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#61
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On 2007-05-06 05:11:53 -0700, "Dudley Henriques" said:
"Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message .130... "Dudley Henriques" wrote in : "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message . 130... "Dudley Henriques" wrote in : wrote in message ps.com... On May 5, 5:10 pm, Mxsmanic wrote: Aircraft normally wait for thunderstorms to pass before taking off. No aircraft is safe in a thunderstorm. So most likely the Kenya Airways flight didn't follow procedure or receive clearance? Hard to say not knowing the exact situation, but in my opinion, only a pilot with a death wish accepts a takeoff clearance in the middle of a thunderstorm. It doesn't neceesarily follow that he took off in the middle of a CB... I agree. To do that would have been against all my sense of logic anyway. Stranger things have happened, and pilots do indeed from time to time push weather for one reason or another but I'd hate to second guess this poor guy at this point. It's been my experience that what appears almost certain immediately after these things seldom carries through the investigation. Precisely. I've flown in that part of the world quite a lot and the CBs have to be seen to be believed. I've been at 310 and had the tops further away than the bottoms as often as not. The size of them is also astonishing and seeing into a large, tight group of cells is next to impossible, even with the best radar. It's hard work but it has to be done or you're on the ground for the best part of six months there. Bertie Reminds me of an old story I heard once that was going around UAL for awhile; A major airline hired a new first officer right out of post graduate school and stuck him in the right seat of a 737 with a crusty old Captain who came up through the ranks after dropping out of high school. On their first flight together, the Captain told the first officer to just sit back and watch and do absolutely nothing. The Captain took off, climbed to FL 360 as filed and leveled off. He set the autopilot and inertial nav for waypoints and told the first officer that he was going to take a nap. The first officer was to touch nothing.......do nothing! Under NO circumstances, was he to disturb the Captain. The Captain went to sleep. The first officer sat there watching the panel. After a while he noticed on the weather radar a HUGE storm ahead directly in the path of the airplane. He watched with interest and gathering alarm as the storm got closer and closer. At about twenty miles, the storm looked absolutely frightening; the biggest thing he had ever seen in his life. He just stared at it on the screen while he pondered the Captain's request not to be disturbed for any reason. Finally, fearing that if a course correction wasn't made immediately, the storm would tear the airplane apart, he decided he couldn't wait any longer to wake the Captain. "Captain.......Captain" he said, "wake up sir...look at this!! It's my sincere recommendation sir, that we circumnavigate that storm immediately!!!!!!!!!!!" The Captain awoke in a start and took one look at the radar screen; "Circumnavigate my ass!!!!!!. We're goin AROUND that son-of-a-bitch!!!!!" Dudley Henriques I am certain that I have flown with that guy. -- Waddling Eagle World Famous Flight Instructor |
#62
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![]() "C J Campbell" wrote in message news:2007050621473638165-christophercampbell@hotmailcom... On 2007-05-06 05:11:53 -0700, "Dudley Henriques" said: "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message .130... "Dudley Henriques" wrote in : "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message . 130... "Dudley Henriques" wrote in : wrote in message ps.com... On May 5, 5:10 pm, Mxsmanic wrote: Aircraft normally wait for thunderstorms to pass before taking off. No aircraft is safe in a thunderstorm. So most likely the Kenya Airways flight didn't follow procedure or receive clearance? Hard to say not knowing the exact situation, but in my opinion, only a pilot with a death wish accepts a takeoff clearance in the middle of a thunderstorm. It doesn't neceesarily follow that he took off in the middle of a CB... I agree. To do that would have been against all my sense of logic anyway. Stranger things have happened, and pilots do indeed from time to time push weather for one reason or another but I'd hate to second guess this poor guy at this point. It's been my experience that what appears almost certain immediately after these things seldom carries through the investigation. Precisely. I've flown in that part of the world quite a lot and the CBs have to be seen to be believed. I've been at 310 and had the tops further away than the bottoms as often as not. The size of them is also astonishing and seeing into a large, tight group of cells is next to impossible, even with the best radar. It's hard work but it has to be done or you're on the ground for the best part of six months there. Bertie Reminds me of an old story I heard once that was going around UAL for awhile; A major airline hired a new first officer right out of post graduate school and stuck him in the right seat of a 737 with a crusty old Captain who came up through the ranks after dropping out of high school. On their first flight together, the Captain told the first officer to just sit back and watch and do absolutely nothing. The Captain took off, climbed to FL 360 as filed and leveled off. He set the autopilot and inertial nav for waypoints and told the first officer that he was going to take a nap. The first officer was to touch nothing.......do nothing! Under NO circumstances, was he to disturb the Captain. The Captain went to sleep. The first officer sat there watching the panel. After a while he noticed on the weather radar a HUGE storm ahead directly in the path of the airplane. He watched with interest and gathering alarm as the storm got closer and closer. At about twenty miles, the storm looked absolutely frightening; the biggest thing he had ever seen in his life. He just stared at it on the screen while he pondered the Captain's request not to be disturbed for any reason. Finally, fearing that if a course correction wasn't made immediately, the storm would tear the airplane apart, he decided he couldn't wait any longer to wake the Captain. "Captain.......Captain" he said, "wake up sir...look at this!! It's my sincere recommendation sir, that we circumnavigate that storm immediately!!!!!!!!!!!" The Captain awoke in a start and took one look at the radar screen; "Circumnavigate my ass!!!!!!. We're goin AROUND that son-of-a-bitch!!!!!" Dudley Henriques I am certain that I have flown with that guy. -- Waddling Eagle World Famous Flight Instructor I think all of us might have flown with him at least once at one time or another :-)) Dudley Henriques |
#63
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Mxsmanic wrote in
: Maxwell writes: First of all the statement is not completley correct. Which part of the statement is incorrect, and why is the incorrect portion (if any) important if the correct portion is not? Send me $600 and I'll tell you you terrorist Wannabe. Bertie |
#64
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![]() "Mxsmanic" wrote in message ... Maxwell writes: First of all the statement is not completley correct. Which part of the statement is incorrect, and why is the incorrect portion (if any) important if the correct portion is not? Say what? Do you even understand that question? Besides, I don't train trolls. |
#65
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![]() "C J Campbell" wrote in message news:2007050614564343658-christophercampbell@hotmailcom... On 2007-05-05 13:48:33 -0700, said: http://www.thenewstribune.com/886/story/55281.html I would not depart in a thunderstorm no matter what I was flying. How many flights have you refused to board because of the weather? -- William Black I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Barbeques on fire by the chalets past the castle headland I watched the gift shops glitter in the darkness off the Newborough gate All these moments will be lost in time, like icecream on the beach Time for tea. |
#66
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William Black wrote:
I would not depart in a thunderstorm no matter what I was flying. How many flights have you refused to board because of the weather? I once dumped an Apache in Fayetteville, NC because of collecting a pile of ice on the approach in. I called my boss, told him his Apache could be found in Fayetteville, and that I would be boarding a USAir flight shortly back to Charlotte. It's one thing to pick up ice on the approach; I was headed downhill anyway. It's a very different situation trying to climb through a freezing overcast and I wasn't going to do it. But I did climb on the USAir jet without hesitation. I figured it had deicing/anti-icing. It must have had something, because we made the flight home without any trouble. As an aside, I have launched many times immediately after a cell moved off the field, as long as it didn't move in the direction I intended to go. But I have never launched with one overhead. I don't know anybody who would. -- Mortimer Schnerd, RN mschnerdatcarolina.rr.com |
#67
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Steve Foley wrote in message ...
wrote in message oups.com... http://www.thenewstribune.com/886/story/55281.html Reading the story says "there were thunderstorms", and it says they took off "during a storm". It doesn't say they took off during a thunderstorm. It crashed 90 miles from the airport. That doesn't sound like a problem during takeoff to me. That initial claim was apperently due to some mixed up satellite signal. The plane actually crashed only 12 miles away. Engine failures or lightning are certainly possibilities. And I'm surprised that a terrorist bomb hasn't been mentioned...so far, since witnesses claimed hearing an explosion. - Rick |
#68
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Mxsmanic wrote:
Mike Hunt writes: Especially if you are a lawyer as well as an aviator and you have night vision problems. Hmm ... do you have someone specific in mind? Not really. No Harm, no foul. |
#69
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Mxsmanic wrote:
Aircraft normally wait for thunderstorms to pass before taking off. No aircraft is safe in a thunderstorm. Yep. Our plane which was bound for Melbourne had to divert to sydney, because there were t-storms in Melbourne. Very bloody annoying as it didn't have enough petrol and so had to refuel (while we muttered on the plane) in Sydney and then continue on to Melbourne. -- Don't try to email me; I'm using the spammer du jour's email addy |
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