Modern Flight

29 Oct 10 2 Comments

I found a lot of interesting articles and clips this week in the news – too many to pick a subject. So for this week, have a news round-up with plenty of links for you to find out more.


The accident report has been released for the incident I wrote up in January:
Ditching in the Irish Sea.

Air Accidents Investigation: Piper PA 30, M-ALAN

Approximately 38 nm south-east of Ronaldsway, at FL 080, the pilot identified a “runaway” (overspeed) of the right engine. She shut down the engine and commenced a diversion to Blackpool Airport. Six minutes into the diversion the left engine also lost power. Despite conducting relevant cockpit procedures the pilot was unable to restore power. Unable to maintain level flight, and having calculated that Blackpool was too far away, she ditched the aircraft and was picked up by a rescue boat from a nearby rig support vessel.

The wreckage of the plane was recovered but severely damaged after five months lying on the seabed. The enquiry confirms that the state of the plane was consistent with the pilot’s report and theorises that the right engine may have suffered a mechanical fault while the left engine may have been the victim of icing.


Caught on video: Why BA 009 rose from the ashes – tech – 27 October 2010 – New Scientist

Next, they sieved volcanic ash collected from farmland near Eyjafjallajökull and kept those particles that were 57 micrometres in diameter or less. These are the particles that reached aircraft cruising altitudes, above 9 kilometres, in European skies during the eruption. They then loaded the ash into a sandblaster and fired it at the hot blades.

The red-hot vanes became coated in a glassy film as the ash melted, so much so that a real jet engine would clog up and fail. But when the team dropped the temperature to 720 ºC – a temperature an engine will cool to after failing – the ash began jumping off the vanes until most of it had gone (see video).


Passenger plane forced to make emergency landing in Canada after family bust-up | Mail Online

The article is pretty silly (“[We] were convinced we were about to die”) but I particularly enjoyed the map showing just how far they had to divert to land safely:

You can see the Great Circle route of today’s flight on FlightAware which takes the flight directly over Gander, making it an obvious place to divert to under the circumstances.


BBC News – UK airlines back call for airport security changes

The UK airline industry has backed British Airways chairman Martin Broughton’s call for changes to airport security checks.

Speaking at the UK Airport Operators’ Association annual conference, Mr Broughton said that no-one wanted weaker security.

But he was quoted by the Financial Times as telling the conference: “We all know there’s quite a number of elements in the security programme which are completely redundant and they should be sorted out.”

Mr Broughton, who is also chairman of Liverpool FC, added the UK should only agree to security checks that the US requires for passengers on domestic flights.

“America does not do internally a lot of the things they demand that we do,” he said. “We shouldn’t stand for that.”


Pilot jailed for 20 years for causing Cotonou plane crash – Bikya Masr

UTA, which was eventually incorporated into a French aviation firm, had a checkered safety history and was only given permission to commence commercial flights from Beirut after initially failing to meet necessary safety specifications.

Preliminary investigations into the cause of the crash showed that the plane had taken off up to 10 tons overweight, although subsequent crash probes revealed a different problem.

“The direct cause of the accident was not the large amount of excess weight on board, but the distribution of the load,” said France’s Accident Investigations Bureau (BEA) in the months following the crash.


Small plane crashes into two parked cars in Wesley Chapel

Preliminary information indicates the student pilot, a 60-year-old man, on his second solo flight, had problems in his takeoff and lost control when he landed. His single-engine plane skidded off the runway and landed on two cars parked in the lot of an industrial business.


This is, of course, a somewhat random selection of current affairs which I found interesting. Feel free to add current aviation stories in the comments.

Category: Fun Stuff,

2 Comments

  • Hi

    Thought I would drop a line re: Cessna 172 that landed in the back of a home 2001 Canada. That indeed was my photo posted on Airliners. At the time I looked for a post mortem report but wasn’t available from Transport Canada.

    Should have photos somewhere of the plan being removed. GIANT crane on the street with the boom from the street over the roof reaching to the backyard…hoisted the plane up and over the house….

    Enjoy your site great footage and posts!

    • Hi Glenn!

      I’d love to see the crane photographs too actually if you find them! That’s a crazy shot you took – I’ll add a note to the original post to let people know you definitely were the photographer.

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