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-   -   Pilots land at wrong airport. (https://www.pprune.org/australia-new-zealand-pacific/585645-pilots-land-wrong-airport.html)

hawkerxp 24th Oct 2016 08:11

In their defence, I have been to the airport they were aiming for and it is the same direction and looks similar, given it is usually 2-4km vis because of the palm oil fires its no wonder they screwed it up.

Then again nothing really surprises me in indonesia :ugh::ugh::ugh:

Flingwing47 24th Oct 2016 18:32


Originally Posted by Metro man (Post 9539531)
The airports look very similar from the air, and being on the coast the runways are the same direction. The mistake is quite easy if you try and eyeball it, thats what navigation equipment is there to prevent.

In India, the ATIS for Chennai warns pilots not to mistake the nearby military airbase for the civil airport, something to do with a cargo jumbo landing there by mistake.

Um not cargo - pax 747 SVA.
Early morning missed approach on 07 due not aligned off vectors.
Problem repeated on 2nd attempt. Tower advised crew " clear to land runway to your right"
Tired crew saw military runway to the right and landed.
Multiple cues ( no city!) and shouting from FE ( wrong airport) ignored.
4000ft runway as I recall. Close to max landing weight. Loved the 74.

Flingwing47 24th Oct 2016 18:36


Originally Posted by tail wheel (Post 9539429)
Don't feel bad about it Pinky. I remember when a Government Airline landed a Green Gravel Truck at Tefalmin instead of Telefomin then had to whistle up a Chook to lift it out as the runway was a tad too short!!

:}

Actually as I recall they bent it trying to takeoff for Telefomin - no charts etc.
Not quite long enough :/
Big operation to get it out.

LeadSled 30th Oct 2016 03:39

JamieM,
Skol is correct re. QF at KLAX, it was Hughes Field, not Hawthorn. I could (but I won't) even tell you who the three pilots were, and how it happened, and including with a major fumble of a frequency change which left the QF off frequency.
Good old QF have had several cases of the wrong field, including Tullamarine before it opened, Changi when it was still RAF Changi, and a whoopsie at Honolulu.
Not to mention close goes at Karachi ( International versus Drigh Road) and others.
All very embarrassing.
I was in London the day a Lufthansa B707 landed at RAF Northolt.
Tootle pip!!

JamieMaree 30th Oct 2016 03:55

Sleddie,
I agree it was Hughes not Hawthorn. It was only a couple of miles north of LAX south of what now is Jefferson Blvd.

Mendi Matt 5th Nov 2016 02:30

It happens! I once landed in the Western Province of PNG in a Twin Otter at Haiwaro (and cancelled SARWATCH)….only to find that I was actually on the ground at Kuri, 10 miles away! Oops….! (in my defence it was a ****ty low-scud day, and from treetop level all strips in the Western Province kinda' look the same…:))

Pinky the pilot 6th Nov 2016 00:52


(in my defence it was a ****ty low-scud day, and from treetop level all strips in the Western Province kinda' look the same…)
Just about all ex PNG Lapuns could/would say; "Been there, done that!":D

Feather #3 6th Nov 2016 17:16

Skol, your story is absolutely correct. It was a bad trip from the time the captain attempted to taxi on the centreline blue lighting departing Sydney.
The captain was sin-binned from training and the F/O was demoted.
Hawthorn may be another incident but not AFAIK.

G'day ;)

Airbubba 6th Nov 2016 19:08


Originally Posted by Flingwing47 (Post 9551721)
Um not cargo - pax 747 SVA.
Early morning missed approach on 07 due not aligned off vectors.
Problem repeated on 2nd attempt. Tower advised crew " clear to land runway to your right"
Tired crew saw military runway to the right and landed.
Multiple cues ( no city!) and shouting from FE ( wrong airport) ignored.
4000ft runway as I recall. Close to max landing weight. Loved the 74.

Here's an Indian news account of the miscue from 1997:


Close shave for 368 on Saudi aircraft

K R Sreenivas

CHENNAI, June 2 [1997]: All the 351 passengers and 17 crew members of a Saudia Airlines jumbo jet Boeing 747 aircraft had a miraculous escape when the flight SVA 770 scheduled to land at the Chennai airport at 6.30 am on Monday landed at the nearby Indian Air Force airbase in Tambaram at 6.44 am.

The wide-bodied heavy jumbo jet aircraft which landed on the secondary runway of the Air Force base came to a screeching halt at the edge of the runway barely 100 feet from a few offices on the campus of IAF Tambaram. The aircraft landed with a heavy thud and made a loud noise, scaring all those around. The airmen and others present at the Air Force base station ran for their lives, seeing the aircraft approach towards them at great speed. The flight was on its way to Chennai from Riyadh and Daharan.

The 4,763 feet secondary runway and four tyres of the aircraft were damaged following the landing of the aircraft. However, all the passengers and crew members escaped unhurt. As the pilot applied brakes, the passengers were thrown forward, sources said.

Airport sources said pilot of the aircraft Captain Khayyat sought visual clearance to land at the Chennai airport after sighting the runway. The Air Traffic Control (ATC) gave him permission to land, but the pilot reported that he had overshot the runway. The ATC instructed the pilot to circle and then come back for landing.

The pilot then went on an orbit and landed at the Tambaram Air Force station airstrip, mistaking it for the Chennai Airport. He then contacted the ATC and told them that he had landed, but they wanted to know where he was as they could not see the aircraft at the Chennai Airport. To their shock, the ATC learnt that the pilot had landed at the Tambaram Air Force station. They immediately contacted all agencies concerned and emergency operations commenced.

The Customs, International Airports Division of the Airport Authority of India and Immigration authorities rushed to the site of the incident. The passengers inside the aircraft suffered as the air-conditioning system was off. Passengers complained of suffocation.

Air India, which is the ground handling agent for Saudia Airlines in Chennai, moved the step ladder from the Chennai airport to the Air Force station for passengers to disembark. The Pallavan Transport Corporation (PTC) pressed into service nine buses for their transported to the airport for Customs and Immigration clearance. Sources said the aircraft landed despite refusal of permission to touch down at the IAF airbase. A Directorate-General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) inquiry has been ordered into the incident. Aviation circles wondered why the pilot did not use the automatic Instrument Landing System (ILS), which guides the aircraft approach path for landing and take off. Since the aircraft circled thrice over the Tambaram runway before landing, the investigators are making enquiries to find if there was a motive for the pilot to land at the sensitive Air Force station base.

A highly placed official said the pilot realised his mistake but it was too late to pull off the aircraft. IAD Airport Director Roshan Lal said the passengers were sent to hotels and all assistance was being provided. The formalities were also relaxed, he said.

The National Airports Division (NAD) has sent a preliminary report to its headquarters in Delhi. The IAF has also constituted a separate inquiry into the incident.
http://www.pprune.org/rumours-news/1...ml#post1225435

C441 6th Nov 2016 23:18

In the early 80's a Philippine Air Force Nomad crew landed at the old Katherine airstrip near the hospital thinking they were at Tindal. They did particularly well to miss a couple of grazing horses and the single-strand power line that ran across the strip that looked more like a disused country track than an airstrip.

Ambulances rushed from the hospital thinking it was a forced landing while over at Tindal a couple of us were telling Flight Service that he wasn't there.

Having realised their error the boys in the Nomad blasted off (can you do that in a Nomad?) over to Tindal, a few more miles away.

I reckon they were probably thinking that the Philippine Air Force was not so bad if this is the best Australia can do for an Air Force base…..until they realised their error…..

LeadSled 10th Nov 2016 05:23

Folks,
Many moons ago (early 1970s) a JAL DC-8 landed a Bombay Juhu in mistake for Bombay Santa Cruz, less than 2 miles apart, with Juhu almost on the coast, (using the old names dates me) and had to groundloop the aeroplane to miss the IL-62 that had made the same mistake a couple of days earlier.
The DC-8 was a write-off. I don't know the eventual fate of the IL-62, but both arrivals must have been a tad exciting, given the short runways involved.
If you go through the history books, such "incidents" are not all that uncommon, and always very embarrassing, and can be career ending, depending on which side of the inquiry desk the Fleet Manager is sitting.
Ask the Ansett/AWAS crew, inaugural Jet Aviation service Bombay to Bangalore, circa 1993.
Tootle pip!!

J.L.Seagull 10th Nov 2016 05:44

An Air India 747 did the same!!! They got the Boeing guys out there to remove everything non-essential. Fuel tanks were drained to the bare minimum for their 2 minute flight to VABB.

Metro man 10th Nov 2016 13:10

Eirjet, operating a flight on behalf of Ryanair managed to do the same thing in Belfast.

Pilot lands passenger jet at wrong airport - Telegraph

kibz2005 10th Nov 2016 19:33

ET have done it as well
 
Ethiopian did the same thing in a B763 mistaking Arusha (small GA hub) for Kilimanjaro (large international airport). All this despite them missing a rather large prominent snow-capped, landmark that should have been North of the airport! :}

Ethiopian Boeing 767 crash-lands in Arusha - National | The Citizen

Clipper811 12th Nov 2016 20:21

skol,

Witnessed the event at Hughes airfield (CVR.)
I was a student studying in the US at Loyola Uni 1981-84. Loyola is located between the N runways at LAX and CVR. Would sit up on the bluff overlooking Hughes and study and watch the limited air traffic.

The QF 747 went missed on final at a fairly low height and commenced G/A.
Went right over the top of me approx. 300' agl.


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