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-   -   EGLL "West Coast" Departures - DC8/707 (https://www.pprune.org/aviation-history-nostalgia/264232-egll-west-coast-departures-dc8-707-a.html)

Midland 331 14th Feb 2007 17:27

EGLL "West Coast" Departures - DC8/707
 
Folks,

I've seen mention of these in a number of posts.

I'm guessing that certain conditions would give these departures an "interesting" rate of climb, no doubt right on the edge of the envelope.
Were special ATC procedures applied in these situations - in addition to understanding controllers and lots of prayer?

I grew up close to East Midlands, quite close to ROBIN on A1, and recall some of the Pan Am 747-1xxs growling along at what looked like quite low levels, allowing the "large logo" fuselage letters to be recognised with the naked eye. Later listening activities revealed that some were barely making FL190 abeam Trent.

Were the earlier generation of aircraft (707/DC8) prone to "labour" more than the early widebodies on West Coast services?

Memories and observations welcomed!

r

chevvron 14th Feb 2007 17:35

There used to be what was called a 'polar' departure from Heathrow; can't remember much detail except that it was pre B747, and was specifically for slow climbers and instead of a right turn towards Beacon Hill fan marker, they used to go left and circle round across final approach direct Garston. I think this procedure may have been dropped when Bovingdon VOR came on line, but maybe if Heathrow Director reads this, he may be able to supply other details.

Talkdownman 14th Feb 2007 18:10

ISTR Polars went EPM-BIG-BPK cos they couldn't comply with the WOB SID profile. ISTR having to coordinate with Preston as they struggled to cross the POL above 245. Memory playing tricks, I shall have to go up in the loft and get the Mediator stuff out. Perhaps the air was thinner in those days.

HEATHROW DIRECTOR 14th Feb 2007 18:13

I don't recall the "circling" departures, nor do I recall doing too much praying other than that I'd be high up the EG list! Sure, the long distance aircraft took up a lot of runway, but most made it.. There were two spectacular engine failures by 747s.. one which went past Windsor at 500ft - right alongside some colleagues and I in a car on the M4. When it later returned to land after dumping fuel I said: "You really frightened us as we were driving in".. a suitable cheery response came from the pilot but it landed me in the cack next day when, apparently, the flight became a discussion point in the Commons. Another 747 taking off, unusually, on 10L was taking up a lot of runway. Someone said: "Hope he doesn't lose one"... which he promptly did with a big bang and lots of flame, setting fire to a huge patch of grass undet the 28R approach lights!
There was a Polar departure off easterlies - Bromley, Hornchurch and BPK at 4000ft, climb when instructed by radar, etc. Produced a classic readback from a US pilot who simply replied "roger" to his clearance. I asked for a readback and got something like "Brookchurchparkhill at 4000ft...."

GK430 14th Feb 2007 19:26

Midland 331 - what are you going to dream up next! I felt ancient enough with your Midland DC-9-15 thread:{
Surprised Heathrow Director has only taken you back to the 747-100 and the early P&W failures. Now I feel even more ancient as I was in a well known detention centre near Slough a long time ago:p.
I remember Clipper 1 or was it 2 and 101 or maybe 102 coming overhead when we were being instructed and just deafening the place. They were 707-320's. An then it would be followed by a Teeny Weeny 70 at about the same height - they had never reached an Alt let alone flight level. The VC.10's and Super 10's seemed quieter which was strange - or is it just that I have only heard Stage 2 707's and DC-8's opposed to pure RR Conways during the current century:D
I used to live in Copthorne and the old man used to depart to Nairobi at about 20:00 in the VC.10 - the house shook! He also flew 70's and hardly ever heard him. Came out of EGLL one night of 28L in a 707 and we were 2,000 by the end of the runway headed for Epsom....empty positioning flt:ok:
Oh the days of the Jump Seat!
Back to original; Seaboard DC-8's didn't climb that badly - until they got the stretch ones. National and no doubt HD remembers, were hilarious on the R/T when they started inbound from MIA - remember one guy asking what the strange black & white animals were when he was about 3 miles out on 10R. Great southern drawl accent.
The best climbers I reckon were the Cedar Jet and Swissair CV.990's, but they were never going that far. On a summer evening when routeing via MID, you could see the smoke almost to SFD:D Would not be appreciated in today's world ....but I'd give so much to see one of those fly again.
If down at Gatwick in those days, Russ Hill could be a scary place, but the best dep I saw was an American Flyers 727-100 off 09.....how the gear missed the nearest obstacle on the railway line still baffles me and he was going to JFK. (Think they had LR tanks). There were some great planes/airlines down there in those days; Ariana and SAM DC-6's, Capitol, TIA, Saturn, ONA, World, Pacific Western, Canadian Pacific-first time I got inside a stretch 8.....okay that's enough! Off 27 at Gatwick, when it was still a shorter runway than today, a lot 707's would line up on the runway heading 090 deg and the nosewheel cranked round.
By the time the 747's started, lessons got quiter and on four P & W's they managed to climb. One of the first take-offs I managed on the J/S with the old man in an early 74-200 with JT9D-7QS was sensational but we were light on fuel.
Now that I think about it, Vanguards didn't climb too well and were quite noisy.

Midland 331 14th Feb 2007 19:30

>Vanguards didn't climb too well and were quite noisy

Yes, but what a glorious "basso profundo" noise... :-)

r

GK430 14th Feb 2007 19:34

Four ear splitting Tynes - well they were when nearby on the ramp!!
Could have been worse....4 darts and your ears would definitely:ouch:

Midland 331 14th Feb 2007 19:46

Castle Don. had both. Music!

A "Guardsvan" doing a full power ground run on the compass base for four hours could, however, get a little "wearing".

Thread drift. Sorry. Maybe time for a Merchantment/Vanguard thread.

So, I'm surmising that on a "power to weight" basis, the early generation of transcontinental aircraft were no worse than the first generation of widebodies when departing "well heavy". I picked up suggestions that they were worse.

I did hear from somewhere that some Pan Am 747s had problems making the SIDs.

(Hah! And after all this, a "Nigel" told me that early 340s could cause embarrassment)

r

chiglet 14th Feb 2007 20:12

When I worked in PATCRU [remember that] in the early '70s we had "Clipper ONE out of FL130 abeam LIC...
"Clipper1, confirm 747"
"Ahhhh negative Sir, we are a 7zero7, but veeery heavy"
Well, it Was "Summer"
watp,iktch

treadigraph 14th Feb 2007 22:16

GK, ah Gatwick in the Seventies... You can find me boring people to death :} on other threads here with my reminiscences, but they were great days! I can also remember World and TIA DC-10s taking off and scraping over the A23 and railway line at the eastern end and I believe at least one took a small souvenir back to LA with it, tangled in the main gear and formerly a fundamental part of the approach lights.

GK430 14th Feb 2007 22:30

Now you mention it.....Think I had moved on by then, but there sure were some great planes. In my day in those parts, the first stretch 8 I saw was TIA, but got on an Empress to look round.
Going back to LHR, I think I recall seeing A.F. Breguet Deux Ponts - or whatever they were called. BKS Ambassadors.
Luxair Connies at LGW?
I can see a visit to the loft and having to dig out the spotter books:ugh:
At least I'll figure out who struggled to get over H.M.'s Castle at Windsor.

shack 15th Feb 2007 10:01

Come on you fellow oldies like me, I would have thought you would have remembered the PA and TWA westcoast 707 departures off of 28R when we had to ring the Police to close the peritrack road so that the passing traffic did not get beheaded. Or the TCA DC8 sitting forlornly in the cabbage patch at the end of 28R------or maybe you are all new boys (I know two of you are), and yes there were Polar departures that went the wrong way round.

Midland 331 15th Feb 2007 10:44

This was more what I was thinking about, and has been hinted at in other threads.

r

pax britanica 15th Feb 2007 10:50

Interesting bit of nostalgia for me this thread .

I remember from my enthusiast/spotter days hearing Clipper flights cleared on as I recall ' a non standard polar departure crossing Epsom at 2000 and Biggin at 4000. I thought these were off 09R as it was because a heavy 747 turning for Epsom off 28L/R would probably have scared everyone in Staines to death but I may well be wrong. I also remember the same aircraft getting a 'non standard Lyneham west departure -to leave airways west of Lyneham'. Was that for the same reason

I assumed these were due to the early 747s being unable to climb as required by SIDs

I ddint know anyone used circling departures at LHR-some years later Iwas on an Air France 747-100 Combi departing beijing for Paris and that performed an enormous circle overhead the airport in order to gain height to cross the mountains north of the city-quite exciting .

On the subject of long trips South African had a Mondays only 747-100 departure direct to Jo'burg- pretty impressive if you stood at the departure end of 28L and watch them rotate just before the block 79? intersection

Happy days-at least if you lived near LHR and put up with the noise you could watch the fun in peace without fences and security

PB

chevvron 15th Feb 2007 13:19

I happened to be radar monitor on the old Sector 6 (WOD - STU low level) when the first 747 departed Heathrow on a demo flight out to STU and back.
His first call to LATCC was 'I'm not gonna make 4 thousand by Woodley'; and this was with a light load!

HEATHROW DIRECTOR 15th Feb 2007 17:58

<<Or the TCA DC8 sitting forlornly in the cabbage patch at the end of 28R------>>

Followed the greens, I s'pose Jack?? Guffaw... guffaw.....

GK430 15th Feb 2007 18:34

Midland 331 - how about going the other way - or was it over the Pole (the man on 120 decimal 4 to advise), but Japanair DC-8's used to come over lower than just about anything else and then, still going west, the
VIASA DC-8's to Caracas never seemed to clear the Castle by a lot.
Pax Britannica - don't think there were Springbok 747-100's? Started with
-200's and if they did go Jo-burg non stop it sure was a long one as if memory serves me right, they could not overfly most of the African continent in those days and used to Tech stop in Las Palmas???? Until they got the 747SP?
Come on, what about the Russians, althought they had the IL-62 by then, they still used the TU-104 as well. What a great bomber. When did all outlying ATC units give up reporting eastern bloc departures to LATCC:=
It was funny seeing a crew member sat in the bomb aimers slot in
civilian 134's:(

pax britanica 15th Feb 2007 21:53

GK 340

Yes I belive you are right about SAA not having 100s-perhaps they couldnt get off the ground at all at JNB-just joking. SAA did go direct just that one day a week the others stopped at Las Palmas or Ilha do Sal in the Cape Verdes Is.I doubt they made the northbound non stop though

shack 16th Feb 2007 11:54


Followed the greens, I s'pose Jack?? Guffaw... guffaw.
Bren I'll smack you if you do not behave!!

Georgeablelovehowindia 16th Feb 2007 12:45

I was in the control tower at Wycombe Air Park, booking out, when the PanAm 747 had the engine failure and started jettisoning. The controller, who was a Heathrow Tower controller on a 'day off' (Denis Cliffe perhaps?) glanced to the south, uttered an exclamation and grabbed the binoculars. We then watched it as it struggled along the Thames Valley, leaving a trail of fuel, vanishing in the direction of Greenham Common, and not seeming to gain much height. After an hour or so, to allow things to calm down, whoever it was then rang Heathrow to confirm that there had been a successful outcome.


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