SKYMASTER
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 19, 2005
- Posts
- 67
The FAA has sunk to a new low. More B.S. from the FAA. Calculate an extra 15% for landing on a snowy or wet runway? Only for passenger carriers?
First of all, as I understand, this new proposal is in response to the Southwest Midway accident. Secondly, the fatality was a non-passenger, off-airport civilian.
How does this fix anything at all? A recent article claimed airlines don't calculate for contaminated runway. This is news to me! I also heard a while back that Southwest calulates reverser thrust into landing. I've never heard of this at any other airline (I'm not sure if this is indeed true).
My final question, why commercial-passenger airlines only? Only in the brilliance of the FAA. The fatality in the "precedent-accident" was an off-airport civilian. How is this a commercial airline problem (and not freight airline problem)?
Bottom line-this whole new rule seems bogus. Typical FAA.
First of all, as I understand, this new proposal is in response to the Southwest Midway accident. Secondly, the fatality was a non-passenger, off-airport civilian.
How does this fix anything at all? A recent article claimed airlines don't calculate for contaminated runway. This is news to me! I also heard a while back that Southwest calulates reverser thrust into landing. I've never heard of this at any other airline (I'm not sure if this is indeed true).
My final question, why commercial-passenger airlines only? Only in the brilliance of the FAA. The fatality in the "precedent-accident" was an off-airport civilian. How is this a commercial airline problem (and not freight airline problem)?
Bottom line-this whole new rule seems bogus. Typical FAA.