Another example of the outstanding professionalism at this carrier.
July 16, 1997 - A Continental Express Embraer 120, bound for Lake Charles, Louisiana, mistakenly lands at Southland Field in Carlyss. See T.J. Milling, "A familiar landmark? Another Continental plane sets down at same, wrong airport," Houston Chronicle, July 19, 1997.
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October 3, 1996 - A Continental Express aircraft, bound for Lake Charles, Louisiana, mistakenly lands at Southland Field in Carlyss. Link.
OK, why did they not just take off and fly on over to the proper airport? 5,000' and paved...
Sorta figured all that - but thought I'd ask.
Do you think the Captain and FO fight over who has to make that cabin announcement?
Another obvious question... was the flight crew already briefed as to their correct destination before they departed the ready room? Wasn't that part of their clearance?
If they were operating in the IFR system, wouldn't they have had plenty of clues before they were committed to land?
Can't takeoff again without a new dispatch release, t/o performance data, current weather packet, and load manifest (remember, these planes fly on paperwork). No way dispatch was going to release that flight!
They actually couldn't if they wanted to (they wouldn't have data for Carlyss, probably, without going into supplemental ops), and there's no way a chief pilot would sign off on it.
And had the pilots taken off without a release...it WOULD get back to the company, and that WOULD be much worse!
No paperwork for the lav, but you'd be amazed at the dance we had to do to get out of the cockpit.Jeez, I'm surprise the airlines doesn't have paperwork for when the pilot can use the lavatory.
So what ends up happening to the passenger? Do they get stranded until the pilot get all the paperwork, or does the airline usually send out another crew to pick them up and fly them to the correct airport?
How much beer does a crew have to buy for the chief pilot after making a mistake like that?
I almost passed over Montgomery to get into a base for Miramar in San Diego was. Thankfully caught my almost mistake when I could still turn final at Montgomery.I've never landed at the wrong airport.
(figured out my mistake when I was still on downwind)
typically they get cleared for the approach and land at the first airport they see. it just happens it isn't the right one
Oh yes, because this is clearly the first time in history this has been done.
http://www.thirdamendment.com/wrongway.html
El Paso has this problem where folks go to the field just north, and Destin has had several problems. Dave
They probably have "I landed at Carlyss" t-shirts in the company store.
The controllers at EL Paso give a "warning" on most clearances to runway 22 saying "Cleared visual 22 approach, Biggs Field 2 miles north". Main problem is El Paso is runway 22 and Biggs is runway 21 (very similar).
On night flights coming through Anthony Gap I will request the rabbit lights if given runway 22 just to be 1000 percent sure.