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#41
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I'd bet that Cessna 172's have more landing gear problems than the
A320. Should we ground them too? |
#42
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There are 2,500 A320s in operation
(http://www.airbus.com/en/aircraftfamilies/a320/ ) putting more passengers at risk each day than the 172s carry in a day/week/month. "Robert M. Gary" wrote in message oups.com... I'd bet that Cessna 172's have more landing gear problems than the A320. Should we ground them too? |
#43
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At risk of what? Getting sick on airline food?
This nosegear thing has happened a number of times in the past few years. No one, as far as I know, has had so much as a minor injury as a result. "sfb" wrote in message news:_0Z1f.4045$nz.2795@trnddc03... There are 2,500 A320s in operation (http://www.airbus.com/en/aircraftfamilies/a320/ ) putting more passengers at risk each day than the 172s carry in a day/week/month. |
#44
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passengers at risk each day than the 172s carry in a day/week/month
huh, which pax were at risk? What risk? I"m not following your logic. Are you speaking of the risk of having to eat dinner in SoCal vs. New York? -Robert |
#45
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"Jay Honeck" wrote in message
Why or how this translates into a more lenient attitude toward airline aircraft maintenance is the question. As always, it's probably a "follow the money" thing. There are several routes that a manufacturer can take to correct difficiencies. To my way of thinking, Lycoming was the impetus behind the O-540 ADs. They didn't want the lawsuits that would inevitably be filed against them by week-end single-engine pilots' estates because the engines failed after the pilots neglected an 'optional' service bulletin. So they 'suggested' that the FAA issue an AD, to my way of thinking. The FAA isn't afraid to tick off the French. Witness the emergency ADs after the Roselawn ATR-72 crash. The French DGAC protested loudly that the ADs weren't neccessary, but every US certificated ATR has the big de-ice boots now along with a prohibition against using the autopilot in severe icing conditions. The A-320 is a good product but not perfect. After 20 years there are still some bugs to work, as there are in any complex piece of machinery. In my manual, there are close to 20 operations bulletins. There are service bulletins issued to flightcrews and to maintenance. The nosewheel problem and the lack of tail strike protection ($1.5Million or more per strike not including loss of revenue) perplex me, but then again, the A-320 won't have exploding gas tanks because the electric pump wiring is outside the tank. A canted nosewheel is no more dangerous than a gear that fails to extend. The B-727 has been filmed numerous times landing without one of the gears being extended. I'm not aware of any ADs for that problem. Expanding perceptions, D. |
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