MauleSkinner
Touchdown! Greaser!
No, you’re not.Sorry if i offend anyone
No, you’re not.Sorry if i offend anyone
AC 150/5300-13A Airport Design, Chapter 4 is all about Taxiway Design. There are standards for wingtip separation between parallel taxiways, but obviously not for crossing taxiways. There are also standards of distance between taxiways and runways, but that is more driven by obstacle height clearance to the tip of tail of an aircraft on the taxiway.
So, the CRJ can just stop wherever they want and everyone else has a responsibility to ensure clearances to go around them? Lol, get out of here.
The nose of the CRJ was 80' from the line. I put 60% of the fault on the CRJ.
They were about 40 feet from the hold line. Regardless it’s irrelevant. It could have been a 757 and they would have hit even with their nose on the line. There is no clearance guaranteed in this situation. It’s up to the A350 to not hit stopped traffic.So by that logic, had the CRJ not turned onto Taxiway H and instead stopped on Taxiway E (the parallel to the runway), the Airbus can just run over it?
They were about 40 feet from the hold line. Regardless it’s irrelevant. It could have been a 757 and they would have hit even with their nose on the line. There is no clearance guaranteed in this situation. It’s up to the A350 to not hit stopped traffic.
Curious, why you say it was the A350 responsibility. I asked earlier, only the taxiway design regs were listed.
What responsibility does GND have? ATC has responsibility in the air? With a tower on the field, I have always assumed (and this so far worked for tiny GA planes) that GND provides separation once you enter the operating area. In fact, this is what I was told at KBED by the controllers. But I never questioned this assumption, or had a reg to point too one way or the other.
Tim
So, the CRJ can just stop wherever they want and everyone else has a responsibility to ensure clearances to go around them? Lol, get out of here.
The nose of the CRJ was 80' from the line. I put 60% of the fault on the CRJ.
So that covers taxiway design. What about the GND responsibility (or not).
Tim
May I introduce you to 91.3(a).Curious, why you say it was the A350 responsibility. I asked earlier, only the taxiway design regs were listed.
What responsibility does GND have? ATC has responsibility in the air? With a tower on the field, I have always assumed (and this so far worked for tiny GA planes) that GND provides separation once you enter the operating area. In fact, this is what I was told at KBED by the controllers. But I never questioned this assumption, or had a reg to point too one way or the other.
Tim
I don't get why this is hard to understand. The CRJ was stopped, or for all practical purposes we should assume it was stopped. The A350 hit a parked plane.
If you hit a parked car with your car, you're responsible.
That the CRJ wasn't at the hold line contributed to the accident cause, but that is an "after action" observation that can be used to help prevent future accidents. It has nothing to do with who was responsible for the accident.
Since the CRJ is clearly dragging metal and probably hemorrhaging hydraulic oil, would they have (or did they?) off-loaded passengers at the side of the runway and bus them back to the terminal? Would they have tried to jack the tail off the tarmac and put a dolly under it to get it back to a maintenance hangar without leaving shrapnel behind?From another pilot's perspective at the incident.
View attachment 133411
Video available showing passenger buses arriving at the CRJ at the accident location. Also showing two cranes lifting tail onto flatbed and tug towing tailless CRJ away from accident location.Since the CRJ is clearly dragging metal and probably hemorrhaging hydraulic oil, would they have (or did they?) off-loaded passengers at the side of the runway and bus them back to the terminal? Would they have tried to jack the tail off the tarmac and put a dolly under it to get it back to a maintenance hangar without leaving shrapnel behind?
Reports are the Airbus taxied back to the terminal and the RJ passengers got off at the spot and were bused back.
As for moving the rest of it. I would assume they probably severed whatever was left holding it on and forked it up off the runway.
...or a second pass by the Airbus.The only question I would have is did they use wrenches to unbolt what was left, or sawzall?
That picture is telephoto and is pretty squashed. Discounting any torsional rotation imparted by the A350, the CRJ’s nosewheel is roughly 63’ from the hold short line, which puts the tip of the nosecone about 56’ from the line. Going back 118’ from the nosecone to the trailing edge of the stab, that puts the tail about 17’ into the taxilane clearance required by the A350. Pretty big overhang.They weren't all the way to the line, but I'd hardly call that 'way off'
“Aaaaahhhhhhhh, Ground, could you ask this little airplane to pull ahead so we can get by?”While it is a fact that this incident would not have happened if the RJ had pulled up tight to the hold short line, they are not at fault, maybe rude, but not to blame. This is completely on the Airbus pilots for not identifying that they had clearance to taxi past a parked object.
Ground told them "as able".What responsibility does GND have? ATC has responsibility in the air? With a tower on the field, I have always assumed (and this so far worked for tiny GA planes) that GND provides separation once you enter the operating area.
The ground controller is located in a tower a mile away. Do you think they have a better perspective on wingtip clearance than the pilots?
I’m sorry you were touched in your special place but no reason to be a ***** about it…None of the crews are losing their job, or getting a *post-facto training failure added to their airman file, so what inducement is there for any of this to matter?
*In the military, they checker/mess up your FEF (flight evaluation folder in blue bird parlance, e.g. checkride records) after the fact, knowing it hurts future civilian flying employment prospects. The DoD recognizes money is seldom an effective inducement for .mil folks at the commissioned officer level. Many are members of the upper middle class before they even got to the military, and most who resemble the remark consider their time in military aviation as merely "their regional years" anyways. Not defending the draconian/petty approach, but that's how the cookie crumbles over on this side of the indentured servitude line.
So remember to thank your union rep prior to your next block out, you guys are playing LifeTM in Peaceful mode, to grab a reference from my kiddo's Minecraft.
*break break*
TLDR forewarned Uncle HS story time:
I've been close to getting hacked up as collateral damage by the .mil system. They tried to burn me with a Q3 for something the other qualified instructor in the aircraft (T-6A), senior in rank, did off-station during a formation landing (back when we could do those things). Decides to impromptu snatch the aircraft from me on landing rollout to shine his ... in front of a pos guppy from his new employer (former AirTran, at the time newly SWA-acquired pilot) that was following behind on a 3 mile final.
Something about taking taxiways like they do at the airline...real dumb, taxiway in question wasn't a real high-speed anyways, and proceeds to lock, smoke and blow out the living life out of both tires, with wingman witnessing/following the whole thing less than 20 ft off our wing. And apropos to this thread, we did have a UPS 767 taxi past us with wingtip overlapping our aircraft wing footprint, while we waited for airfield management to figure out how the hell they were gonna get our airplane out of the way.
The FBO with the .gov fuel contract refused to tow with flats, so there we sat on the wing, as I waved at the people in the pax terminal in my full "top gun dressup", and the offending IP stomping his feet and trying to barter with me with insolent "why didn't you take it from me!?!" straw-grasping. It was a real crapshow.
Where it got real for me, was when Massa then tried to hook us both for it. I MAGNUM'd back with 'what is this "we" business'. In the end, airline dope came clean and told them I had nothing to do with his imprudence. And he knew I had him dead to rights, as I had transmitted " XXXX 69, unable taxiway Juliet" on the rollout to tower, right before cowboy decides to snatch the controls and pull the stunt. It took a few days to figure out, which was injustice enough, but I was ready to go all-in and really burn my future civil employability over it.
Since then, I've been largely disabused from the desire to fly with other qualified people in the seat, any more than I'm absolutely required to. To say nothing of my disinterest for crew aircraft flying, which was already stipulated when I ran away to the training command in the first place. 10/10 will always rather fly with the worst performing student actively trying to kill me, than share a pit with a qualified peer. Nothing I have more distaste for in this life than moral hazards.
Depends on if they want to spend the money to fix it.Wife asked me - I don’t know….. so asking here.
Is the CRJ likely repairable, or a total loss, organ-donor?
While it depends on several variables for this type aircraft, the repairable benchmark is usually determined by the amount of damage to the pressure vessel. Have seen several high end business jets get repaired with "similar" damage after severe weather events.Is the CRJ likely repairable, or a total loss, organ-donor?
Wife asked me - I don’t know….. so asking here.
Is the CRJ likely repairable, or a total loss, organ-donor?