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#1
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http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/10/21/geo...ion/index.html
Back to incursions. -- Regards, Ross C-172F 180HP Sold ![]() KSWI |
#2
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![]() "Ross" wrote in message ... http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/10/21/geo...ion/index.html Back to incursions. -- Regards, Ross C-172F 180HP Sold ![]() KSWI Wow, thats a major screw up! |
#3
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"Ross" wrote in message
... http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/10/21/geo...ion/index.html Back to incursions. -- Regards, Ross C-172F 180HP Sold ![]() KSWI Other than the runway and taxiway lights being in use, the article did not apear to mention the time of day, place of origin, or the number of hours the crew had been or duty. Y'all don't suppose that crew fatigue could have played a part? Peter |
#4
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On Oct 21, 7:40*pm, "Peter Dohm" wrote:
"Ross" wrote in message ... http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/10/21/geo...ion/index.html Back to incursions. -- Regards, Ross C-172F 180HP Sold ![]() KSWI Other than the runway and taxiway lights being in use, the article did not apear to mention the time of day, place of origin, or the number of hours the crew had been or duty. Y'all don't suppose that crew fatigue could have played a part? Peter Peter, it landed at 6:05 AM, it would have been quite dark, and the flight was I think from Reo. I guess if there was a cross wind of, say, 50 knots, if they were flying an ILS the nose could have been pointing at the taxiway when they broke out (that is intended to be funny -- this event was not). Years ago I was flying an approach into Seattle's airport (Seatac?), and not very far off the extended centerline of the runway I was to use was another airport, with a runway aligned almost the same way. I wonder how often visitors land at the wrong airport? |
#5
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On Oct 21, 10:46*pm, a wrote:
On Oct 21, 7:40*pm, "Peter Dohm" wrote: "Ross" wrote in message ... http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/10/21/geo...ion/index.html Back to incursions. -- Regards, Ross C-172F 180HP Sold ![]() KSWI Other than the runway and taxiway lights being in use, the article did not apear to mention the time of day, place of origin, or the number of hours the crew had been or duty. Y'all don't suppose that crew fatigue could have played a part? Peter Peter, it landed at 6:05 AM, it would have been quite dark, and the flight was I think from Reo. I guess if there was a cross wind of, say, 50 knots, if they were flying an ILS the nose could have been pointing at the taxiway when they broke out (that is intended to be funny -- this event was not). Years ago I was flying an approach into Seattle's airport (Seatac?), and not very far off the extended centerline of the runway I was to use was another airport, with a runway aligned almost the same way. I wonder how often visitors land at the wrong airport?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I have suffered momentary confusion at an airport that was using a closed runway as a taxiway. |
#6
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Stubby wrote:
On Oct 21, 10:46 pm, a wrote: On Oct 21, 7:40 pm, "Peter Dohm" wrote: "Ross" wrote in message ... http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/10/21/geo...ion/index.html Back to incursions. -- Regards, Ross C-172F 180HP Sold ![]() KSWI Other than the runway and taxiway lights being in use, the article did not apear to mention the time of day, place of origin, or the number of hours the crew had been or duty. Y'all don't suppose that crew fatigue could have played a part? Peter Peter, it landed at 6:05 AM, it would have been quite dark, and the flight was I think from Reo. I guess if there was a cross wind of, say, 50 knots, if they were flying an ILS the nose could have been pointing at the taxiway when they broke out (that is intended to be funny -- this event was not). Years ago I was flying an approach into Seattle's airport (Seatac?), and not very far off the extended centerline of the runway I was to use was another airport, with a runway aligned almost the same way. I wonder how often visitors land at the wrong airport?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I have suffered momentary confusion at an airport that was using a closed runway as a taxiway. Long ago there use to be two airports in Kansas City area. One on the Kansas side (Fairfax) and the other on the MO side which was the original KC main airport. A river separated the two airports. There was a hot line between the towers because the pilot would be talking to one tower and landing at the other airport. Fairfax is now gone. -- Regards, Ross C-172F 180HP Sold ![]() KSWI |
#7
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"a" wrote in message
... On Oct 21, 7:40 pm, "Peter Dohm" wrote: "Ross" wrote in message ... http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/10/21/geo...ion/index.html Back to incursions. -- Regards, Ross C-172F 180HP Sold ![]() KSWI Other than the runway and taxiway lights being in use, the article did not apear to mention the time of day, place of origin, or the number of hours the crew had been or duty. Y'all don't suppose that crew fatigue could have played a part? Peter Peter, it landed at 6:05 AM, it would have been quite dark, and the flight was I think from Reo. I guess if there was a cross wind of, say, 50 knots, if they were flying an ILS the nose could have been pointing at the taxiway when they broke out (that is intended to be funny -- this event was not). Years ago I was flying an approach into Seattle's airport (Seatac?), and not very far off the extended centerline of the runway I was to use was another airport, with a runway aligned almost the same way. I wonder how often visitors land at the wrong airport? I have lined up on a taxiway by mistake, in the middle of the afternoon and I was well rested. That was as a student pilot, and back before every incident became a big deal. In any case, that was a common enough occurrance in those days on Runway 18 at Tampa and the controller caught the error before I could even roll out with the wrong alignment. However, I have also seen some of the faulty reasoning that can occur during the hours of darkness, especially when it is not your normal waking hours, and have been a participant a few times--and not only in aviation. In this particular case, the crew almost certainly would have seen what was wrong, and acted appropriately, if there had been any activity in progress on the taxiway--but they also would have been far less likely to fall into a similar sequence of errors during the beginning of the night-time low traffic period. I have read that the highest incidence of really poor reasoning and decision making occurs between the hours of approximately 1:00 am and 6:00 am, with the time periods just before and after being not quite as attrocious. Just as a couple of examples, the nuclear power plant accidents at Three Mile Island and also at Chernobyl both occurred during the pre-dawn time periods which would have been the second half of a mornal sleeping period. So my point is that, if we really want to be serious about safety and good decision making; sanctioning the above flight crew is probably a poor choice. We might do a lot better to simply accept our failings as humans, which are unlikely to change meaningfully, and take a hard look at which activities really MUST be accomplished during those hours, how much such activity is truly necessary, and also the possibility that staffing levels should be greater in order to assure a greater margin of safety in the high risk time periods. IMHO, we have been going in exactly the wrong direction and, since the subject of this thread was an airline transport incident, I will use them as my example. Just a few decades ago, the crew of a transport aircraft on an international flight would have included a Navigator and a Flight Engineer in addition to the Pilor and Copilot. That provided a lot more backup, and a lot more opportunity to notice something amiss and call attention to it. In addition, I have every reason to suppose that the staffing level in the tower is also reduced during non peak hours. Peter |
#8
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Ross wrote:
Stubby wrote: On Oct 21, 10:46 pm, a wrote: On Oct 21, 7:40 pm, "Peter Dohm" wrote: "Ross" wrote in message ... http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/10/21/geo...ion/index.html Back to incursions. -- Regards, Ross C-172F 180HP Sold ![]() KSWI Other than the runway and taxiway lights being in use, the article did not apear to mention the time of day, place of origin, or the number of hours the crew had been or duty. Y'all don't suppose that crew fatigue could have played a part? Peter Peter, it landed at 6:05 AM, it would have been quite dark, and the flight was I think from Reo. I guess if there was a cross wind of, say, 50 knots, if they were flying an ILS the nose could have been pointing at the taxiway when they broke out (that is intended to be funny -- this event was not). Years ago I was flying an approach into Seattle's airport (Seatac?), and not very far off the extended centerline of the runway I was to use was another airport, with a runway aligned almost the same way. I wonder how often visitors land at the wrong airport?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I have suffered momentary confusion at an airport that was using a closed runway as a taxiway. Long ago there use to be two airports in Kansas City area. One on the Kansas side (Fairfax) and the other on the MO side which was the original KC main airport. A river separated the two airports. There was a hot line between the towers because the pilot would be talking to one tower and landing at the other airport. Fairfax is now gone. Got my PPL there in '67. Great airport to learn right and left patterns since you always had to keep west of Fairfax to avoid KMKC. It was turned into a GM assembly plant over thirty years ago so hard telling what it is today. I left KC 20 years ago. |
#9
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ManhattanMan wrote:
Ross wrote: Stubby wrote: On Oct 21, 10:46 pm, a wrote: On Oct 21, 7:40 pm, "Peter Dohm" wrote: /snip/ to one tower and landing at the other airport. Fairfax is now gone. Got my PPL there in '67. Great airport to learn right and left patterns since you always had to keep west of Fairfax to avoid KMKC. It was turned into a GM assembly plant over thirty years ago so hard telling what it is today. I left KC 20 years ago. I got my PPL at Hillside Airport far south of KCMO. 1800' Ma and Pa operation. C-150 was $8.00/hr wet. This was 1970. Got my CPL at, then, Johnson County Airport though the Johnson county community college. Paid $75 for tuition and $14.00/hr wet for C-172 or Cherokee 140s. Instructors were free as they were paid by the college. Did a lot of flying out of Stateline Airport at 150 highway and Stateline. I left in 1974. And, I thought flying was expensive then. Kansas City International was being built. I remember doing T&Gs up there and was in the pattern with a TWA L-1011 doing the same thing. -- Regards, Ross C-172F 180HP Sold ![]() KSWI |
#10
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![]() "Ross" wrote in message ... ManhattanMan wrote: Ross wrote: Stubby wrote: On Oct 21, 10:46 pm, a wrote: On Oct 21, 7:40 pm, "Peter Dohm" wrote: /snip/ to one tower and landing at the other airport. Fairfax is now gone. Got my PPL there in '67. Great airport to learn right and left patterns since you always had to keep west of Fairfax to avoid KMKC. It was turned into a GM assembly plant over thirty years ago so hard telling what it is today. I left KC 20 years ago. I got my PPL at Hillside Airport far south of KCMO. 1800' Ma and Pa operation. C-150 was $8.00/hr wet. This was 1970. Got my CPL at, then, Johnson County Airport though the Johnson county community college. Paid $75 for tuition and $14.00/hr wet for C-172 or Cherokee 140s. Instructors were free as they were paid by the college. I like those prices! |
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