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-   -   Lufthansa Frankfurt - Toronto diverted to Manchester (https://www.pprune.org/spectators-balcony-spotters-corner/593269-lufthansa-frankfurt-toronto-diverted-manchester.html)

The AvgasDinosaur 8th Apr 2017 18:47

Lufthansa Frankfurt - Toronto diverted to Manchester
 
Apparently on Thursday afternoon a Lufthansa B.747 en route Frankfurt to Toronto was diverted to Manchester to deposit a drunken passenger and his luggage.
Hope they get the full bill.
Would a fuel dump be required this early in a long haul flight ?

gearlever 8th Apr 2017 19:18

Oh my God. A diversion.....

The AvgasDinosaur 8th Apr 2017 19:29

I asked a serious question in my post as well

B2N2 8th Apr 2017 19:29

Likely no as I don't expect it would have a full fuel load for that 'short' a trip.

The AvgasDinosaur 8th Apr 2017 19:33

Many thanks for your prompt reply.

Airbubba 8th Apr 2017 19:39

Looks to me like they did a little maneuvering at altitude to burn down to landing weight and/or get a welcoming party ready at Manchester:

https://www.flightradar24.com/data/f...lh470/#cf90756

https://flightaware.com/live/flight/...210Z/EDDF/EGCC

Gertrude the Wombat 8th Apr 2017 19:42


Originally Posted by The AvgasDinosaur (Post 9733448)
a drunken passenger

How come?


(1) Drunk on boarding the plane (gate staff failure)
(2) Got drunk on board from alcohol supplied by cabin crew (cabin crew failure)
(3) Got drunk on board from alcohol carried into the airport (security staff failure)


or


(4) Got drunk on board from alcohol purchased duty free (about the only way it couldn't have been partially someone else's fault)

Herod 8th Apr 2017 20:26

OK Gertrude. Since you want to blame everyone except the drunk himself:

1, Drunk on boarding. Would have been spotted by cabin crew

2. Alcohol supplied by cabin crew. How much can you drink in that short time?

3. Alcohol carried through security. No way.

4. Alcohol purchased duty free. Yep, and probably poured into a soft-drink bottle to get past the cabin crew. Thinks he's (she's) clever. Throw the book at them.

Doors to Automatic 8th Apr 2017 20:35

David - to give you a slightly more detailed answer - I do not know whether this was a 747-400 or -800 but let's assume it was the former. EDIT - it was the 747-400

The aircraft empty weight is around 187 tonnes.
Maximum landing weight is c297 tonnes (MTOW is over 400t) so there are 110 tonnes available for fuel and payload.

Typical payload for a reasonably full flight with some cargo will be in the region of 40 tonnes so that leaves 70 tonnes for fuel.

Including reserves and diversion fuel this would provide around 7 hours of flight time so on a day where no significant delays are forecast (e.g due to weather) this would mean that a diversion could be carried out somewhere between 5 and 6 hours from the destination without the need to burn off or dump fuel.

EDIT: having seen the flight plot this looks consistent with the circuits the aircraft flew which appear to take around 30 minutes.

slam_dunk 8th Apr 2017 21:51

If it was a 747-400 , max Landing weight allowed is 285.800 KG, otherwise it's an overweight landing

DaveReidUK 8th Apr 2017 23:56


Originally Posted by Airbubba (Post 9733483)
Looks to me like they did a little maneuvering at altitude to burn down to landing weight and/or get a welcoming party ready at Manchester

Half an hour at FL340 isn't going to make much difference to the landing weight, unless they were dumping as well as burning ...

Big Eric 9th Apr 2017 09:00

The aircraft involved was D-ABVU, a 747-430.

Doors to Automatic 9th Apr 2017 15:02


Originally Posted by DaveReidUK (Post 9733622)
Half an hour at FL340 isn't going to make much difference to the landing weight, unless they were dumping as well as burning ...

About 5 tonnes?

wiggy 9th Apr 2017 15:47


If it was a 747-400 , max Landing weight allowed is 285.800 KG, otherwise it's an overweight landing
Yep, that was certainly the number for ours.....As I recall it ballpark figures figures were if you were up to max ZFW you'd generally need to dump down to around 40 tonnes in tanks before you were at Max Ldg Wt ( structural).

Tanks fuel for the flight in question at departure may have been in the vicinity of 70, plus/minus tonnes, they may well have burnt 10 tonnes climbing out and during the short cruise, so maybe 60 tonnes left in tanks when it went pear shaped with the drunk......so at the risk of speculating ( but isn't that what we are here for) I'd have thought they would have needed to dump around 20 tonnes, maybe less if the ZFW was below max.

TBH can't remember the 744 dump rate...


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