Garuda Indonesian 330 off the runway
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Garuda Indonesian 330 off the runway
Seems to be coming up on my feed: ALERT Garuda Indonesia Airbus A330 ran off runway during taxi at Sultan Hasanuddin International Airport
From Aerotime Hub: The Airbus A330 operated flight GA610 from Soekarno Hatta International Airport (CGK) in Jakarta, Indonesia. The Garuda Indonesia wide-body landed at the airport at 5:07 PM local time (UTC +8). Allegedly, the nose gear of the aircraft slipped when it was turning away from the runway and the A330 ended up on the grass.
Two separate sources...
From Aerotime Hub: The Airbus A330 operated flight GA610 from Soekarno Hatta International Airport (CGK) in Jakarta, Indonesia. The Garuda Indonesia wide-body landed at the airport at 5:07 PM local time (UTC +8). Allegedly, the nose gear of the aircraft slipped when it was turning away from the runway and the A330 ended up on the grass.
Two separate sources...
Though, if Avherald's analysis is to believed, it was taxying in the opposite direction from the FR24 track, backtracking for an 03 departure and went off at the 03 threshold. I have no idea how they reached that conclusion.
Incident: Garuda A333 at Makassar on Jul 1st 2020, runway excursion during backtracking for departure
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Originally Posted by Pistonprop
I'm not entirely sure that this is headline news!
The aeroplane was however pretty well bogged down!
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There is no 20 knot taxi limit for the A330, heavy or light.
In a straight line, ~ 30 knots is a recommended maximum, for a 90 degree turn, ~ 10 knots. The same numbers as most other big jets. None are limits per se.
For a 180 deg turn, ~ 8 knots keeps the turn going.
In a straight line, ~ 30 knots is a recommended maximum, for a 90 degree turn, ~ 10 knots. The same numbers as most other big jets. None are limits per se.
For a 180 deg turn, ~ 8 knots keeps the turn going.
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Because it is a Indonesian airline and excursions happen more regularly or because it happened during taxi?
one wheel in the grass is a headline in most places. Precautionary landing due medical is on the news described as an emergency landing.
one wheel in the grass is a headline in most places. Precautionary landing due medical is on the news described as an emergency landing.
Another view showing the A333's final position adjacent to the 21 piano keys (screen-grab from a news video):
Worth noting that:
a) unlike 13/31, neither end of 03/21 has a turning pad, although there is a taxiway at each end that provides a bit more diameter than just the runway width
b) the GA610/613 rotation is normally operated by a B738 rather than an A333
Meanwhile, Avherald's "analysis" stoutly maintains that it all happened at the 03 end instead.
Worth noting that:
a) unlike 13/31, neither end of 03/21 has a turning pad, although there is a taxiway at each end that provides a bit more diameter than just the runway width
b) the GA610/613 rotation is normally operated by a B738 rather than an A333
Meanwhile, Avherald's "analysis" stoutly maintains that it all happened at the 03 end instead.
Recovery in progress:
And yes, that really is a 40-year-old B732 (of the Indonesian AF) landing on 31 in the foreground as the A333 is towed off the 21 threshold.
The long arrow on the aerodrome chart points (entirely coincidentally) to the spot where the A333 ended up:
And yes, that really is a 40-year-old B732 (of the Indonesian AF) landing on 31 in the foreground as the A333 is towed off the 21 threshold.
The long arrow on the aerodrome chart points (entirely coincidentally) to the spot where the A333 ended up:
Last edited by DaveReidUK; 3rd Jul 2020 at 08:08.