A321 Aeroflot from Moscow overrun in Kaliningrad
Join Date: Oct 2013
Location: Sweden
Age: 47
Posts: 443
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
I really hope this was a case of unexpected slippery runway.
Lately everything is about fatigue, overworked pilots, stress and time pressure.
Would be nice to have a common weather related problem this time.
Lately everything is about fatigue, overworked pilots, stress and time pressure.
Would be nice to have a common weather related problem this time.
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Belgium
Posts: 67
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Movie of the "calm" evacuation: Aeroflot flight SU1008 exits runway during landing at Kaliningrad - Luchtzak.be
Can we assume touchdown was at about 20:55Z?
Heavy sleet shower reported, with very poor visibility to the north-east (i.e., on the approach to Rwy 24), an RVR of 600 metres, and cloud broken at 300 ft. IIRC, braking action of 0.32 is medium-poor.
UMKK 032130Z 19008MPS 160V220 2300 -SHSNRA BKN004 BKN014CB 00/00 Q0989 R24/59//32 NOSIG RMK QBB120 OBST OBSC QFE741/0988
UMKK 032100Z 18007MPS 1700 0200NE R24/0600 +SHSNRA BKN003 BKN014CB 00/00 Q0991 R24/59//32 NOSIG RMK QBB110 OBST OBSC QFE742/0990
UMKK 032030Z 18007MPS 150V210 1400 1300S R24/P2000N SHSNRA SCT004 BKN014CB 00/00 Q0992 R24/59//37 NOSIG RMK QBB120 OBST OBSC QFE743/0991
UMKK 032000Z 18007MPS 1700 1400S R24/P2000N SHSNRA SCT004 BKN014CB 00/00 Q0994 R24/59//37 NOSIG RMK QBB130 OBST OBSC QFE744/0993
Aircraft appears to be substantially damaged.
Heavy sleet shower reported, with very poor visibility to the north-east (i.e., on the approach to Rwy 24), an RVR of 600 metres, and cloud broken at 300 ft. IIRC, braking action of 0.32 is medium-poor.
UMKK 032130Z 19008MPS 160V220 2300 -SHSNRA BKN004 BKN014CB 00/00 Q0989 R24/59//32 NOSIG RMK QBB120 OBST OBSC QFE741/0988
UMKK 032100Z 18007MPS 1700 0200NE R24/0600 +SHSNRA BKN003 BKN014CB 00/00 Q0991 R24/59//32 NOSIG RMK QBB110 OBST OBSC QFE742/0990
UMKK 032030Z 18007MPS 150V210 1400 1300S R24/P2000N SHSNRA SCT004 BKN014CB 00/00 Q0992 R24/59//37 NOSIG RMK QBB120 OBST OBSC QFE743/0991
UMKK 032000Z 18007MPS 1700 1400S R24/P2000N SHSNRA SCT004 BKN014CB 00/00 Q0994 R24/59//37 NOSIG RMK QBB130 OBST OBSC QFE744/0993
Aircraft appears to be substantially damaged.
Thanks as usual, Kulverstukas. Actually, that photo of the R/H main gear (aircraft pointing from left to right) does not look too bad.
But, in addition to the apparent collapse of the nose gear, the previous ones suggest that the engines may have ingested soil, etcetera. That partly depends on at what point the engines were throttled back to idle, at what point reverse was cancelled, and at what point they were shut down. (Presumably full reverse would have been used for the landing.)
But, in addition to the apparent collapse of the nose gear, the previous ones suggest that the engines may have ingested soil, etcetera. That partly depends on at what point the engines were throttled back to idle, at what point reverse was cancelled, and at what point they were shut down. (Presumably full reverse would have been used for the landing.)
Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: UK
Posts: 730
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
So, crap vis and a slippery runway, and if the tracking data is to be believed, and orbit at the start of the approach. That could have been to avoid a small patch of weather, but is more likely to have been to reduce energy. It'll be interesting to find out what speed and height profile they had on intercepting the approach and where (and if) they met stabilized criteria - it may be that they were stable early on and have been very unlucky, but the orbit raises suspicion of a rushed, high energy approach. I hope for the former.
Thread Starter
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Moscow, Russia
Posts: 1,011
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Actually, that photo of the R/H main gear (aircraft pointing from left to right) does not look too bad.
I Have Control
Join Date: May 2004
Location: North-West England
Posts: 49
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
More to the point, I trust the flight crew calculated IFLD (In-Flight Landing Distance). The A321 is a slippery beast, reversers are generally not much use, and the full length 2500m runway was definitely going to prove tricky with the 0/0 temp split, 12 knot crosswind, +SNRA and medium/poor BRAKING ACTION.
The QRH landing performance calculation shows that it was marginal at best, (IFLD comes to 2350 m, assuming low landing weight, CONF Full, Autobrake MED and a fully serviceable aircraft with no MEL items to affect. Factored Landing Distance, as advocated by Airbus, is 1.15 *IFLD, which comes to 2702 meters, over 200 meters longer than the full runway length. LDA is doubtless down to around 2200m, so an overrun was inevitable). Aquaplaning and/or temporary loss of directional control due to employment of full reverse would lengthen the landing run substantially, causing a yet longer overrun.
Standard winter conditions for that part of Russia though, but never easy with a slippery jet. And if the approach was a few knots fast, therein the problems really mount up.
And why would anyone "hope" that it was weather-related rather than fatigue of the pilots. Such a stupid comment, given above. Not a professional pilot.
The QRH landing performance calculation shows that it was marginal at best, (IFLD comes to 2350 m, assuming low landing weight, CONF Full, Autobrake MED and a fully serviceable aircraft with no MEL items to affect. Factored Landing Distance, as advocated by Airbus, is 1.15 *IFLD, which comes to 2702 meters, over 200 meters longer than the full runway length. LDA is doubtless down to around 2200m, so an overrun was inevitable). Aquaplaning and/or temporary loss of directional control due to employment of full reverse would lengthen the landing run substantially, causing a yet longer overrun.
Standard winter conditions for that part of Russia though, but never easy with a slippery jet. And if the approach was a few knots fast, therein the problems really mount up.
And why would anyone "hope" that it was weather-related rather than fatigue of the pilots. Such a stupid comment, given above. Not a professional pilot.
Last edited by RoyHudd; 4th Jan 2017 at 13:45. Reason: calculation
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Russia
Posts: 0
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Standard winter conditions for that part of Russia though.
As we all know it's part of the Baltic states/northern Poland region, and it's not standard winter conditions currently either.
FYI current weather is really quite ferocious with a first winter storm over the whole region - a winter depression currently centred over exactly that area in Lithuania, + heavy icing in the Baltic sea off Helsinki wave height 2-4m.
Wind swung from SW to E to N in a matter of hours.
Ask me how I know!
Outside temp -12C the wind adding a further -10C to it.
Join Date: Aug 2013
Location: Land of 1,000 Dances
Age: 63
Posts: 68
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
It's just an exclave, that's all, just as Alaska is an exclave of the US. (Some would argue that Alaska is really a pene-exclave, but at that point we are just splitting hairs).
.
Last edited by HighAndFlighty; 4th Jan 2017 at 14:05.
Join Date: Aug 2013
Location: Land of 1,000 Dances
Age: 63
Posts: 68
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Russia
Posts: 0
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Cos I live here? Isn't that a good enough reason?
It won't be the first time someone has made a complete b..ls up of landing a plane at KGD.
Last time it was a Boeing 737–300 back in 2008.
had someone else just landed successfuly or maybe diverted
Last time it was a Boeing 737–300 back in 2008.