Zeldman
Touchdown! Greaser!
I don't know what all the beef is about, everyone knows that the bigger airplane has the right of way...
Because they could see the RJ, while the RJ could not see them nor were they moving.Curious, why you say it was the A350 responsibility. I asked earlier, only the taxiway design regs were listed.
Well... See below.What responsibility does GND have?
There is no ATC responsibility that absolves a pilot from any of their own responsibilities.ATC has responsibility in the air?
It's probably in the 7110.65 somewhere if it's true, but I'm not seeing it. Everything is in relation to whole aircraft conflicts, not parts of aircraft that may contact parts of other aircraft.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.
You could make the case that neither one knew whether they were spilling fuel or otherwise at risk of fire, but other than that I would say no, simply because at that point they don't need special handling, no lives were in danger, and no aircraft were imminently in danger beyond the damage that had already occurred.3. Shouldn’t both airplanes declare an emergency?
Not quite, though it's an easy mistake to make.I don't know what all the beef is about, everyone knows that the bigger airplane has the right of way...
Is this still available?Not much to add, but I could not resist.
That CRJ is in the tail dock at work. Don't want to say much as I'm just a worker bee. I looks repairable but a heck of a lot of work... in a CRJ the aft equipment bay is home to parts of the APU, the air paks, 2 of the 3 hydraulic systems, elt. If they don't fix it they will have to cut it up. Its not flying anywhere. Not sure if the engines would be 'good' as they were running and might have had FOD injestion. With any luck I'll get some OT out of it.
We were told not to talk about it.. but its not like there isn't video/audio/eyewiteness reports etc.
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.
I know JS about commercial jets...
But for f**** sake, we have backup cameras as standard equipment on even cheap cars these days.
No one has had the thought of sticking cams on the wingtips and nose gear of these airliners where the wingtips aren't visible from the cockpit?
This is insanity.
Am I the only one that’s a bit surprised by how apparently easily it snapped off? Considering the slow taxi speed, it seems like it didn’t take much to break it off. I realize the A350 has a lot of mass, it’s just hard to fathom.
They don't make CRJ900s like they used to. some years ago, an A380 merely spun one around. The tail remained attached. I'm a little surprised no one posted this one yet:A big wing full of fuel, striking the top of the fin of a bizjet, should easily bust the fin spars. Lots of leverage, lots of mass, maybe some speed, against a structure designed to handle high winds, basically.
More like broken news. The airplanes were broken.the link says it was “breaking news.” Ever notice how they never have “fixing news?”
It doesn't happen very often enough to justify the total expense- installation, certification, maintenance, weight, etc. On a car, it is just parts & labor to install.I know JS about commercial jets...
But for f**** sake, we have backup cameras as standard equipment on even cheap cars these days.
No one has had the thought of sticking cams on the wingtips and nose gear of these airliners where the wingtips aren't visible from the cockpit?
This is insanity.
I would suspect that a big part of the overhead on such a feature would be avionics certification. Prove on paper and in testing that there is no possible failure mode of the new camera, display, or wiring that can interfere with the operation of anything else in the plane. And do that certification in a post-MCAS environment. I wouldn’t bid the project for less than the cost of a few tails and wings.It doesn't happen very often enough to justify the total expense- installation, certification, maintenance, weight, etc. On a car, it is just parts & labor to install.
I thought the FAA allowed you to just duct tape a GoPro on the wing.It doesn't happen very often enough to justify the total expense- installation, certification, maintenance, weight, etc. On a car, it is just parts & labor to install.
I know JS about commercial jets...
But for f**** sake, we have backup cameras as standard equipment on even cheap cars these days.
No one has had the thought of sticking cams on the wingtips and nose gear of these airliners where the wingtips aren't visible from the cockpit?
This is insanity.
In the conext of this accident what does strike me as pennywise pounds foolish, is the lack of consideration/outright dismissal of incurring the logistics of wing walkers.
Walk the wings all the way to Vr. Passengers will pay extra for the entertainment.This accident didn't happen in the terminal environment, where wing walkers are standard protocol. This happened on a taxiway near the end of an active runway. Are you proposing wing walkers on the airfield as well?
In the context of the bellyaching about proximity radar/cameras being too costly/onerous to implement, I figured wingwalkers for certain wingspans wouldn't be the end of the world.This accident didn't happen in the terminal environment, where wing walkers are standard protocol. This happened on a taxiway near the end of an active runway. Are you proposing wing walkers on the airfield as well?
I didn't know Hindsight is that oldI'm going to guess B-47.
Simple solution: only one aircraft not parked at a gate. An aircraft is not allowed to land until all other aircraft on the airport surface are parked at a gate.
This will save us for the expensive horror of aircraft trading paint.
Job description:Are you proposing wing walkers on the airfield as well?
I get the red tape, but I think in this particular application it's an unfortunate roadblock.I would suspect that a big part of the overhead on such a feature would be avionics certification. Prove on paper and in testing that there is no possible failure mode of the new camera, display, or wiring that can interfere with the operation of anything else in the plane. And do that certification in a post-MCAS environment. I wouldn’t bid the project for less than the cost of a few tails and wings.
That airplane would certainly make me happy.
Hope that was sarcasm.
Discretion is the better part of job security: I know of folks who had to fight for their jobs for posting stuff they were told not to talk about.We were told not to talk about it.. but its not like there isn't video/audio/eyewiteness reports etc.
Unless the smaller aircraft is stolen, or a rental.The bigger aircraft has the right of weight.
Well, that's how I used to do it, before I became too lazy to track-down the boom lift every time I went out to the plane. Now I just look out of the windshield.I thought the FAA allowed you to just duct tape a GoPro on the wing.
It doesn't have to be complicated. The first step is to recognize the potential conflict (the issue at the heart of the matter). The second step is to stop the aircraft before things get too interesting. At busy airports, the ground controller will quickly notice that you have stopped and try to resolve the matter before gridlock ensues. If that doesn't work, a simple request will bring an airport operations vehicle out to assist. And if that doesn't work, restart the APU, shut down the engines, and get a cup of coffee.This accident didn't happen in the terminal environment, where wing walkers are standard protocol. This happened on a taxiway near the end of an active runway. Are you proposing wing walkers on the airfield as well?
I do concede my bias having operated an exceedingly ground handling handicapped slant heavy for a while. Universally hated by airfield managements, hatred i certainly shared, but it was the cost of not knocking out everything sticking more than an inch off the ground on the airfield with our tips and outrigger gear....offense which we still accomplished (as a community) with incredible regularity anyways lol.
Thread derailment warning…
Jet exhaust frying chickens in the barnyard. One of my favorite scenes.