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InquiringMind
21st Apr 2016, 03:12
Hi there,

I'm a reporter working on an aviation-related story. I'm trying to determine if a Boeing 727-31 recorded flying over Florida in 2009 was indeed that plane. I've heard control towers sometimes make typos when noting a plane's tail number, leading to mistaken identity.

I'd so appreciate it if you could take a look at the plane's track log on Flightaware, and lend your opinion on whether it's possible this is a 727. It was flying low and slow, but I'm not sure about the reliability of the groundspeed and altitude readings in the track log data.

The circumstances of this flight are murky. The plane filed a visual flight plan mid-flight. It said it was landing at Fort Lauderdale Executive Airport -- but apparently never ended up landing there. The track log covers only a snippet of flying time. There's no word on where the plane took off from, or where it ultimately landed.

N220NE ? FlightAware (http://flightaware.com/live/flight/N220NE)

KKoran
22nd Apr 2016, 02:34
While the registration equates to a B-727, FlightAware shows the type of aircraft as an experimental.

ErwinS
11th May 2016, 05:39
N220NE is stored at Porlamar-Santiago Mariņo Intīl - SVMG since at least 2006. Never left

jrmyl
11th May 2016, 10:16
Aircraft Registration Photos - N220NE - JetPhotos.Net Aviation Photos (http://www.jetphotos.net/showphotos.php?regsearch=N220NE)

InquiringMind
17th May 2016, 20:48
N220NE is stored at Porlamar-Santiago Mariņo Intīl - SVMG since at least 2006. Never left

Thanks for the reply. How are you sure the plane has been stored since 2006? I see an entry on planelogger.com that says it's been stored since February 2009 - so, one month after the possible flight over Florida.

https://www.planelogger.com/Aircraft/Registration/N220NE/495524

Any verifiable information you can provide would be much appreciated.

InquiringMind
17th May 2016, 20:52
While the registration equates to a B-727, FlightAware shows the type of aircraft as an experimental.

This puzzled me. I spoke with several knowledgeable people who said the plane could have been reported as experimental because it had switched out a part since its last air worthiness certification with the FAA. That would seem to jibe with the FAA's guide on the "experimental category."

https://www.faa.gov/aircraft/air_cert/airworthiness_certification/sp_awcert/experiment/

Any thoughts?

fr8doggie
18th May 2016, 10:11
It was an extraordinary rendition. And you're next...