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View Full Version : 747 tyre "explodes" at Melbourne.


Centaurus
9th Jun 2005, 12:14
Seems a Singapore Airlines 747 landed hot into Melbourne and stuffed a tyre. The Air Services spokesman charged with reassuring the public said that "the plane landed more quickly than the pilot had thought it would." Aeroplanes sometimes trick pilots that way!

The AS bloke added that "the pilot applied extra brakes and a tyre exploded." Aren't autobrakes supposed to prevent that sort of thing happening to tyres?

Anyone at Tulla see it happen?

18-Wheeler
9th Jun 2005, 12:39
The AS bloke added that "the pilot applied extra brakes and a tyre exploded." Aren't autobrakes supposed to prevent that sort of thing happening to tyres?

Not everyone lands with autobrake on, and if you do it's often faster and easier to apply more manual braking than select a higher level of autobrake.

HotDog
9th Jun 2005, 13:51
Tyre exploded? What happened to the fusible plugs?:confused:

Ultralights
9th Jun 2005, 21:46
Aeroplanes sometimes trick pilots that way!

ahhhhhh thats it! and to think, its always been called "Pilot error!"

Flight Detent
10th Jun 2005, 02:34
Maybe the anti-skid malfunctioned on that wheel/brake!

Just a thought

FD :ooh:

Kaptin M
10th Jun 2005, 02:56
Yes, I think it was the anti-skid that Centaurus was referring to - he's probably got his mind on other "things" ;)

But these "spokespeople" for airlines, seem to me, to be the first (and preferably the one with the LEAST knowledge of aircraft, and aircraft ops) employee of that company, that the press can rustle up.

It's a fact of life, that tyres fail sometimes - not only on aircraft, but also on cars, motorbikes, bicycles, prams, etc.
But NOT trains!
Oh to be a train driver (even just a glorified one:ugh: ).

J430
10th Jun 2005, 03:29
Here we go again...

Try here and create your own answer before the papers do it for you
http://radans.net/jens/planestory.html

WRR
10th Jun 2005, 06:25
Actually Kapt M trains DO have tyres, and the last major train crash in Germany was caused by a tyre comming off the wheel and spearing through the floor with one end while the other end hit some points and derailed the tran.


You live and learn....

Buster Hyman
13th Jun 2005, 07:41
At least it wasn't that dreaded No. 2 Engine again!:rolleyes:

quarter hr pack
15th Jun 2005, 06:00
Fair enough then, train tyres do sometimes fail....but just imagine if they EXPLODED as is the case here....very messy indeed. I guess thats why they want you to stand well back from the platform when the train arrives - just in case the train driver has to apply 'extra brakes' and a similar problem occurs.