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#1
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![]() The FAA says runways without a 1000-ft overrun area are unsafe. The solution? Extend the overrun by shortening the runway. That sounds fishy to me. What am I missing here? Reference: http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald...l/15925782.htm |
#2
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"Andrew Sarangan" wrote in message
oups.com... The FAA says runways without a 1000-ft overrun area are unsafe. The solution? Extend the overrun by shortening the runway. That sounds fishy to me. What am I missing here? Reference: http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald...l/15925782.htm If the official length of the runway establishes whether a given airliner can land there, then shortening the official length (and correspondingly extending the designated runoff area) can indeed extend the worst-case safety margin. --Gary |
#3
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In article .com,
"Andrew Sarangan" wrote: The FAA says runways without a 1000-ft overrun area are unsafe. The solution? Extend the overrun by shortening the runway. That sounds fishy to me. What am I missing here? Reference: http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald...l/15925782.htm They are not going to physically shorten the pavement. The article says, "shortening the length of usable runway". This (presumably) means declaring some of the runway "unusable" by repainting runway markings, changing lighting and signage, etc. So, right now you've got (say) 9000 feet of pavement and performance is calculated based on all 9000 feet. If you declare the last 500 feet to be "unusable", everybody now has to do their performance calculations based on the runway being 8500 feet long. Which means aircraft that require between 8500 and 9000 feet must either go elsewhere or somehow improve their performance (typically by operating at lower gross weights, which means fewer people, less freight, and/or less fuel). |
#4
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"Andrew Sarangan" wrote:
The FAA says runways without a 1000-ft overrun area are unsafe. The solution? Extend the overrun by shortening the runway. That sounds fishy to me. What am I missing here? Reference: http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald...l/15925782.htm What rampant stupidity. If a pilot cannot land/take off on the useable runway then create a requirement that you must be able to safely operate off the published runway length minus whatever safety margin they demand. No painting is required...no signage changes needed. Not every runway in the USA has to accommodate the largest aircraft on the worst day. This also means that by default all runways are within standards. If we did not have as many idiotic pilots like Lidle and the KLEX pilots, things would be much better. Or idiotic "rules" people. Ron Lee |
#5
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![]() "Andrew Sarangan" wrote in message oups.com... The FAA says runways without a 1000-ft overrun area are unsafe. The solution? Extend the overrun by shortening the runway. That sounds fishy to me. What am I missing here? Probably nothing Andy. Sounds about right for the average FAA solution :-) Dudley Henriques |
#6
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The
solution? Extend the overrun by shortening the runway. That sounds fishy to me. What am I missing here? When you (officially) shorten the runway, you (legally) limit the aircraft that can use it. Jose -- "Never trust anything that can think for itself, if you can't see where it keeps its brain." (chapter 10 of book 3 - Harry Potter). for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#7
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In article .com,
"Andrew Sarangan" wrote: The FAA says runways without a 1000-ft overrun area are unsafe. The solution? Extend the overrun by shortening the runway. That sounds fishy to me. What am I missing here? don't know. But Massport did the same stupid thing at Logan many years ago. (even dumber because the moved the thresholds AFTER building highspeed taxi turnoffs.) -- Bob Noel Looking for a sig the lawyers will hate |
#8
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In article ,
"Dudley Henriques" wrote: "Andrew Sarangan" wrote in message oups.com... The FAA says runways without a 1000-ft overrun area are unsafe. The solution? Extend the overrun by shortening the runway. That sounds fishy to me. What am I missing here? Probably nothing Andy. Sounds about right for the average FAA solution :-) Dudley Henriques to pick a nit, the FAA isn't responsible for determining a runway length. That "honor" is left to the airport. -- Bob Noel Looking for a sig the lawyers will hate |
#9
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![]() "Bob Noel" wrote in message ... In article , "Dudley Henriques" wrote: "Andrew Sarangan" wrote in message oups.com... The FAA says runways without a 1000-ft overrun area are unsafe. The solution? Extend the overrun by shortening the runway. That sounds fishy to me. What am I missing here? Probably nothing Andy. Sounds about right for the average FAA solution :-) Dudley Henriques to pick a nit, the FAA isn't responsible for determining a runway length. That "honor" is left to the airport. Why do you think I said it sounds about right for the average FAA solution??? :-) DH |
#10
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The FAA says runways without a 1000-ft overrun area are unsafe. The
solution? Extend the overrun by shortening the runway. That sounds fishy to me. What am I missing here? Probably nothing Andy. Sounds about right for the average FAA solution :-) Dudley Henriques to pick a nit, the FAA isn't responsible for determining a runway length. That "honor" is left to the airport. Isn't the "standard/safety issue" coming from the FAA? Ron Lee |
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