Another Korean Airlines Classic
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Location: I bucked one and Tim bucked two
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How do you know so much about Korean Ailines ?
I am an expat flying for Korean Airlines and yes, I have reserched to find
out who was on Airbus 330 on Aug 28, 2012
And you know what ?
There was no expat flew to Incheon on that day ?
Keylime,
Please don't write a novel because you make me and other expats of
Korean Airlines look bad. We are trying to get along with Korean pilots
but your nonsense article make us difficult.
I don't mind if anyone post the fact so we can learn from it but false info
like keylime's post should not be allowed.
I am an expat flying for Korean Airlines and yes, I have reserched to find
out who was on Airbus 330 on Aug 28, 2012
And you know what ?
There was no expat flew to Incheon on that day ?
Keylime,
Please don't write a novel because you make me and other expats of
Korean Airlines look bad. We are trying to get along with Korean pilots
but your nonsense article make us difficult.
I don't mind if anyone post the fact so we can learn from it but false info
like keylime's post should not be allowed.
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Keylime
Is there a chance you could get a job elsewhere? Like you, I was very angry with the corporate culture of my previous airline, so I left. Believe me, it's important that you fly for an outfit that you can, at least, tolerate.
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Keylime
You wrote : First of all, I was not about to put the correct date of the flight, for obvious reasons
Now this sentence makes you a lier all the way.
If you were worry about the expat relief captain on board, you should't have mentioned the date in the first place.
BUT YOU DID.
And you said it's not the correct date when it happend.
Now let me ask you to all the reader of this post.
Can you now believe Keylime who calaimed it's the true story but now
but he is saying that it's not the correct date.
As I said before we, expats with Korean Airlines, are trying to get along
with Korean Pilots who may not like us being here.
But many of us here and trying to support our family.
Is this something wrong ?
I know there are many foreigners who came to try to join Korean Airlines.
Some of them did not make it but it's not because they are not good
pilots. It's just that they were not lucky enough like me. That's all.
I don't know if Keylime was one of the unlucky one or not.
Keylime.
I cannot understand why are you so upset with Korean Airlines !!!!!!
But as I said before there are many of us trying to supprot our family
and we are pretty happy being here.
I don't mind if you post the true statement we maybe we can learn from it.
But PLEASE DO NOT MAKE UP A FALSE STORY.
Now this sentence makes you a lier all the way.
If you were worry about the expat relief captain on board, you should't have mentioned the date in the first place.
BUT YOU DID.
And you said it's not the correct date when it happend.
Now let me ask you to all the reader of this post.
Can you now believe Keylime who calaimed it's the true story but now
but he is saying that it's not the correct date.
As I said before we, expats with Korean Airlines, are trying to get along
with Korean Pilots who may not like us being here.
But many of us here and trying to support our family.
Is this something wrong ?
I know there are many foreigners who came to try to join Korean Airlines.
Some of them did not make it but it's not because they are not good
pilots. It's just that they were not lucky enough like me. That's all.
I don't know if Keylime was one of the unlucky one or not.
Keylime.
I cannot understand why are you so upset with Korean Airlines !!!!!!
But as I said before there are many of us trying to supprot our family
and we are pretty happy being here.
I don't mind if you post the true statement we maybe we can learn from it.
But PLEASE DO NOT MAKE UP A FALSE STORY.
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Some of the details that have not surfaced: The foreign relief captain who observed the Korean Captain's discomfort with the weather conditions(anyone who has ever flown in Korea knows that the Koreans almost sh@t themselves when confronted with a 10-15 knot crosswind let alone a 20-30 knot crosswind component) offered to make the landing for the Captain. Of course, the Korean declined in order to save face(save face but don't save your life or the life of the passengers). During the ensuing investigation by the Safety?? department at Korean Airlines(by the way the company's slogan is "Safety is the Way") the foreign captain was never interviewed. The foreign captain was on the jumpseat and observed the debacle. The only microburst was in the Korean captain's pants. But then, you know how those foreign devils lie and besides that they nothing about aviation.
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While a childish and naive rave goes on no one seem to realize we're talking about this fella here Typhoon Bolaven (2012) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia The only consequence should be: installment of LLWAS and BA measurement equipment to prevent future events.
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Loose lips
Looks like this is a bad case of loose lips. A lot of information about this episode, which did happened, was dished out in the biannual safety meetings for expat captains. Now that this is now leaked on Pprune, there will be consequences just a gangnamstyle said.
We really have idiot expats who go for cheap shots at their Korean hosts without thinking through the consequences, unless of course it was the intent of the loose lips.
We really have idiot expats who go for cheap shots at their Korean hosts without thinking through the consequences, unless of course it was the intent of the loose lips.
XW or hot air...
a high g landing on the edge of a typhoon is more a cause for concern about the risk management of a corporation than it is the pilot's skill level as commented on by parties with no data on the event. Airbus v Boeing structure strength, depends what part you are talking about, both have their inherent strengths and areas of lesser margin over CS25/Part25. For every complaint about the metalwork of an Airbus, there is a history of issue with Boeing. They are mechanical devices, they need care and maintenance, and both do not like operational or maintenance related abuse.
The A330 FCS works more or less like a real plane at that time at least WRT commanded output, but the operation tends to end up with the pilot less in the loop with dynamic changes of the flight path from feedback cues. The 330's landing gear is a thing of beauty, brakes are s**t, but the gear is nice. It does however permit high torsional loads to be developed at the trunnion bearings on occasions, much better than the A300 though.
Koreans and crosswinds... maybe so, but there is a pretty good pool of evidence of skill issues with various other groups around the rock, including those blessed with the FAA and JAA oversight of said skills. Incompetency is a norm, whether you are white or blue, male or female, CEO or worker, president or felon. Pax are happy with a race to the bottom, apparently even investors are, and yet we are hung up over a minor operational event in adverse weather that exhibits all the hallmarks of incompetent oversight occasioning minor economic loss, and signifying... not a lot... Can crosswinds be better handled? Sure can. Been a topic of investigation with this operator some years back, with manufacturer concurrence with the recommendations, didn't last long though. Note that the damage was not just an Euro toy at that time, yankee tin gets bent just as readily, in fact, statistically was more prevalent by some metrics.
Anyone happy to throw stones on the operation of a particular nation should have a really close look at their own countries record, there are few out there that shine once the BS has been brushed off the top of the outside of their record.
Is KAL good at crosswinds? not at all, they are barely any worse than average.
Wm Shakespeare, Macbeth, Act 5 Scene 5
Hot Springs eternal
PS, @IGh: I concur that "unreviewable discretion" is a disgrace; that board findings are not subject to peer review is poor practice, and the bias and just plain unsupportable garbage that occasionally floats to the surface is unjustifiable if the intent of Annex 13 truly is to improve system safety. This is also not a regional item, for every BEA case that raises concern there are many more from across the channel, or across the pond that are of equal concern. As far as MI185 goes, there was one bright light in that BS, who was estranged from his own country as a consequence for a substantial period of time for placing ethics above politics.
The A330 FCS works more or less like a real plane at that time at least WRT commanded output, but the operation tends to end up with the pilot less in the loop with dynamic changes of the flight path from feedback cues. The 330's landing gear is a thing of beauty, brakes are s**t, but the gear is nice. It does however permit high torsional loads to be developed at the trunnion bearings on occasions, much better than the A300 though.
Koreans and crosswinds... maybe so, but there is a pretty good pool of evidence of skill issues with various other groups around the rock, including those blessed with the FAA and JAA oversight of said skills. Incompetency is a norm, whether you are white or blue, male or female, CEO or worker, president or felon. Pax are happy with a race to the bottom, apparently even investors are, and yet we are hung up over a minor operational event in adverse weather that exhibits all the hallmarks of incompetent oversight occasioning minor economic loss, and signifying... not a lot... Can crosswinds be better handled? Sure can. Been a topic of investigation with this operator some years back, with manufacturer concurrence with the recommendations, didn't last long though. Note that the damage was not just an Euro toy at that time, yankee tin gets bent just as readily, in fact, statistically was more prevalent by some metrics.
Anyone happy to throw stones on the operation of a particular nation should have a really close look at their own countries record, there are few out there that shine once the BS has been brushed off the top of the outside of their record.
Is KAL good at crosswinds? not at all, they are barely any worse than average.
She should have died hereafter.
There would have been a time for such a word.
Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow,
Creeps in this petty pace from day to day
To the last syllable of recorded time,
And all our yesterdays have lighted fools
The way to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle!
Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor player
That struts and frets his hour upon the stage
And then is heard no more. It is a tale
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
Signifying nothing.
There would have been a time for such a word.
Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow,
Creeps in this petty pace from day to day
To the last syllable of recorded time,
And all our yesterdays have lighted fools
The way to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle!
Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor player
That struts and frets his hour upon the stage
And then is heard no more. It is a tale
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
Signifying nothing.
Hot Springs eternal
PS, @IGh: I concur that "unreviewable discretion" is a disgrace; that board findings are not subject to peer review is poor practice, and the bias and just plain unsupportable garbage that occasionally floats to the surface is unjustifiable if the intent of Annex 13 truly is to improve system safety. This is also not a regional item, for every BEA case that raises concern there are many more from across the channel, or across the pond that are of equal concern. As far as MI185 goes, there was one bright light in that BS, who was estranged from his own country as a consequence for a substantial period of time for placing ethics above politics.
Last edited by fdr; 19th Nov 2012 at 21:50.
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Exactly Agaricus. I can do the physics. I got an "O" level...
Luke Sky Toddler: "Wiz it's not just the total G pulled it's how fast the G came on ... they plot G vs time in 0.1 second increments and there's a huge chart they have to refer to to calculate the severity from that."
This makes no sense.
"G" pulled refers to acceleration equal to gravity. This is approx. 9.8 meters per second per second. 2.3G is therefore an acceleration of 22.54 meters per second per second. The force of this can be calculated as newtons per kg of mass of the body accelerating...
Take an average landing weight of a 330 to be 150 tonnes... that will mean the gear was loaded with 3.4 million newtons of force. (the G will have peaked when the bird hit I am presuming... I doubt they damaging the bird with aerobatics). Brand B may be "weak"... but that gives you an idea of the forces involved.
Luke Sky Toddler: "Wiz it's not just the total G pulled it's how fast the G came on ... they plot G vs time in 0.1 second increments and there's a huge chart they have to refer to to calculate the severity from that."
This makes no sense.
"G" pulled refers to acceleration equal to gravity. This is approx. 9.8 meters per second per second. 2.3G is therefore an acceleration of 22.54 meters per second per second. The force of this can be calculated as newtons per kg of mass of the body accelerating...
Take an average landing weight of a 330 to be 150 tonnes... that will mean the gear was loaded with 3.4 million newtons of force. (the G will have peaked when the bird hit I am presuming... I doubt they damaging the bird with aerobatics). Brand B may be "weak"... but that gives you an idea of the forces involved.
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Gents I'm no engineer, I'm just reporting what I saw and was told by the engineers, the one time I was mixed up in one of these investigations (not my landing I hasten to add!)
On taxi in after the suspected hard landing, the cockpit printer spewed out several pages of data which is exactly what I already said ... "G" load vs time in 0.1 second intervals for several seconds before and after the landing.
We then had to take that data to the engineers who dug out a book and plotted that data on a graph. You could clearly see the moment of touchdown as it was the first time the "G" went up from 0.95ish to >1.
Then the numbers went up by tenths of a second from 1.05 to 1.2, 1.4, 1.65, whatever it was, over the course of a few more tenths of a second to the moment of maximum "G".
Because there was a bit over a second between initial contact and peak "G" load, we fell into the area on the graph where visual inspection only and no tech log entry was required.
However, the engineer explained to us, and you could clearly see on the curve of the graph, if we had experienced that same peak "G" within 0.7ish seconds or less from initial contact, it would have fallen into the more serious area on the graph, where the aircraft would have been grounded for mandatory repair work.
That's as much as I can tell you, it was a few years ago and I make no claim to be a specialist on hard landings, but that is exactly as I recall it and it was an A330.
(If anyone's interested - that was in KTM Kathmandu which must surely be the world's greatest sucker trap for hard landings, due to the crazy approach profile, the late stabilization criteria, the short runway, constant light tailwind and most of all the convex curve in the runway which gives a really strong visual illusion of being high crossing the threshold. Like I said not my landing, but I felt really sorry for the skipper that day ...)
On taxi in after the suspected hard landing, the cockpit printer spewed out several pages of data which is exactly what I already said ... "G" load vs time in 0.1 second intervals for several seconds before and after the landing.
We then had to take that data to the engineers who dug out a book and plotted that data on a graph. You could clearly see the moment of touchdown as it was the first time the "G" went up from 0.95ish to >1.
Then the numbers went up by tenths of a second from 1.05 to 1.2, 1.4, 1.65, whatever it was, over the course of a few more tenths of a second to the moment of maximum "G".
Because there was a bit over a second between initial contact and peak "G" load, we fell into the area on the graph where visual inspection only and no tech log entry was required.
However, the engineer explained to us, and you could clearly see on the curve of the graph, if we had experienced that same peak "G" within 0.7ish seconds or less from initial contact, it would have fallen into the more serious area on the graph, where the aircraft would have been grounded for mandatory repair work.
That's as much as I can tell you, it was a few years ago and I make no claim to be a specialist on hard landings, but that is exactly as I recall it and it was an A330.
(If anyone's interested - that was in KTM Kathmandu which must surely be the world's greatest sucker trap for hard landings, due to the crazy approach profile, the late stabilization criteria, the short runway, constant light tailwind and most of all the convex curve in the runway which gives a really strong visual illusion of being high crossing the threshold. Like I said not my landing, but I felt really sorry for the skipper that day ...)
Last edited by Luke SkyToddler; 19th Nov 2012 at 23:01.
Some useful info from Airbus on post-hard-landing measures, albeit for the A300/A310:
http://www.thai-ab6.com/peegolas/AIR...%20LANDING.pdf
http://www.thai-ab6.com/peegolas/AIR...%20LANDING.pdf
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Now that this is now leaked on PPRuNe, there will be consequences just as gangnamstyle said.
We really have idiot expats who go for cheap shots at their Korean hosts without thinking through the consequences, unless of course it was the intent of the loose lips.
We really have idiot expats who go for cheap shots at their Korean hosts without thinking through the consequences, unless of course it was the intent of the loose lips.
So in other words, you are pretty much saying "here's some useless and unnecessary information but I wanted to give off the impression that I am useful in this online society".
Come back once you know what a real aeroplane looks like.