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fantom
29th Feb 2016, 10:17
What has been spilled ?

KelvinD
29th Feb 2016, 10:33
Oil, apparently.

Charley B
29th Feb 2016, 10:41
Gatwick is now open again using the Northern Runway...most can use that(not A380)

Tim91
29th Feb 2016, 10:46
Everything can use 08L/26R, except A380

yotty
29th Feb 2016, 11:00
I can imagine the "Yellow Peril" wetting themselves with excitement apportioning the blame and working out the penalties for this problem! :E

wheels_down
29th Feb 2016, 11:01
EK A380 currently holding at 8000ft ever hopeful of a fast fix.

EDIT-EK going to LHR.

T250
29th Feb 2016, 11:04
No, the A380 (EK15) has diverted.

Northern runway ops at KK are not A380 compliant.

Not sure what aircraft type, however it is a Virgin Atlantic aircraft responsible for this situation. Strange how it always seems to be Virgin causing issues at LGW...

Charley B
29th Feb 2016, 11:13
VS 44 (747) from Vegas was the last aircraft to land before runway was shut..the aircraft behind that a BA was sent around..

Skipness One Foxtrot
29th Feb 2016, 11:24
There are also taxiway restrictions in force when 08L/26R is in use which cause further delays if I recall the last time I landed on the short?
Taxiway J isn't far enough from the runway, is that correct?

xanda_man
29th Feb 2016, 11:28
Just noticed that the Norwegian LAX flight has gone to BHX. They didn't seem to hold instead looked to head straight up.

Edit - actually just noticed they seemed to do a circuit off the coast before heading in and then up

Right Way Up
29th Feb 2016, 11:41
Skipness it has improved so that aircraft with a wingspan of 50m or less can use J so not so many delays. Obviously some wide bodies will be more restrictive.

Wycombe
29th Feb 2016, 11:48
If FR24 is to be believed, some heavies are crossing 08L, and holding in the 08R threshold/undershoot area before departure.

I "saw" a couple of BA Airbii heading to BOH earlier and a VY heading to LHR. The Aurigny Embraer has also made a rare appearance at SOU.

Northern runway ops still continuing around 4 hours after the disruption started, so whatever the "spillage" was it must have been significant.

One EK 380 remains "trapped".

Edit: 1405L - EK12 departed from 08R, 4hr 20min behind schedule.

tubby linton
29th Feb 2016, 22:17
Who spotted it?

yotty
2nd Mar 2016, 20:41
I believe that the A/C had a reducing hydraulic quantity on the inbound leg, so I imagine ATC had been notified.

Heathrow Harry
4th Mar 2016, 10:30
I believe that the A/C had a reducing hydraulic quantity on the inbound leg, so I imagine ATC had been notified.


good reason for a second runway........ ;);)

yotty
4th Mar 2016, 11:03
I thought it already had 2 runways Harry? := ;)

Heathrow Harry
5th Mar 2016, 16:01
NOt REAL runways....................

zonoma
5th Mar 2016, 16:07
They are BOTH real runways! Otherwise you couldn't use the other one when the main is unusable in situations such as this. You just cannot use them simultaneously. Another year, same old argument.... :ugh:

Dairyground
5th Mar 2016, 23:10
They are BOTH real runways! Otherwise you couldn't use the other one when the main is unusable in situations such as this. You just cannot use them simultaneously. Another year, same old argument....


The second one was originally built as a taxiway, the, what seems now a long time ago, upgraded to allow lighter aircraft to "escape" when the original runway is closed. I don't know what further upgrades have been applied over the years, but it is probably still something of a "toy" runway.

ExXB
6th Mar 2016, 14:25
From Wiki:

Gatwick operates as a single-runway airport although it has two runways;

The usable length of its main runway is 11,178 ft (3,407 m) when aircraft take off in a westerly direction (26L) and 10,863 ft (3,311 m) when takeoffs occur in an easterly direction (08R).

The respective usable runway lengths for the northern runway as 9,974 ft (3,040 m) (08L) and 8,858 ft (2,700 m) (26R),

Both runways are 148 ft (45 m) wide; they are 656 ft (200 m) apart, which is insufficient for the simultaneous use of both runways. During normal operations the northern runway is used as a taxiway.

Hardly a 'toy'.

Edited to add - I think they have one or the other runway length mixed, probably both.

zonoma
8th Mar 2016, 12:42
The 'toy' runway for 'lighter aircraft' is capable of allowing B747s land on it.......

Out Of Trim
9th Mar 2016, 02:46
I've known an MD11 use the " Toy Runway " for Take Off... Not all that light really, as it was fuelled up to make it to Namibia! :=