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#11
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Stiff upper lip and all that. I'm sure the marine life in the Tampa
area appreciated not getting thousands of pounds of jet-a dumped on them. Mike wrote: Bonehenge wrote: On Sat, 21 Oct 2006 22:02:38 GMT, john smith wrote: Another story where British pilots encounter a situation and decide to fly all the way to the UK before landing!!! My thoughts exactly. My God, they were 15 minutes out of Tampa! What's that make them 7 from Miami or Melbourne? G What I like that 'low-key' description of the event and how obviously accurate it is.. Like starting off describing "packed" British Airways Jet, then mentioning the "175 terrified paddangers"... Let's see not, 175 passangers on a 777 ?? Wow.. that is really packed!! What's that, somewhere around half filled? Yeah, right... |
#12
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Jim Macklin wrote:
BFD and you snipped the copyright info. Plunged a whole 600 feet? My God, that is about like straight and level flight for a poor pilot. You can easily have 600' in a short time in turbulance. |
#13
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Robert Chambers wrote:
Stiff upper lip and all that. I'm sure the marine life in the Tampa area appreciated not getting thousands of pounds of jet-a dumped on them. I don't know about the Brits but few U.S. carriers would dump fuel on a 777 with everything working. They would simply use pilot's emergency authority to make an overweight landing. That is the norm. |
#14
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![]() "JesusLives" wrote in message . .. A packed British Airways jet was just seconds from disaster after plummeting out of the sky in a dramatic near miss over America, it has emerged. Enquirer version snipped.. BA said: "We have filed a report with the US Federal Aviation Authority which is investigating." From ANN: Officials: BA Plane, King Air Had Close Call Near Tampa Mon, 23 Oct '06 When Is A Near Miss, Not? Everyone's OK after a British Airways 777 and a privately-flown Beech King Air got a bit too close in the skies around 50 miles north of Tampa, FL earlier this month. The planes did not collide, and the BA pilot did not report a near-miss to the FAA... but six people were injured when the big Boeing suddenly descended 700 feet to avoid the turboprop twin. The Orlando Sentinel reports on October 10, the British Airways airliner with 175 aboard had just taken off from Tampa to London. As it was climbing to its assigned altitude of 26,000 feet, the Traffic Collision Avoidance System suddenly alerted when the aircraft was at 16,800 feet, said a British Airways spokesman. The TCAS directed the plane to descend, which the pilots did very quickly... so much so that two passengers and four crew members were sent to the ceiling. An FAA spokesman said the King Air was still at least 1,400 feet higher than the 777, and its pilot claimed that he was aware of the location of the British Airways jet. Despite the injures, the British Airways 777 did not officially report the apparent near-miss and its sudden descent, and continued on to England. Several critics told the Associated Press this incident illustrates the problem with the antiquated air traffic control system in this country, but as yet, it is unclear if the near-miss was actually a close-call, or one pilot's overly enthusiastic cooperation with a TCAS alert. In any case... since injuries were minor, and no official report was filed, the FAA will not be investigating. |
#15
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![]() Al G wrote: control system in this country, but as yet, it is unclear if the near-miss was actually a close-call, or one pilot's overly enthusiastic cooperation with a TCAS alert. I thought in most of airlines' operation manual, a TCAS's manuever instruction is a mendatory command that the crew must follow immediately after its issurance. jbskies |
#16
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An FAA spokesman said the King Air was still at least 1,400 feet higher than
the 777, and its pilot claimed that he was aware of the location of the British Airways jet. I've been told by the FAA at safety seminars (pertaining to the NY Bravo) that if a nearby plane climbs or descends more than 500 fpm, it triggers an RA much farther away than a near miss would. Perhaps that's what happened? 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. |
#17
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Where the hell was Jesus when all this was going on?
"JesusLives" wrote in message . .. |
#18
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![]() "Jim Burns" wrote in message ... Where the hell was Jesus when all this was going on? Someone interrupted him about the Mets! -- Matt --------------------- Matthew W. Barrow Site-Fill Homes, LLC. Montrose, CO (MTJ) |
#19
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Al G wrote:
I thought in most of airlines' operation manual, a TCAS's manuever instruction is a mendatory command that the crew must follow immediately after its issurance. This rings a bell with me too. It may have come about as a result of a collision between a Tu154 and a B757 over Germany a few years back. The TCAS said one thing, and the controller said another; it seems that although both pilots obeyed the TCAS in the first instance, the Tu154 pilot changed his mind and obeyed the controller instead. Thus both aircraft descended, and the collision occurred - but it wouldn't have if TCAS had been obeyed in both instances. D. |
#20
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In article ,
"David Cartwright" wrote: Al G wrote: I thought in most of airlines' operation manual, a TCAS's manuever instruction is a mendatory command that the crew must follow immediately after its issurance. This rings a bell with me too. complying with a TCAS Resolution Advisory is indeed mandatory. it may have come about as a result of a collision between a Tu154 and a B757 over Germany a few years back. Nope. This was the case from the beginning of TCAS II. -- Bob Noel Looking for a sig the lawyers will hate |
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