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-   -   Enter Air landing Salzburg (https://www.pprune.org/spectators-balcony-spotters-corner/601258-enter-air-landing-salzburg.html)

exeng 5th Nov 2017 23:38

Loose rivets. In all my flying a low groundspeed never converts into a low airspeed.

I will be flying the correct approach speed (IAS)given the wind conditions.

When I go-around I will be at a safe speed to perform that manoeuvre. Done it quite a few times in several types but more so in various types of 737.

As for the example approach I certainly will not criticise the Pilots as I wasn't there and have no access obviously to the FDM data.

What I will say is that as Professional Pilots we are at times required to operate the aircraft in conditions that are not ideal but at the time are judged to be 'safe'. That judgement is given to a person who has been deemed experienced enough to make that judgement (i.e. the Captain) He or she would be failing in their responsibilities if they did not attempt to achieve their objective.

They tried but did not achieve their objective.

The go-around from what I have seen of it was well flown - they were certainly well prepared for that outcome.

I feel somewhat sorry that the Pilots here are being lambasted by people that are criticising the flight on the basis of a video without knowledge of the actual and the forecast WX plus any PIREPS.

It probably was an uncomfortable manoeuvre but it was safe and all the Pax lived to tell about it.

Well done that crew I say.

Vessbot 6th Nov 2017 05:52


Originally Posted by cactusbusdrvr (Post 9947689)
I don't want to beat this into a dead horse, but.....

I wholeheartedly agree with everything in your post. Anytime I've had a student try to change their mind from a go-around back to a landing, they've gotten waaaay, way more unstabilized than whatever triggered the go-around in the first place. A goaround requires commitment and follow-through.

I also don't see how this bears on what was said previously.

Loose rivets 6th Nov 2017 23:44

I wish I'd remained in the background, but since I didn't, I'll try to clarify my statements.

As strange as it may seem, I've consistently NOT criticised the crew as much as the system. At the end of my career I felt strongly the strangulation of natural talent by the constriction of operational methods. I suppose an analogy would be the plethora of cameras feeding back perhaps momentary deviations to road traffic authorities. One dare not give that last touch of power in an overtake for fear of breaking limits - for a second or so. It's a line that there "is no excuse . . ." for breaking - as the wording on the back of cameras states.

As an oldie I was in an era when the most incredible things happened - without a word of post-analysis. An example might be, nearing V1 in Naples when a bowser appears out of the rippling heat haze. No chance of stopping but if we shoved over a bit, there was obviously going to be room to pass behind it. That was until the second trailer in the train became visible.

More flap and a short flight. A landing. A tucking away of the excess flap and a bit more takeoff roll all lead to a timely lift off. What was so incredible was that there was nothing said about it after the nervous laughter died down. The Palma thing was the same. One day when the entire jet transport training staff were on the flightdeck and the aircraft began to shake there was an exchange of looks, a nod, and we were falling out of the sky with the taps shut and the brakes out. The cause? Not one of the 4 senior guys had ever experienced CAT. Not on a springy wing, anyway.

There was a huge amount to learn and the aircraft and crews were an open laboratory. Now it seems there a book. Oh, great. The answers will be in there.

Fleet manager and senior captain. Full manual reversion landing. Can you imagine this now? All looked good - then not quite as good. The concrete was approaching too fast. PF pulled. Not enough and the other joined in. Together they managed to squish enough hydraulic fluid through the actuators and the nose lifted - I guessed to about 30 degrees with no power on. I think it was me that suggested going for the electric trim, and I was the most junior person on the flight-deck. Come to think of it, I was the most junior person in the quite substantial airline.

The stories could go on and on, but suffice it to say, SOPs were just beginning to evolve and the chances of real hands on handling of extreme situations were becoming a thing of the past. Just as well, statistically, but the chances of having had real aircraft experience in these excursions was fast decreasing to nil.

Back to this instance and Newtonian physics muddled in with meteorology. IF the GS was low, and I think it was, we're down to mass and velocity - with a complex variable thrown in. One could not precisely predict the wind velocity on a time-line either side of the touchdown point. Every pilot would know that but it was all happening when the workload was high and the effects of such WV changes could only realistically be instinctive.

I don't think there is any way one can divorce flying from such basic physics. If the mass was accelerated during short finals and then that accelerative force removed, then it would put that airframe in a most unenviable position.

My entire argument is that the crew should never be restricted by rules that inhibit natural flying. Nothing else, and my argument is that the quote:


Every jet I've flown, from 737 to A320 to 767 I have kicked out the crab starting in the flare and touched down with one wing slightly low, to prevent side gear loading.
was just what I was trying to express, though without the currency or eloquence.

Start Fore 7th Nov 2017 08:42

5 pages of posts after a spotter videos a perfectly normal go around.

What the hell is wrong with you lot? Get a life.

Glorified Dus Briver 7th Nov 2017 09:01

My ego can't handle somebody claiming that their opinions are better than mine!

Consol 7th Nov 2017 15:05

Well put Start Fore. I've gone around in the flare because of roll I didn't like.

The rest of you, get over yourselves. Aircraft still fly on windy days all over the world.
If any of you armchair sleuths want to do something worthwhile then read up on fatigue, pay to fly, lack of manual handling skills and corrosive management. These are the things that are destroying this industry and likely to kill people. Otherwise stick to FS and watching AC investigators.

Pugilistic Animus 8th Nov 2017 05:19

A touch and go, basically due to winds apparently. I fail to see an issue

wiggy 8th Nov 2017 08:36


somewhat frustrated that there's not the plethora of technical input that sometimes follows such an OP.
But what objective, technical input do we/you expect to get in this place?

The only "evidence" here is a bit of video footage, ..airplane comes down, wobbles a bit, airplane goes up..we (rightly) don't have access to the minute level of detail that would be available to those with access to the FDR and QAR. Unless the pilots involved or their management decide to pop in here with more info I'm at a loss to see how anything meaningful can be brought into the discussion here, let alone debated, let alone analysed..we're basically operating at an "oh look a squirrel" level of understanding.

Must admit I'm with the likes of Start Fore and Pugilistic Animus on this.

The Ancient Geek 8th Nov 2017 13:41

Nothing to see here,time to lock the thread.

Pugilistic Animus 29th Nov 2017 21:50

One more, there is no approach Idle....you need to be spooled up as part of a stabilized approach


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