BA 747 incident at Johannesburg
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- speedbird591
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BA 747 incident at Johannesburg
Following a tip from a friend last night, I found some info about this frightening incident that happened recently. A heavy 747-400 taking off from JNB (6,000 ft ASL) experienced spurious reverser warnings on engines 2 and 3 which caused partial retraction of the LE slats. The stick shaker activated at 12' AGL! :o
At 4,400 metres this is one of the longest commercial runways in the world and I remember that we nearly always used all of it. So to lose a lift device right at the end must rate as one of a pilot's worst nightmares!
http://avherald.com/h?article=4198598d&opt=0
Ian
At 4,400 metres this is one of the longest commercial runways in the world and I remember that we nearly always used all of it. So to lose a lift device right at the end must rate as one of a pilot's worst nightmares!
http://avherald.com/h?article=4198598d&opt=0
Ian
- DaveB
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Re: BA 747 incident at Johannesburg
Hi Ian..
One of the Brooklands team emailed me about this the week before last. I was going to post here and forgot :brick:
ATB
DaveB :tab:
One of the Brooklands team emailed me about this the week before last. I was going to post here and forgot :brick:
ATB
DaveB :tab:


Old sailors never die.. they just smell that way!
- speedbird591
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Re: BA 747 incident at Johannesburg
If you'd told me before I could have had my nightmares and been over it by now!DaveB wrote:One of the Brooklands team emailed me about this the week before last. I was going to post here and forgot :brick:
- DaveB
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Re: BA 747 incident at Johannesburg
Yeh.. sri mate ;-)
I know it's not directly related but here's the latest snippet I've been sent.. followed by the words 'I presume the crew are now unemployed'
It's a Scarebus tail strike btw ;-)
ATB
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- speedbird591
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Re: BA 747 incident at Johannesburg
I've just been given a pile of Flight Internationals. April 13th edition statesDaveB wrote: .. followed by the words 'I presume the crew are now unemployed'..
You know, I've pondered for a long time that with human error being the cause of most accidents, why are we so reluctant to switch over completely to computers?Emirates confirms that the pilots flying an Airbus A340-500 ..... have left the airline, but declines to give any further explanation.
Ian
- DaveB
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Re: BA 747 incident at Johannesburg
Ah yes.. pilotless passenger aircraft. I can just imagine how popular this idea would be
ATB
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- speedbird591
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Re: BA 747 incident at Johannesburg
I could be the only passenger. With half a dozen stewardesses to pamper to my every whim. And a robotic voice from a locked cupboard up the front saying "input required, input required ..."DaveB wrote:Ah yes.. pilotless passenger aircraft. I can just imagine how popular this idea would be![]()
Ian
- Prop Jockey
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Re: BA 747 incident at Johannesburg
As are the engineers responsible for the demise of this ConvairDaveB wrote:
I know it's not directly related but here's the latest snippet I've been sent.. followed by the words 'I presume the crew are now unemployed'.. :
Scary !
Cheers
Rich
- DaveB
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Re: BA 747 incident at Johannesburg
Deary me :-( Not the first time and I doubt it'll be the last either.
ATB
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ATB
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- Chris Trott
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Re: BA 747 incident at Johannesburg
Sadly, reversed control or trim cables has been the cause of more than a few accidents. What surprises me is that the condition wasn't noticed by an increase in control forces as trim was applied. I used to work for that company and the maintenance was typically pretty good, especially as the airline operated under a Part 121 certificate (same as many of the charter and cargo operators in the US, including Leif's employer if I'm not mistaken). One of the things I was trained for as a private pilot was recognition of reversed trim and how to deal with it, but I know that in the heat of the moment, such things may be forgotten.
Sadly, no amount of checks will completely prevent things like these from happening. I know of at least 2 occasions where FAA Inspectors missed things on major inspections that were later found by a company's Quality Control people before flight. Everyone is human, and thus everyone can unfortunately make mistakes.
Sadly, no amount of checks will completely prevent things like these from happening. I know of at least 2 occasions where FAA Inspectors missed things on major inspections that were later found by a company's Quality Control people before flight. Everyone is human, and thus everyone can unfortunately make mistakes.



