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#1
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Virgin Australia flew 13 passenger flights in broken turbo-prop
http://blogs.crikey.com.au/planetalk...en-turbo-prop/
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#2
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Could you imagine the media frenzy if this was QF….
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#3
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Oh spare me, for crying out loud
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#4
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Sorry, I am with Brad.
I had an experience several years ago (at the height of the Qantas/ALAEA "differnce of opinion"). As we touched down in Melbourne, a trim panel detached from the ceiling and fell to the floor. The trim was about 1.5 to 2.4 metres in length and was relatively insignificant in the grand scheme of things. No one was injured, none of the crew were incapacitated, the aircraft didn't plummet hundreds of metres and surprisingly, we landed safely, and all lived happily ever after ! ! ! That was until the matter was brought to the attention of our media stalwarts - those doyens of truthful and informed reporting. The report I saw inferred a major catastrophe and Qantas management negligence for allowing such a dangerous and potentially serious issue to occur. Any half-baked piece of banana bread could have seen that a plastic strip which was previously taped in place did not play any part in aircraft operation (more cosmetic) and at no stage was anyone is danger. The difference in these cases:-
versus
I bet the latter doesn't rate so much as an honourable mention in the mainstream press (like The Age, SMH, AFR or Australian) - most likely a non-descript item in "The Border Mail" - perhaps page 19, bottom-right corner - where very few people look ! Time for some on this forum to own up to having a very narrow view of what gets reported and recognise that there are media sellers (QF, Telstra, CBA et al) that the media want to jump on regardless of what they do because they're easy targets and perhaps don't pay up and there are dwellers (VA in particular) that stand back, cherry-pick all they like, then disappear when the going gets tough, leaving trail of flotsam behind them but presumably paying their dues. |
#5
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What's not to say that the report above is over exaggerated?
I'm sure the engineer who signed it out didn't do it simply so he didn't disturb Virgin's schedule. Everyone makes mistakes every now and then. The main thing is someone picked it up. If I had a dollar for every time I've flown an aircraft that shouldn't have been signed out..... Mick |
#6
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Would these be for things that could not be picked up until the aircraft was already in flight? |
#7
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#8
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With all due respect; I know you have very extensive flying experience, but are you suggesting the blog post or the actual ATSB report is over exaggerated?
The facts in the ATSB report are clear; a significant incident occurred; one which could have legitimately resulted in significant loss of life, if the cracks were not picked up when they were. Like most aviation incidents/accidents, multiple redundancies in aviation is what saved the day here. Yes the pilots made an error; yes the engineers should have done better and completed a proper examination and yes Virgin and ultimately CASA should have had ensured oversight of all of the above. Guess we will see more when the full report comes out. For what it's worth; the plane is still packed away in the hanger in ABX. |
#9
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I'm not suggesting the ATSB report is over exaggerated. It seems quite factual from the extract that I read.
However is Ben Sandilands an engineer? Ok, something was missed. Sh*t happens. Like I said, the engineers wouldn't have gone out of their way to sign out an aircraft that shouldn't have flown. I'm failing to see how Virgin and CASA were supposed to oversee any more of this. They employ/contract licensed engineers. The engineers perform the job, they sign it out under their license. If Virgin and CASA were to inspect every little task that a licensed engineer performed, it'd take a month for an aircraft to be released to service. I'm sure Virgin and CASA will now be asking questions of said organisation, however I can just about guarantee you that the response will simply be something along the lines of "We have taken steps to ensure the quality control in this area is increased". Maybe the question that should be asked, is why were the crew inputing control inputs at the same time without crew co-ordination? Mick |
#10
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__________________
http://flightdiary.net/MarkG |
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