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Jet goes down on its way to Medellin, Colombia

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Jet goes down on its way to Medellin, Colombia

Old 29th Nov 2016, 17:00
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WRONG!

It was a Chartered Flight from BOLIVIA to COLOMBIA.

The flight from Brazil to Bolivia was commercial....but this was a different flight. ANAC didn't allow the chartered flight from Brazil to Colombia because the charter plane/company was from Bolivia and not from Brazil or Colombia. So the team flew to Bolivia first on a commercial flight....

Please stop posting bad information here.
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Old 29th Nov 2016, 17:08
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Old 29th Nov 2016, 17:11
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As noted, there have been at least two significant crashes in which FC concerns about what eventually proved to be minor electrical issues caused sufficient distraction to result in fuel exhaustion and a crash right before landing. The particular ones that I recall are a United DC8 in Portland, Oregon and a Eastern L1011 at Miami. But I am sure there are others.
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Old 29th Nov 2016, 17:17
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Originally Posted by eagleflyer
PEI, but where does hydraulic power come from when all engines have failed and the APU doesn´t run due to lack of fuel? I understand it would come from an electrical pump that would run on battery power (the only energy source left). How long would that battery last?
Why does that matter ?

The only powered primary flight control on the 146/RJ is the rudder; elevators and ailerons are controlled via conventional servo-tabs and will function perfectly well in the absence of hydraulic power.
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Old 29th Nov 2016, 17:47
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eagle, # 62,
You are contemplating a situation involving failure of 4 engines or a combination of engines and the 4 independent power generating systems - no electrics, no hydraulics. Even then the battery should provide 30 min power, more with a dual option, enabling basic IFR flight; attitude, E2 compass, and pressure st by ASI and altimeter.

As DRUK explains above, flight control is not an issue.
IIRC Such a scenario was demonstrated during certification testing, ...
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Old 29th Nov 2016, 17:48
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SeenItAll:

As noted, there have been at least two significant crashes in which FC concerns about what eventually proved to be minor electrical issues caused sufficient distraction to result in fuel exhaustion and a crash right before landing. The particular ones that I recall are a United DC8 in Portland, Oregon and a Eastern L1011 at Miami. But I am sure there are others.
The Eastern flight didn't run out of fuel. The crew was distracted by a landing gear indication issue. The F/O unintentionally applied slight forward pressure on his yoke, dropping the autopilot from command to control wheel steering. They slowly descended into the swamp.

The other big out of fuel was the Avianca 707 at JFK.
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Old 29th Nov 2016, 17:55
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Apparently the airline's owner was flying the aircraft and is one of the fatalities.
I think that operations with aircrew who are financial stakeholders should either not be permitted or else be regulated so that the operating company has minimum cash reserves to survive a few non profitable flights. I used to fly charter aircraft in Europe in which the chief pilot was also part-owner and personally witnessed (and heard of others from colleagues) when his airmanship was outrageously compromised to save money when cash flow was difficult. On one occasion, rather than announcing a fuel emergency, he cancelled IFR to avoid a long low-level IFR approach and instead did a direct VFR approach in IMC - this was a EU/OPS charter with pax on board. On another occasion, he refused anti-ice protection on a departure in icing conditions because the cost would cause the flight to be non-profitable.
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Old 29th Nov 2016, 18:21
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Thanks for your input. I was not aware that on this type only the rudder depended on hydraulics. So a controlled glide towards a runway would have been technically possible. As a controller I ask myself what I could have done to help a crew in such a situation. Will transponders usually be on the emergency battery bus? Othewise I´d have to rely on primary radar, and I heard management talking about "there´s no need for this nowadays".
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Old 29th Nov 2016, 18:27
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Unfortunately it looks pretty clear this one ran out of fuel. Other than the don't speculate speculators and the wait for the enquiry bunch, does anyone think that there is a viable alternative explanation? No FOD fan distress, no fuel, no fire, no electrics, no go around, out of range. Of course there maybe a completely different explanation but this is a flyers forum folks. The 146 is not my favourite jet but its record over many years is that whatever its shortcomings it is a pretty safe beast. Fuel management must surely have had a role,
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Old 29th Nov 2016, 18:32
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Can someone interpret the Flightradar data?
The cruising speed was 676 km/h.
Seems like the auotopilot is deactivated at around 2:15 UTC (manually increasing speed ? to 700km/h) long before descent, may things start to go awry here?
2:33 UTC descent starts from 9144m to 7612m, maintaining speed. Is this normal?
2:36 UTC speed starts to decline as well, dropping to 441km/h in 11 minutes (2:47).
2:42-2:47 holding starts
2:47 UTC altitude 6400m speed 441km/h
2:50 Tries to speed up to 513km/h maintaining 6400m altitude
2:55 Speed drops to 263km/h, Altitude to 4740m and vanishes off the radar.

It has been reported that the airplane declared emergency at 10pm and crashed at 10:15pm Colombian time (3:15 UTC), so flying 20 minutes at around 260km/h off the radar? The crash site's altitude is around 2500-2600m.

The crash site here is reported as 17km away from the airport. https://t.co/qPKJMab7dA, it vanishes off the radar at around approximatley 30 km away from the airport. If the reported crash time and locations are correct this means flying 13km at an average speed of 153km/h. V0 is 263km/h. V-Crash 43km/h, hence the survivors?

If there were a fuel problem why hold 13 minutes? The holding may be for dumping fuel for an emergency landing...
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Old 29th Nov 2016, 18:32
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Are fuel gauges still alive when flying with minimal power from batteries?
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Old 29th Nov 2016, 18:37
  #72 (permalink)  
 
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Originally Posted by cargun
  1. 2:33 UTC descent starts from 9144m to 7612m, maintaining speed. Is this normal?
  2. 2:36 UTC speed starts to decline as well, dropping to 441km/h in 11 minutes (2:47).
  3. 2:42-2:47 holding starts
  4. 2:47 UTC altitude 6400m speed 441km/h
    2:50 Tries to speed up to 513km/h maintaining 6400m altitude
  5. 2:55 Speed drops to 263km/h, Altitude to 4740m and vanishes off the radar.
If there were a fuel problem why hold 13 minutes? The holding may be for dumping fuel for an emergency landing...
An intriguing question (why hold for 13 (or 11) minutes?) but your second question makes no sense for me. Why would they need to dump fuel for an emergency landing, given the discussion over how much fuel this aircraft can carry and how long the flight was? You don't need to be on empty/fumes to carry out an emergency landing, right?

Last edited by Lonewolf_50; 29th Nov 2016 at 18:44. Reason: updated due to new calculations
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Old 29th Nov 2016, 19:06
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Perhaps someone should be looking into the flight history of this pilot/airline owner who was flying the plane, to see how much recent experience he had. It's possible that he got distracted with an electrical issue and went into a race track pattern to troubleshoot, and while doing so, forgot about the fuel situation. Sounds like he was cutting the fuel situation close anyway.
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Old 29th Nov 2016, 19:22
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The 146/RJ can not dump fuel. If you want to reduce landing weight or fuel you have to burn it off.
Rather than looking at distance travelled, look at time airborne. On average the AC will burn 2000kgs per hour, taking into account take off, climb, cruise and descent. The AC took off at 2218z and disappeared at 0255z. That's a flight time of 4:37hrs and roughly 9000kgs of fuel burnt. The max useable fuel quantity is 9300kgs. Unless pannier tanks were added (I personally don't think this is a financially viable option for a South American operator buying a relatively cheap regional jet). This would increase useable fuel to 10300. The AC definitely declared an electrical emergency. Then continued to hold PRESUMEABLY to deal with the checklist etc. To have a electrical failure due to lack of fuel is an idiotic assumption as the immediate emergency would be the flameout of engine/s.
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Old 29th Nov 2016, 19:25
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Dump fuel? Why would you dump fuel when you are damn near out? Here's the answer. This would be humorous but for the fact that dozens of people lost their lives.

Chapecoense plane crash: 75 dead and 6 survivors after plane carrying Brazilian football team crashes in Colombia - Mirror Online
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Old 29th Nov 2016, 19:31
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People PLEASE stop talking about dumping fuel. Pilots only dump fuel when above maximum landing weight, generally if there is a problem near the start of the flight! Not at the end of a flight near the edge of the plane's endurance. Even them, in a severe emergency pilots will just get it down and land above max weight. Narrow bodies dont generally even have fuel dump capability.

To add some local info (I live in Medellin) the weather last night was fairly vile and has been in general for a good couple of months, the wet season has been very strong, and long, this year.

If they (speculation) genuinely did take it to the limit with fuel planning that would have been extremely risky as you could easily be down an alley with nowhere to go if weather conditions weren't favourable. Colombian domestics carry a lot of reserve for holding and enough to get back to origin at this time of year - quite interesting watching on FR24 when the weather is bad in Bogota. You cannot rely on getting into your destination.

It hasn't been collaborated but someone on the 'other' forum mentioned that a vivacolombia flight called an emergency after attempting takeoff just before this one was due to land. If true that could explain having to hold with a bad fuel situation...not a good place to be.

Last edited by neila83; 29th Nov 2016 at 21:49.
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Old 29th Nov 2016, 19:31
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Is it possible that range was miscalculated?
I mean average passenger weight is possibly estimated on many types: men, women, kids etcetera.
But here we have the group only well built men so...
(And it really happend earlier; but can't help where and when it was)
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Old 29th Nov 2016, 19:34
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All that have flown RJ/146s (inc me) will tell you that fuel CANNOT be dumped from this AC.
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Old 29th Nov 2016, 19:35
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Just to add..that final ground speed of 142 knots is VERY low considering the altitude it was at...
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Old 29th Nov 2016, 20:03
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A lot of technical mis-understanding about this airframe so i'll try and summarize some technical tidbits here. Apologies if it appears hap-hazard - just going back through the thread.

- No fuel dumping provisions in the 146/RJ

- Fuel Qty indication is availible with only battery power. Infact, there's a momentary Fuel Qty pushbutton above the Engine Insturments that lets you check qty with battery off. It's a digital display on the bottom of the EIS.

- Pannier tanks can be installed and removed regardless if aircraft was delivered from factory with/without them. I suspect this one did not have any installed though, as it's a relatively big job and usually the entire (relatively small) operator community will get wind of someone looking for pannier tanks parts.

- Pannier(or auxillary) tanks are considered part of the wing tanks and thier qty indication is combined with wing tanks if installed. Also an annunciation if they are not empty on the overhead panel. Pannier tanks will feed into thier respective wing tanks.

- I highly doubt any of the belly aux tanks were installed in this aircraft. They are very rare and the only outfit that I know that uses them consistenly nowadays is the FAAM aircraft. Home

- Redundancy is king on this aircraft (it is British...). As detailed above a bit, electrical power is primarily derived from two 115/200 VAC generators on engines 1 and 4. The APU also drives an identical generator without the CSD. Each single AC generator is capable of completely powering the aircraft. In the Avro RJ, bus switching in the event of a generator failure is automatic (provided panel is configured correctly). There is no paralled AC buses in this aircraft. DC power is provided through two (optional third) Transformer Rectifier Units. 26VAC power through transformers for some avionics.

- Essential and Emergency (different buses on this aircraft) AC & DC power can be provided from: Battery (in conjunction with static inverter), and/or a hydraulically powered standby generator (Powered off green system - requires #3 engine-driven-hydraulic pump functioning. Isolates Green system)

- With emergency DC (battery) and AC (static inverter) only:
- Standby Horizon
- #1 VOR/ILS
- #1 COM
- #1 XPNDR
- Standby ASI and Altimeter (straight old pitot/static insturments - no DC draw)
- *I think* L/H landing light
- Pilot's Windshield wiper
- Yellow system DC pump (used to help extend yellow emergency extension jack on main gear, and pump up brake accumulator)
- Anti-skid (Anti-Skid sys. switch has to be placed in BATT position)
- EIS N2 indication
- EIS EGT indication
- FADEC continues to function (if engines are) through PMA's on the FADEC/HMU units on engines.

With Essential AC & DC (from Green system hydraulic stand-by generator)
- couple more engine indications
- More avionics
- normal cockpit lighting
- Battery is isolated w/ standby generator operating.

- Fuel system is a mix of complexity and simplicity.


Anhedral wings will make fuel in the wing tanks go outboard through gravity. Gravity & jet transfer pumps flow fuel from wing tanks to Inboard and Outboard feed tanks in each wing. Inboard for #2/3 engine - Outboard for #1/4. AC pumps in each feed tank provide jet-transfer pump pressure and pressure fuel to engines. Engines will suction-feed fine from feed-tanks though as well.
Center-tank fuel will flow into wing tanks. Floats in each feed tank will annuciate a low fuel condition if any tank is less than full (~600 lbs each).

- In the event of an AC electrical failure, standby hydraulically driven fuel pumps can provide fuel pressure.

- Primary flight controls with exception of rudder are completely manual with flying/servo tabs.
- Loss of yellow hydraulics means no roll spoilers, and some ground spoilers
- Loss of green means no speed-brake, other ground spoilers, and primary gear extension.
- Flaps can run half-speed off a single (yellow or green) hydraulic system.
- Alternate gear extention is gravity, with an emergency-yellow assister-jack for the main gear that may be powered from Yellow DC pump.

It is typical operator method to have APU running below 10,000 ft, providing bleed air for AC packs and pressurization. Frees up bleed air from the anemic engines (LF507). The APU Gen switch will usually be left on, although it will not be on either bus. In event of Gen failure with APU Gen on, APU gen will power the failed bus. APU running does jump into your fuel usage a bit though too...

Having said all this.....this redundancy is very suspect when you have no fuel....
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