boeing Co. 777 carrying 152 passengers and
>>>crew, touched down at 12:42 p.m. local time today, airport owner BAA Ltd.
>>>said in a statement. The cause of the accident is under investigation.
>>>
>>>Television pictures showed the 777 at the edge of the runway apron with
>>>the grass behind it torn up for several hundred yards where the aircraft
>>>had scraped along. Escape chutes were deployed and fire trucks sprayed
>>>the plane with foam. One wing and much of the landing gear appeared
>>>damaged.
>>>
>>>``It would be inappropriate for me to speculate as to the likely cause of
>>>this incident,'' British Airways Chief Executive Officer Willie Walsh
>>>said in a statement. ``We are very proud of the way our crew safely
>>>evacuated all 136 passengers on board with only minor injuries.''
>>>
>>>The Associated Press said hospitals reported receiving 19 people with
>>>crash injuries.
>>>
>>>Heathrow's southern runway was closed for almost two hours after the
>>>accident, BAA said. U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown's plane was among
>>>departures that were delayed, with the pilot informing those aboard that
>>>a ``significant incident'' had occurred at the airport, Europe's busiest.
>>>
>>>`Out of Our Window'
>>>
>>>``We saw it out of our window,'' said Peter Morris, chief economist at
>>>Ascend Worldwide, an aviation data provider and consulting company with
>>>offices just outside the Heathrow airfield. ``There's no official report
>>>but it appears that the aircraft undershot the runway -- it landed too
>>>soon.''
>>>
>>>The plane suddenly lost power as it approached the runway, CNN quoted the
>>>pilot as saying.
>>>
>>>Today's event appears to be the first major incident involving a Boeing
>>>777, Morris said. Like most planes landing at Heathrow, it approached the
>>>airport over the heavily populated suburbs of west London, western
>>>Europe's biggest city.
>>>
>>>The 777-200ER, registration G-YMMM, was built in 2001 and is one of 43 in
>>>the British Airways fleet. It's powered by two Rolls-Royce Group Plc
>>>Trent 895 engines and had accumulated 23,476 flying hours as of Dec. 31,
>>>2006, according to data on the Web site of the U.K. Civil Aviation
>>>Authority.
>>>
>>>Maintenance Check
>>>
>>>The plane's last maintenance check was in December and it was piloted by
>>>an experienced captain who has been with British Airways for almost 20
>>>years, said the company, whose shares closed up 1.4 percent today at
>>>293.5 pence.
>>>
>>>The incident will be investigated by the Air Accidents Investigation
>>>Branch of the U.K. Department for Transport.
>>>
>>>``All we can say at this point is, we look forward to helping with the
>>>investigation as we are invited to participate,'' said Jim Proulx, a
>>>Boeing spokesman in Seattle.
>>>
>>>Heathrow is operating at 99 percent of its government- permitted flight
>>>capacity. The tightly packed take-off and landing schedule means even
>>>minor glitches at the airport can have a domino effect on its operations.
>>>
>>>BAA, owned by Spanish builder Grupo Ferrovial SA, has been criticized by
>>>politicians, airlines and business leaders for the standards of services
>>>and facilities at Heathrow, which handles 67 million passengers a year in
>>>buildings meant for 45 million.
>>>
>>>The airport's southern runway was later reopened for take- offs only,
>>>with the northern runway operating for arriving aircraft. As of 5:30
>>>p.m., 222 out of 1,300 flights had been canceled, with 24 switched to
>>>other airports.
>>>
>>>Poor weather may have been a factor in the incident, which didn't appear
>>>to be a premeditated emergency landing, said Robert Cullemore, a
>>>consultant with Aviation Economics in London.
>>>
>>>Bird Strike
>>>
>>>Other aviation experts said the plane's engines may have sucked in a
>>>flock of Canada geese, causing power to fail. The geese are known to
>>>frequent the many reservoirs around Heathrow. The British Broadcasting
>>>Corp. cited an airport worker it didn't identify as saying the plane had
>>>lost power on its approach.
>>>
>>>``From all sources, it would seem that something must have happened in
>>>the minutes or seconds prior to touching down,'' Cullemore said.
>>>``Windshear, a sudden burst of wind, is one possible culprit, as is the
>>>possibility that the aircraft lost power to its crucial functions.''
>>>
>>>BMI, the second-biggest operator at Heathrow, is flying ``as
>>>near-a-normal schedule as possible'' following the incident, it said in a
>>>statement today. Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd. said all of its services
>>>were proceeding as planned.
>>>
>>>`Good Spirits'
>>>
>>>Passengers from the British Airways flight were taken to an employee
>>>lounge to be cared for and were ``generally in good spirits'' CEO Walsh
>>>said. The carrier will most likely have to write off the damaged aircraft
>>>and may consequently face operational difficulties, Cullemore of Aviation
>>>Economics said.
>>>
>>>``BA's safety record is exemplary and the rapid evacuation of the
>>>passengers without loss of life is a tribute to their safety
>>>commitment,'' he said.
>>>
>>>Prime Minister Brown, leading a U.K. trade delegation of 30 executives to
>>>China and India, took off almost an hour late on a British Airways Boeing
>>>747. Also on the aircraft was billionaire Richard Branson, who controls
>>>Virgin Atlantic.
>>>
>>>
>
>

Herman
January 20th 08, 07:26 PM
?????

"Grumpy AuContraire" > schreef in bericht
...
> You have a great talent for twisting words...
>
> JT
>
>
>
>
>
> Herman wrote:
>
>> Running out of fuel 50 yards short of the runway?
>> I don't think so. No aircrew would ever operate that close to the edge
>> and even large jet-powered airliners can glide for considerable distances
>> without power. Remember the 747 whose engines failed after flying through
>> a cloud of volcanic ash and then became the worlds largest glider?
>> I think it is a simple (?) case of undershooting the runway.
>> The pilot will have some explaining to do and possibly his next job will
>> be sweeping the streets of London.
>>
>> Regards,
>> Herman
>>
>>
>> "Grumpy AuContraire" > schreef in bericht
>> ...
>>
>>>This has all the symptoms of running out of fuel.
>>>
>>>• Both engines fail
>>>• No fire on impact
>>>• Very similar to a B-707 incident a few years ago near JFK
>>>
>>>JT
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>J.F. wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>>Jan. 17 (Bloomberg) -- A British Airways Plc jumbo jet arriving from
>>>>China crashed on landing at London's Heathrow airport, injuring 19
>>>>people and forcing the cancellation of more than 200 flights.
>>>>
>>>>Flight BA038 from Beijing, a Boeing Co. 777 carrying 152 passengers and
>>>>crew, touched down at 12:42 p.m. local time today, airport owner BAA
>>>>Ltd. said in a statement. The cause of the accident is under
>>>>investigation.
>>>>
>>>>Television pictures showed the 777 at the edge of the runway apron with
>>>>the grass behind it torn up for several hundred yards where the aircraft
>>>>had scraped along. Escape chutes were deployed and fire trucks sprayed
>>>>the plane with foam. One wing and much of the landing gear appeared
>>>>damaged.
>>>>
>>>>``It would be inappropriate for me to speculate as to the likely cause
>>>>of this incident,'' British Airways Chief Executive Officer Willie Walsh
>>>>said in a statement. ``We are very proud of the way our crew safely
>>>>evacuated all 136 passengers on board with only minor injuries.''
>>>>
>>>>The Associated Press said hospitals reported receiving 19 people with
>>>>crash injuries.
>>>>
>>>>Heathrow's southern runway was closed for almost two hours after the
>>>>accident, BAA said. U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown's plane was among
>>>>departures that were delayed, with the pilot informing those aboard that
>>>>a ``significant incident'' had occurred at the airport, Europe's
>>>>busiest.
>>>>
>>>>`Out of Our Window'
>>>>
>>>>``We saw it out of our window,'' said Peter Morris, chief economist at
>>>>Ascend Worldwide, an aviation data provider and consulting company with
>>>>offices just outside the Heathrow airfield. ``There's no official report
>>>>but it appears that the aircraft undershot the runway -- it landed too
>>>>soon.''
>>>>
>>>>The plane suddenly lost power as it approached the runway, CNN quoted
>>>>the pilot as saying.
>>>>
>>>>Today's event appears to be the first major incident involving a Boeing
>>>>777, Morris said. Like most planes landing at Heathrow, it approached
>>>>the airport over the heavily populated suburbs of west London, western
>>>>Europe's biggest city.
>>>>
>>>>The 777-200ER, registration G-YMMM, was built in 2001 and is one of 43
>>>>in the British Airways fleet. It's powered by two Rolls-Royce Group Plc
>>>>Trent 895 engines and had accumulated 23,476 flying hours as of Dec. 31,
>>>>2006, according to data on the Web site of the U.K. Civil Aviation
>>>>Authority.
>>>>
>>>>Maintenance Check
>>>>
>>>>The plane's last maintenance check was in December and it was piloted by
>>>>an experienced captain who has been with British Airways for almost 20
>>>>years, said the company, whose shares closed up 1.4 percent today at
>>>>293.5 pence.
>>>>
>>>>The incident will be investigated by the Air Accidents Investigation
>>>>Branch of the U.K. Department for Transport.
>>>>
>>>>``All we can say at this point is, we look forward to helping with the
>>>>investigation as we are invited to participate,'' said Jim Proulx, a
>>>>Boeing spokesman in Seattle.
>>>>
>>>>Heathrow is operating at 99 percent of its government- permitted flight
>>>>capacity. The tightly packed take-off and landing schedule means even
>>>>minor glitches at the airport can have a domino effect on its
>>>>operations.
>>>>
>>>>BAA, owned by Spanish builder Grupo Ferrovial SA, has been criticized by
>>>>politicians, airlines and business leaders for the standards of services
>>>>and facilities at Heathrow, which handles 67 million passengers a year
>>>>in buildings meant for 45 million.
>>>>
>>>>The airport's southern runway was later reopened for take- offs only,
>>>>with the northern runway operating for arriving aircraft. As of 5:30
>>>>p.m., 222 out of 1,300 flights had been canceled, with 24 switched to
>>>>other airports.
>>>>
>>>>Poor weather may have been a factor in the incident, which didn't appear
>>>>to be a premeditated emergency landing, said Robert Cullemore, a
>>>>consultant with Aviation Economics in London.
>>>>
>>>>Bird Strike
>>>>
>>>>Other aviation experts said the plane's engines may have sucked in a
>>>>flock of Canada geese, causing power to fail. The geese are known to
>>>>frequent the many reservoirs around Heathrow. The British Broadcasting
>>>>Corp. cited an airport worker it didn't identify as saying the plane had
>>>>lost power on its approach.
>>>>
>>>>``From all sources, it would seem that something must have happened in
>>>>the minutes or seconds prior to touching down,'' Cullemore said.
>>>>``Windshear, a sudden burst of wind, is one possible culprit, as is the
>>>>possibility that the aircraft lost power to its crucial functions.''
>>>>
>>>>BMI, the second-biggest operator at Heathrow, is flying ``as
>>>>near-a-normal schedule as possible'' following the incident, it said in
>>>>a statement today. Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd. said all of its services
>>>>were proceeding as planned.
>>>>
>>>>`Good Spirits'
>>>>
>>>>Passengers from the British Airways flight were taken to an employee
>>>>lounge to be cared for and were ``generally in good spirits'' CEO Walsh
>>>>said. The carrier will most likely have to write off the damaged
>>>>aircraft and may consequently face operational difficulties, Cullemore
>>>>of Aviation Economics said.
>>>>
>>>>``BA's safety record is exemplary and the rapid evacuation of the
>>>>passengers without loss of life is a tribute to their safety
>>>>commitment,'' he said.
>>>>
>>>>Prime Minister Brown, leading a U.K. trade delegation of 30 executives
>>>>to China and India, took off almost an hour late on a British Airways
>>>>Boeing 747. Also on the aircraft was billionaire Richard Branson, who
>>>>controls Virgin Atlantic.
>>>>
>>>>
>>

Phyl's[_2_]
January 20th 08, 09:06 PM
J.F. a ιcrit :
> Jan. 17 (Bloomberg) -- A British Airways Plc jumbo jet arriving from China
> crashed on landing at London's Heathrow airport, injuring 19 people and
> forcing the cancellation of more than 200 flights.
>
> Flight BA038 from Beijing, a Boeing Co. 777 carrying 152 passengers and
> crew, touched down at 12:42 p.m. local time today, airport owner BAA Ltd.
> said in a statement. The cause of the accident is under investigation.
>
> Television pictures showed the 777 at the edge of the runway apron with the
> grass behind it torn up for several hundred yards where the aircraft had
> scraped along. Escape chutes were deployed and fire trucks sprayed the plane
> with foam. One wing and much of the landing gear appeared damaged.
>
> ``It would be inappropriate for me to speculate as to the likely cause of
> this incident,'' British Airways Chief Executive Officer Willie Walsh said
> in a statement. ``We are very proud of the way our crew safely evacuated all
> 136 passengers on board with only minor injuries.''
>
> The Associated Press said hospitals reported receiving 19 people with crash
> injuries.
>
> Heathrow's southern runway was closed for almost two hours after the
> accident, BAA said. U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown's plane was among
> departures that were delayed, with the pilot informing those aboard that a
> ``significant incident'' had occurred at the airport, Europe's busiest.
>
> `Out of Our Window'
>
> ``We saw it out of our window,'' said Peter Morris, chief economist at
> Ascend Worldwide, an aviation data provider and consulting company with
> offices just outside the Heathrow airfield. ``There's no official report but
> it appears that the aircraft undershot the runway -- it landed too soon.''
>
> The plane suddenly lost power as it approached the runway, CNN quoted the
> pilot as saying.
>
> Today's event appears to be the first major incident involving a Boeing 777,
> Morris said. Like most planes landing at Heathrow, it approached the airport
> over the heavily populated suburbs of west London, western Europe's biggest
> city.
>
> The 777-200ER, registration G-YMMM, was built in 2001 and is one of 43 in
> the British Airways fleet. It's powered by two Rolls-Royce Group Plc Trent
> 895 engines and had accumulated 23,476 flying hours as of Dec. 31, 2006,
> according to data on the Web site of the U.K. Civil Aviation Authority.
>
> Maintenance Check
>
> The plane's last maintenance check was in December and it was piloted by an
> experienced captain who has been with British Airways for almost 20 years,
> said the company, whose shares closed up 1.4 percent today at 293.5 pence.
>
> The incident will be investigated by the Air Accidents Investigation Branch
> of the U.K. Department for Transport.
>
> ``All we can say at this point is, we look forward to helping with the
> investigation as we are invited to participate,'' said Jim Proulx, a Boeing
> spokesman in Seattle.
>
> Heathrow is operating at 99 percent of its government- permitted flight
> capacity. The tightly packed take-off and landing schedule means even minor
> glitches at the airport can have a domino effect on its operations.
>
> BAA, owned by Spanish builder Grupo Ferrovial SA, has been criticized by
> politicians, airlines and business leaders for the standards of services and
> facilities at Heathrow, which handles 67 million passengers a year in
> buildings meant for 45 million.
>
> The airport's southern runway was later reopened for take- offs only, with
> the northern runway operating for arriving aircraft. As of 5:30 p.m., 222
> out of 1,300 flights had been canceled, with 24 switched to other airports.
>
> Poor weather may have been a factor in the incident, which didn't appear to
> be a premeditated emergency landing, said Robert Cullemore, a consultant
> with Aviation Economics in London.
>
> Bird Strike
>
> Other aviation experts said the plane's engines may have sucked in a flock
> of Canada geese, causing power to fail. The geese are known to frequent the
> many reservoirs around Heathrow. The British Broadcasting Corp. cited an
> airport worker it didn't identify as saying the plane had lost power on its
> approach.
>
> ``From all sources, it would seem that something must have happened in the
> minutes or seconds prior to touching down,'' Cullemore said. ``Windshear, a
> sudden burst of wind, is one possible culprit, as is the possibility that
> the aircraft lost power to its crucial functions.''
>
> BMI, the second-biggest operator at Heathrow, is flying ``as near-a-normal
> schedule as possible'' following the incident, it said in a statement today.
> Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd. said all of its services were proceeding as
> planned.
>
> `Good Spirits'
>
> Passengers from the British Airways flight were taken to an employee lounge
> to be cared for and were ``generally in good spirits'' CEO Walsh said. The
> carrier will most likely have to write off the damaged aircraft and may
> consequently face operational difficulties, Cullemore of Aviation Economics
> said.
>
> ``BA's safety record is exemplary and the rapid evacuation of the passengers
> without loss of life is a tribute to their safety commitment,'' he said.
>
> Prime Minister Brown, leading a U.K. trade delegation of 30 executives to
> China and India, took off almost an hour late on a British Airways Boeing
> 747. Also on the aircraft was billionaire Richard Branson, who controls
> Virgin Atlantic.
>
>
>
It is not a short landing. It is a banal crash. The plane crashed at
300m of the runway because of an anomaly on the engines.

Phyl's

Al G[_1_]
January 21st 08, 03:59 PM
"Grumpy AuContraire" > wrote in message
...
>
>
> Al G wrote:
>
>> "Grumpy AuContraire" > wrote in message
>> ...
>>
>>>This has all the symptoms of running out of fuel.
>>>
>>>• Both engines fail
>>>• No fire on impact
>>>• Very similar to a B-707 incident a few years ago near JFK
>>>
>>>JT
>>>
>>
>> http://news.bbc.co.uk:80/2/hi/uk_news/england/london/7196962.stm
>>
>> The report noted that: "A significant amount of fuel leaked from the
>> aircraft but there was no fire."
>>
>>
>>
>> Al G
>>
>>
>
>
> "Significant" is kind of an ambiguous term. Surely, some fuel would
> remain but maybe not enough for a "draw."
>
> OTOH, this is speculation by a casual individual, (me), who has no
> official info but just opines based on seat of pants experience...
>
> JT
>
Indeed. When an aircraft with fully redundant systems loses both
engines,
the first place to look are the things both engines have in common, i.e.
fuel, pilot, and air. If that wasn't the problem, and apparently it wasn't,
you are left with what at first glance appears to be a simultaneous failure
in redundant systems. I'll leave it to the statisticians to describe this
likelihood.

Al G

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