PDA

View Full Version : Merged: Qantas jet was on collision course


Capt Kremin
24th Nov 2010, 22:25
Airliners on collision course over Mildura (http://www.smh.com.au/travel/travel-news/airliners-on-collision-course-over-mildura-20101124-187e5.html)

You really have to think that their may be some other agenda going on in the press these days.

This article about an incident that happened 15 months ago was on the SMH website under the headline,

"Qantas jet was on collision course!"

WHY?

The Qantas crew acted professionally and safely. God knows what was going on in the Emirates flight-deck and it was an ATC error. So why the "Qantas-Drama-Shock-Horror" headline?

.....and it happened 15 months ago! Andrew Heasley, pull your fricken head in!

Cookie7
24th Nov 2010, 22:32
Mark Dunn wrote the same article for the Herald Sun.

Jabawocky
24th Nov 2010, 22:48
Word for word no doubt. :rolleyes:

Sub Orbital
24th Nov 2010, 23:41
This article appeared in the SMH written by one Andrew Heasley

TWO passenger planes with 443 people on board were involved in a near miss over Mildura's outskirts last year after an air traffic controller failed to notice they were on a collision course, it emerged yesterday.
One of the planes was a Qantas 737 with 143 passengers and seven crew aboard, flying from Sydney to Adelaide, the other an Emirates Boeing 777 carrying 276 passengers and 17 crew, flying from Melbourne to Singapore on September 3 last year.
An air traffic controller cleared both planes to cruise at 30,000 feet, but their flight paths meant they would cross in the same piece of sky 60 kilometres south-east of Mildura in Victoria.
The drama began when the collision course went undetected for more than 17 minutes, according to an Australian Transport Safety Bureau investigation. A ''conflict alert'' flashed up on the air traffic controller's radar screen, the planes less than 19 kilometres apart and closing fast. As the seconds ticked away, the air traffic controller tried to make contact with the Emirates pilots three times, to no avail.
A minute after the alert, the gap had halved to 9.1 kilometres - breaching the allowable minimum space between the aircraft - and he radioed the Qantas pilots to ''turn right'', which they did. Seconds later, he ordered the Qantas pilots to climb their craft 1000 feet, and the gap had shrunk to 6.7 kilometres before the Qantas pilots confirmed they were flying higher, and the drama was averted. A minute later, the air traffic controller was stood down.
The bureau's report does not calculate the time to projected impact had the Qantas plane not climbed out of the way. That, a bureau spokesman said, was ''conjecture''.
But an aerospace engineer who spoke to The Age calculated that at the pace of 10 kilometres a minute, the planes were about 40 seconds from hitting had evasive action not been taken. ''The controller could have observed that they [the 777] and the 737 were on crossing tracks and likely to be in conflict,'' the safety investigators said.
Qantas pilots told investigators they were aware from their cockpit systems of another aircraft closing in.
''The fact that the controller did not recognise the conflict at any stage would indicate that he had not resolved the deficiencies identified in his performance during training,'' investigators concluded.
Airservices Australia undertook to revise parts of its air traffic controller training program.

I sent him this as I am sick to death of the so called Qantas Bashing.
They do it because most of the overseas major airlines give them so many freebees/upgrades etc they wouldn't dare complain about other airlines.

Andrew,
I am trying to be very composed while I write this.
If you read the ATSB records, the EMIRATES aircraft failed on multiple occasions to respond to ATC
In desperation, the ATC controller then asked the Qantas aircraft to do something that they immediately responded to.
This problem was resolved by the QANTAS crew - not the idiots on EMIRATES who weren't listening or had not changed to the appropriate frequency.

How about some FACTUAL reporting instead of Qantas "bashing" to explain the EMIRATES aircraft was the problem.

"EMIRATES jet was on collision course" would be more appropriate.

Oh, but wait.

They give you huge freebees, upgrades etc and you wouldn't dare kill the goose that laid the golden egg. would you.

Let's not forget the EMIRATES takeoff in MEL that was as near as you could come to a disaster.

Oh, and what about the EMIRATES A380 that touched down on 34L at SYD, bounced, touched down firmly again and THEN reached the beginning of the threshold!!!!!!!

Cant' report these can we. I might lose my travel "perks"

Prostitute.

Oakape
25th Nov 2010, 00:05
Come on guys. We want the press on our side when the subject matter suits us & then bag them over any percieved slight! Sure the headline was misleading & overly dramatic, but that is what is used these days to hook the readers. The women's magazines have perfected the technique & my wife is always complaining that the cover bears no resemblance to the actual article.

This article portrayed the QF pilots as switched on professionals, noticing the other aircraft on TCAS & responding immediately to ATC instructions. I would have thought that that was exactly what we want with the current drive against offshoring, reduced training & reduced T & C's.

dudduddud
25th Nov 2010, 11:37
Come on! Agenda?!?!? What on earth would Emirates be doing giving perks to some obscure Australian journalist?

I can just see it now:

Setting:

Emirates check-in desk at Melbourne

Actors:

Journalist

Emirates check-in chick

Act I

Journalist, finally at the front of the queue for economy-class check-in approaches the desk.

Journalist: Hi, yes, just checking in, going through to London.

Check-in chick: Welcome. do you have your passport and ticket?

Journalist: Yes here they are. Say, the girls at the business and first class desks aren't looking very busy today.

Check-in chick: No it's mid-week so it's going to be pretty empty up top today.

Journalist: Oh.

Check-in chick processes Journalist's bags and fiddles with the computer.

Journalist: You know I'm a journalist, right?

Check-in chick: ...

Journalist: I write for 'The Age'.

Check-in chick: Here is your boarding pass sir.

Check-in chick hands boarding pass, passport and ticket to Journalist.

Check-in chick: You are in seat 30b which is on the lower deck. Enjoy your flight.

Bypass ratio
25th Nov 2010, 14:22
Quite simply Sub Orbital, Qantas is a **** product and a **** company to work for. They deserve everything they get in the press. I am so glad that I do not work for them:ok:

connoisseur
25th Nov 2010, 14:30
In case it helps, even today, journalists don't write the headlines, sub-editors or some such do. A perfectly straight forward piece of reporting by the journalist, with a headline written by subs to attract readers interest.

ROH111
25th Nov 2010, 18:40
Hey bypASS,

How's the sand? Finding it ironic to have a golf course made out of sand? Do they have grass as bunkers? Still a little dark we didn't get into Qantas hey mate? Get a councillor.

denabol
25th Nov 2010, 19:36
I've bothered to read the ATSB report a few times.

It describes a situation in which the controller couldn't make himself understood to the Emirates jet. It describes him as being assessed as incompetent during training, yet allowed to work as a controller, where he screwed up early in the day and then screwed up again with the Qantas and Emirates jets.

I'm scratching my head as to why such a dangerous person was allowed to keep his job and then screw it up twice in one day. Is he a one off or is ATC full of fools like this.

ferris
25th Nov 2010, 19:57
Get a councillor Problem with some roadworks? Excessive rates assessment? Shortage of hot air?
Is he a one off or is ATC full of fools like this. Straight to the Alan Woods Building, AsA's 'pool room'.