Jack Mehoff
I PITTY DA FOO!
- Joined
- Nov 12, 2005
- Posts
- 654
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Honestly...
Before some of you RJ wannabees go ahead and burn these guys maybe you should read the facts, And not that toilet paper rag that is the New York Post.
There is something that WE can all learn from this... And if you think you are immune to cockpit error you simply don't belong in a cockpit of an airplane with passengers on board. (or boxes for that matter)
Nice posting flatspin.
Fins...we'll take your advice by considering the source. Speaking of monumentally stupid look at your career choice
Nobody's perfect...we all make mistakes....yada yada. You can't ignore the fact that these guys fu#*ed up royally. Come on - Two professional pilots with thousands of hours of experience landing a plane with 157 passengers on a taxiway by mistake?!
1. I'm pretty sure that, beginning with your very first flight in an airplane, landing on the proper runway (or at least not a taxiway) is a very important.
2. I can hear one or both pilots thinking, "There are no numbers or threshold markings on this runway. That's weird. Oh well, I'm sure it's fine."
3. If anyone else was on that taxiway, 157+ people could have been killed.
I can't get these three things out of my head. No, I'm not perfect. Yes I, like us all, do really stupid things from time to time. And I'm not saying anyone needs to be fired or have their ticket pulled. But the fact remains that what these two did was MONUMENTALLY STUPID.
Agreed. That's the exact philosophy that has kept aviation going for over a thousand years.
Honestly... If I was involved in an incident such as this I wouldnt think about talking to the press.
A) The company will fry you for talking.
B) The Union will be pissed because they wont be able to defend you as well as they could of.
C) The press will undoubtably get the facts wrong and make you look like a drunken cowboy pilot who is a danger to some poor scared 5 year old and her cute puppy.
That being said... I heard that the CA on that flight marched him self right down the the Chief Pilots Office the next morning and took the rap.
Also if you have ever done a circle to 29 at night you know that the PAPI is on the right side of the runway where 99% of the time its on the left... The taxiway lights on ZULU are a great deal brighter that Rwy 29. There are no REILs or ODALS or anything to make the runway stand out. I know of many people including myself who have been intially fooled by the set up and rolled out on Taxiway Z in EWR, obviously in all cases it got fixed before anyone noticed.
The weather in EWR on Saturday was awful with winds gusting to 40+ and lots of windshear and the like.
Before some of you RJ wannabees go ahead and burn these guys maybe you should read the facts, And not that toilet paper rag that is the New York Post. It goes waaaay beyond "2 morons land on a taxiway for no reason" Is there blame on these pilots... YES. The buck stops at the pointy end of the airplane, but there are many other factors that can open the door to this deal.
There is something that WE can all learn from this... And if you think you are immune to cockpit error you simply don't belong in a cockpit of an airplane with passengers on board. (or boxes for that matter)
Agreed !!! Now, for some historical perspective....back in 1989-90 time frame...a B-737 went off the end of rwy 31 at LGA.
It went into the East river. After all the pax were taken care of, the Pam Am J/S'er offered his nearby crashpad to the cockpit crew. Now, the company knew where the pilots were....the ALPA folks knew where the pilots were...BUT...the NYC press didn't know where the pilots were.
...And that set it off....
Dramatic headlines, the DA threatening to press charges...even had a nearby Marriott bartender claim that the Captain of that airplane was in the Marriott bar drinking just a couple of hours before the crash....which the NYC press took off and ran with...even though, that crew had been on duty all day long, and not even near that hotel.
In the end, no charges were pressed, no retractions from the NYC newspapers, or the bartender....and both pilots still have their jobs.
Now, in this CAL situation, just because the flight crew didn't hang around long enough for the NY Post reported doesn't necessarily mean that they "bolted". No doubt CAL knows how to contact them as do their ALPA reps...thats really all that matters....isn't it?
Tejas
Also if you have ever done a circle to 29 at night you know that the PAPI is on the right side of the runway where 99% of the time its on the left... The taxiway lights on ZULU are a great deal brighter that Rwy 29. There are no REILs or ODALS or anything to make the runway stand out. I know of many people including myself who have been intially fooled by the set up and rolled out on Taxiway Z in EWR, obviously in all cases it got fixed before anyone noticed.
The weather in EWR on Saturday was awful with winds gusting to 40+ and lots of windshear and the like.
Airspeed, altitude & brains, you've gotta have at least two.
What was ceiling and visibility at the time of the incident?
1. We landed at 17:20 and the sun was setting -- a beautiful sunset because of the thin overcast. So, I don't think the sun was in their eyes.
2. Visibility was probably 20+ miles.
Sadly, in your case, you have only two as well: Airspeed & Altitude!
Bunny
Not exusing what happened, but EWR doesn't have any taxiway edge lighting. I don't think there are any other major US airports that can say that (but I'm not positive).
Combine that with a relatively challenging circling approach and I can certainly see how it could happen.
Me too. Six years flying in to EWR and only circled to 29 once.