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http://www.startribune.com/stories/1631/4837686.html
Heard a thing like this a few years ago; they thought they were landing in Amsterdam, turned out to be Frankfort, as I recall. Walt |
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After an exhausting session with Victoria's Secret Police, WalterM140
confessed the following: Heard a thing like this a few years ago; they thought they were landing in Amsterdam, turned out to be Frankfort, as I recall. Kinda...sorta. DC-10 enroute to Frankfurt, ATC over the UK started them down early...landed in Brussels (same ILS freq as Frankfurt and similar runway alignment). New Captain (WRT to international flying) on his first flight after IOE with a piece of **** First Officer (uniformly hated). CA kept saying, "this doesn't look right, this is too early..." and the FO kept saying "No, this is right...that's the airport." The SO was kinda tumbleweed. CA knew prior to touchdown they were not in Frankfurt (but not sure where he was), but landed anyway, admitted his mistake to the passengers immediately after landing. CA retired in short order...FO finally got fired after years of second chances...SO retrained. |
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I can remember as an ole nav catching the pilots dialing in the wrong ILS or
VOR. It was fun scoring a gotcha! But they did listen over water. ole nav "Robey Price" wrote in message ... After an exhausting session with Victoria's Secret Police, WalterM140 confessed the following: Heard a thing like this a few years ago; they thought they were landing in Amsterdam, turned out to be Frankfort, as I recall. Kinda...sorta. DC-10 enroute to Frankfurt, ATC over the UK started them down early...landed in Brussels (same ILS freq as Frankfurt and similar runway alignment). New Captain (WRT to international flying) on his first flight after IOE with a piece of **** First Officer (uniformly hated). CA kept saying, "this doesn't look right, this is too early..." and the FO kept saying "No, this is right...that's the airport." The SO was kinda tumbleweed. CA knew prior to touchdown they were not in Frankfurt (but not sure where he was), but landed anyway, admitted his mistake to the passengers immediately after landing. CA retired in short order...FO finally got fired after years of second chances...SO retrained. |
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On Sun, 20 Jun 2004 21:07:35 GMT, Robey Price
wrote: After an exhausting session with Victoria's Secret Police, WalterM140 confessed the following: Heard a thing like this a few years ago; they thought they were landing in Amsterdam, turned out to be Frankfort, as I recall. Kinda...sorta. DC-10 enroute to Frankfurt, ATC over the UK started them down early...landed in Brussels (same ILS freq as Frankfurt and similar runway alignment). New Captain (WRT to international flying) on his first flight after IOE with a piece of **** First Officer (uniformly hated). CA kept saying, "this doesn't look right, this is too early..." and the FO kept saying "No, this is right...that's the airport." The SO was kinda tumbleweed. CA knew prior to touchdown they were not in Frankfurt (but not sure where he was), but landed anyway, admitted his mistake to the passengers immediately after landing. CA retired in short order...FO finally got fired after years of second chances...SO retrained. Gotta say that reflects a total breakdown in situational awareness. No navaids in use, no crew coordination, no apparent communication, no listening to the controller saying "Slowbird 452, this is Brussels Approach...." Calling them "kinda tumbleweed" is an understatement. All that being said, however, there are a lot of places in the world in which pairs of airports are nearby and even have the same runway alignment. It's usually a major part of squadron in-briefing to point them out. Pairs that I recall include Bitburg/Spangdahlem, Torrejon/Barajas, and Incirlik/Adana. The Spanish pair and the Turkish pair all were 05/23 runways. And, all within ten miles of each other. (Bit/Spang are 4.3 miles apart IIRC.) "Caveat aviator" Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN #1-58834-103-8 |
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After an exhausting session with Victoria's Secret Police, Ed Rasimus
confessed the following: Gotta say that reflects a total breakdown in situational awareness. That pretty much sums up the FAA and NWA's conclusion. Calling them "kinda tumbleweed" is an understatement. Hey I was being nice calling the SO tumbleweed...she was totally out of the loop. The FO was very assertive, this guy had been demoted to FO because of a bunch of **** he pulled as a CA. Things like adding "Lifeguard" to the callsign going to LAS because a passenger (during boarding) mentioned his wife was going into labor in LAS. The somewhat humourous aspect of the Brussels event...the moving map display in the cabin showed their location to the passengers. So they knew they were in Brussels even if the crew didn't until after landing. This current episode at Rapid City/Ellsworth has me stumped. I had assumed this was a DC-9 incident at first blush. The 757 software has the ability to display all airports with at least a 5000' runway. I'd imagine the A-320 can as well, so unless they had a "map shift" due to a faulty ADIRU (think INS) I don't know how they missed the airport with the magic ****. I'm guessing that the CEO of NWA will want these two guys fired...he wanted guys fired for leaving engines running at the gate (there more to it than meets the eye, sorta). Robey |
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In article , WalterM140
wrote: http://www.startribune.com/stories/1631/4837686.html Heard a thing like this a few years ago; they thought they were landing in Amsterdam, turned out to be Frankfort, as I recall. They did this about a decade ago with one of the smaller planes, either a 727 or DC-9. The crew landed at the Wausau, Wisconsin, airport. Only problem was that the passenger terminal was at the Central Wisconsin Airport about 10 miles to the south. The runway was too short to fly the plane out as-is, so they had to bring in a new crew, strip down everything that could be removed, drain out almost all the fuel, and then do a max performance take- off. -john- -- ================================================== ================== John A. Weeks III 952-432-2708 Newave Communications http://www.johnweeks.com ================================================== ================== |
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On Sun, 20 Jun 2004 23:45:41 GMT, Robey Price
wrote: Hey I was being nice calling the SO tumbleweed...she was totally out of the loop. Say no more, lest we stir the dark forces of political correctness. The somewhat humourous aspect of the Brussels event...the moving map display in the cabin showed their location to the passengers. So they knew they were in Brussels even if the crew didn't until after landing. This current episode at Rapid City/Ellsworth has me stumped. I had assumed this was a DC-9 incident at first blush. The 757 software has the ability to display all airports with at least a 5000' runway. I'd imagine the A-320 can as well, so unless they had a "map shift" due to a faulty ADIRU (think INS) I don't know how they missed the airport with the magic ****. Was about four years ago that a 727 headed for Hayden CO (serves the Steamboat Springs ski area) landed about 12 miles long at Craig CO. Hayden Regional is atop a mesa with long, wide, ILS-served runway and little or no development surrounding. Craig Muni is almost in town, surrounded by trees and the Yampa River--short, narrow and ringed with small airplanes. Got it stopped in time, but had to shut down and bus the PAX to their destination. Special crew came in, along with fuel bowsers to download fuel to minimum weight. Flew it out over to Hayden. Big event for the locals to see the big jet come to town. Of course, the 727 isn't known for a lot of whiz-bang technology like moving map displays. Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN #1-58834-103-8 |
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On Sun, 20 Jun 2004 16:26:56 -0600, Ed Rasimus
wrote: [stuff snipped] All that being said, however, there are a lot of places in the world in which pairs of airports are nearby and even have the same runway alignment. It's usually a major part of squadron in-briefing to point them out. Pairs that I recall include Bitburg/Spangdahlem, Torrejon/Barajas, and Incirlik/Adana. The Spanish pair and the Turkish pair all were 05/23 runways. And, all within ten miles of each other. (Bit/Spang are 4.3 miles apart IIRC.) "Caveat aviator" Fort Hood has two airfields like this which have ensnared unwary (mostly USAF) aviators. Hood AAF and Robert Gray AAF have runways with the same headings. The runways are something like 7 miles apart. Gray has 11,000+ feet (it was a SAC base at one time) and Hood has a much shorter runway used mostly by helicopters. In two years that I worked ATC at Hood I saw several USAF aircraft (mostly C-130s) attempt to land there when they thought they were landing at Robert Gray. This usually happened more in the evening or at night. This was common enough that when USAF aircraft called final to Robert Gray tower but were nowhere in sight the Robert Gray tower guys would automatically call Hood tower on the hotline to look to see if they saw a USAF fixed-wing on final. The aircraft would get a red light and a warning on the guard push. I remember a C-130 one day almost touching down on the runway when he figured out he was in the wrong place. Evidently he didn't see the red light from the tower and wasn't monitoring the guard freqs. The interesting part was that Hood AAF had an always hot range just north of it, which wasn't a problem with helicopter traffic which had set departure/arrival corridors, but USAF fixed-wings had to make a hasty right turn at low altitude to avoid getting shot down. I've seen more than one C-130 make a near 90-degree bank at low altitude trying to beat feet out of there. Hood AAF tower commo to departing USAF (red-faced) fixed-winged aviators: "Thanks for the low approach". John Hairell ) |
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Sort of like Bitburg and Spangdhalem back in the day.
Only 8 kilometers apart, the traffic pattern at Spang was left hand break and at Bitburg was right hand break, in both cases to avoid the base housing areas and to de-conflict extended downwinds. Every once in a while (on those USAFE VFR days) an F-15 would show up on initial at Spang, break right followed by an immediate left turn to Bitburg, after the pilot had looked down and saw he was directly over the housing area, (that wasn't supposed to be there). -- Les Matheson F-4C(WW)/D/E/G(WW), AC-130A, MC-130E WSO/EWO (ret) "John Hairell" wrote in message ... On Sun, 20 Jun 2004 16:26:56 -0600, Ed Rasimus wrote: [stuff snipped] All that being said, however, there are a lot of places in the world in which pairs of airports are nearby and even have the same runway alignment. It's usually a major part of squadron in-briefing to point them out. Pairs that I recall include Bitburg/Spangdahlem, Torrejon/Barajas, and Incirlik/Adana. The Spanish pair and the Turkish pair all were 05/23 runways. And, all within ten miles of each other. (Bit/Spang are 4.3 miles apart IIRC.) "Caveat aviator" Fort Hood has two airfields like this which have ensnared unwary (mostly USAF) aviators. Hood AAF and Robert Gray AAF have runways with the same headings. The runways are something like 7 miles apart. Gray has 11,000+ feet (it was a SAC base at one time) and Hood has a much shorter runway used mostly by helicopters. In two years that I worked ATC at Hood I saw several USAF aircraft (mostly C-130s) attempt to land there when they thought they were landing at Robert Gray. This usually happened more in the evening or at night. This was common enough that when USAF aircraft called final to Robert Gray tower but were nowhere in sight the Robert Gray tower guys would automatically call Hood tower on the hotline to look to see if they saw a USAF fixed-wing on final. The aircraft would get a red light and a warning on the guard push. I remember a C-130 one day almost touching down on the runway when he figured out he was in the wrong place. Evidently he didn't see the red light from the tower and wasn't monitoring the guard freqs. The interesting part was that Hood AAF had an always hot range just north of it, which wasn't a problem with helicopter traffic which had set departure/arrival corridors, but USAF fixed-wings had to make a hasty right turn at low altitude to avoid getting shot down. I've seen more than one C-130 make a near 90-degree bank at low altitude trying to beat feet out of there. Hood AAF tower commo to departing USAF (red-faced) fixed-winged aviators: "Thanks for the low approach". John Hairell ) --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.707 / Virus Database: 463 - Release Date: 6/15/2004 |
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