Ethiopian 767 Lands Arusha
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Kenya
Posts: 239
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Mobotu
If you have contact with Cessna over their investigations into the left-tyre burst syndrome, perhaps they should also investigate what power settings caravan pilots use on short finals - the braking force from some of the approaches I have seen locally in East Africa would have to be a major contributing factor in bursting tyres.
Cessna should also take into consideration the location of 'home' base or parking areas when taking statistics on left-tyre bursts. There definitely seems to be a very high percentage of burst tyres occuring at/just before/immediately after the turning towards the parking area or towards the aircraft base. In humans I believe it might be called "Repetitive Strain Injury" - LTB in Cessna Caravans it seems.
Does anyone know if the 767 actually took off this morning from Arusha? Would love to know what the outcome of this incident is...
If you have contact with Cessna over their investigations into the left-tyre burst syndrome, perhaps they should also investigate what power settings caravan pilots use on short finals - the braking force from some of the approaches I have seen locally in East Africa would have to be a major contributing factor in bursting tyres.
Cessna should also take into consideration the location of 'home' base or parking areas when taking statistics on left-tyre bursts. There definitely seems to be a very high percentage of burst tyres occuring at/just before/immediately after the turning towards the parking area or towards the aircraft base. In humans I believe it might be called "Repetitive Strain Injury" - LTB in Cessna Caravans it seems.
Does anyone know if the 767 actually took off this morning from Arusha? Would love to know what the outcome of this incident is...
Join Date: Jun 2001
Posts: 285
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
The aircraft took off this morning and went to Kilimanjaro airport. A video showing the takeoff can be seen here.
VID 20131220 WA0000 - YouTube
VID 20131220 WA0000 - YouTube
Join Date: Jun 2001
Posts: 285
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
video showing the takeoff (impressive) can be seen here
VID 20131220 WA0000 - YouTube
VID 20131220 WA0000 - YouTube
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Kenya East Africa
Posts: 7
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
That was "something" and expeditiously done! Now what are the facts ?fuel? Mistaken runway? Did HTKJ authorize the diversion? Was there no contact with HTAR control during the diversion?
Join Date: Jun 2001
Posts: 285
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Another video taken from a higher level here
sadimsolutions.com » Ethiopian Airlines Boeing767 Leaves Arusha Airport
sadimsolutions.com » Ethiopian Airlines Boeing767 Leaves Arusha Airport
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Not far from a big Lake
Age: 82
Posts: 1,454
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Originally Posted by andrasz
It appears to be confirmed now that there was no emergency, it was the simple case of mixing up two similarly aligned runways and not bothering to cross-check. Happened before, one not so long ago...
It gives a good indication of the cockpit mindset that after stopping at the end of the runway and realizing their mistake, they attempted to turn a 76 around on the grass...
It gives a good indication of the cockpit mindset that after stopping at the end of the runway and realizing their mistake, they attempted to turn a 76 around on the grass...
Both are serious issues, but attempting to turn around adds the potential for serious FOD damage to engines which would have really exacerbated the total situation.
And once they turned around, what then? Would they attempt to immediately takeoff again??
Good thing they got stuck in the mud. It allowed calm oversight of a very sketchy situation.
I'm hoping that professionalism would have overridden embarrassment and panic, but with humans, you never know.
Join Date: Jun 2001
Posts: 285
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
internet research shows the aircraft transaction with the owner of the frame (Kuta-2 Aircraft Corporation Limited) as leased-in. Guess that is the same as a dry lease.
I believe this means just the frame is leased, no crew. So crew supplied by Ethiopian Airlines.
I believe this means just the frame is leased, no crew. So crew supplied by Ethiopian Airlines.
Join Date: Dec 1999
Location: Chile
Posts: 188
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Don't you just love it when pilots give each other credit for what the aircraft has done? Do you think the pilot played any part in using "only" 850 meters, other than using the makers power settings and speeds?
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: South Africa
Age: 49
Posts: 30
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
They were cleared for the Avatu 1A approach to Kili, landing Rwy 27 at HTKJ. They landed at Arusha thinking it was HTKJ as the runways are the same orientation. There was in fact a light aircraft, C208B, near the end of Rwy 27 due to a flat main tyre. The ET plane was given LDA of 3300m by the controller. When the controller asked him where he was he said he had landed. Tower then realised he landed at the wrong airport, probably Arusha, and gave him the frequency, whereby the pilot asked Arusha tower at which airport he had just landed. Another C208B had just taken off at Arusha on Rwy 27 before the ET 767 landed at arusha, he saw the aircraft on approach, and advised Arusha Tower of the jet about to land there. The tower tried in vain to contact him to go-around, the C208 pilot tried contact the plane on 120.1 (HTKJ freq), but no response.
Great landing, up to the point where he tried to turn a B767-300 on a 30 m wide runway and taxied into soft grass and mud. The passengers were kept on board the aircraft for over 3 hours, some more. Captain wanted stairs brought to the plane. He was complaining of the lack of facilities, until someone reminded him that Arusha airport does not accomodate such large aircraft, and therefore did not require such equipment. Stairs were brought from Kili some hours later. By then the pax were irrate, and demanded to be let off the plane. One idiot passenger opened the overwing exit, walked on the wing and lit a cigarette. The passengers were not told about their current location, but when one local expat resident recognised the school they had attended, as being just nearby, they realised they where not in Kilimanjaro. The flight attendant was reported as giving the standard " welcome to Kilimanjaro" speech.
There was no fuel emergency, there was no emergency declared, the crew (all 3 of them) assumed they were landing in HTKJ. Bottom line! They should have fuel to destination, holding, diversion to alternate, hold for 30 min, and complete an approach at the alternate. ie Nairobi, Mombasa, Dar, Zanzibar.
Other airlines and aircraft landed safely on rwy 27 kili, with the stranded plane on the runway. The kili airport authorities should have cleared the plane sooner, but it took little over an hour to get another plane, with engineers from arusha to kili to repair the plane.
What the crew were thinking? Who knows? When you land at an airfield thats really short 1620m, with destination still 27 nm away, in this case behind you, you may want to start scratching your head. There are no runway lights, approached, nav aids, markers at Arusha. Its a VFR field. If you approach HTKJ, in a 767, you would normally have all nav aids etc programmed in, right?
In the end, a spectacular take off by replacement crew, using less than 75% of the runway at Arusha, to get the plane to kili.
As for the idiots who landed there, well, the investigation will reveal all, we hope.
On a last note, i'm pretty sure that at least one of the crew members on an international flight, with an airline, should be familiar with the destination airport, or have a current route check? how can 3 pilots not know where kili is? howcome they did not ask the whereabouts of the stranded plane when they landed?
Great landing, up to the point where he tried to turn a B767-300 on a 30 m wide runway and taxied into soft grass and mud. The passengers were kept on board the aircraft for over 3 hours, some more. Captain wanted stairs brought to the plane. He was complaining of the lack of facilities, until someone reminded him that Arusha airport does not accomodate such large aircraft, and therefore did not require such equipment. Stairs were brought from Kili some hours later. By then the pax were irrate, and demanded to be let off the plane. One idiot passenger opened the overwing exit, walked on the wing and lit a cigarette. The passengers were not told about their current location, but when one local expat resident recognised the school they had attended, as being just nearby, they realised they where not in Kilimanjaro. The flight attendant was reported as giving the standard " welcome to Kilimanjaro" speech.
There was no fuel emergency, there was no emergency declared, the crew (all 3 of them) assumed they were landing in HTKJ. Bottom line! They should have fuel to destination, holding, diversion to alternate, hold for 30 min, and complete an approach at the alternate. ie Nairobi, Mombasa, Dar, Zanzibar.
Other airlines and aircraft landed safely on rwy 27 kili, with the stranded plane on the runway. The kili airport authorities should have cleared the plane sooner, but it took little over an hour to get another plane, with engineers from arusha to kili to repair the plane.
What the crew were thinking? Who knows? When you land at an airfield thats really short 1620m, with destination still 27 nm away, in this case behind you, you may want to start scratching your head. There are no runway lights, approached, nav aids, markers at Arusha. Its a VFR field. If you approach HTKJ, in a 767, you would normally have all nav aids etc programmed in, right?
In the end, a spectacular take off by replacement crew, using less than 75% of the runway at Arusha, to get the plane to kili.
As for the idiots who landed there, well, the investigation will reveal all, we hope.
On a last note, i'm pretty sure that at least one of the crew members on an international flight, with an airline, should be familiar with the destination airport, or have a current route check? how can 3 pilots not know where kili is? howcome they did not ask the whereabouts of the stranded plane when they landed?