Hugh Jorgan
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2001
- Posts
- 2,307
The way I understand it, the latter is for determining the former, no?TR4A said:LAX Tower was at fault. This is now a NTSB investigation.
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The way I understand it, the latter is for determining the former, no?TR4A said:LAX Tower was at fault. This is now a NTSB investigation.
LAX ATC has admitted responsibility for the error which took place during a shift change.Hugh Jorgan said:The way I understand it, the latter is for determining the former, no?
I'd be interested to read about that. Any links to a source?TR4A said:LAX ATC has admitted responsibility for the error which took place during a shift change.
Our Union says that it is an active NTSB Investigation. It may show up at the NTSB web site some day.Hugh Jorgan said:I'd be interested to read about that. Any links to a source?
Why would the NTSB investigate this?LAX Tower was at fault. This is now a NTSB investigation.
Do you want the FAA investigating itself?The NTSB investigates accidents while the FAA investigates incidents. IF this really happened, the FAA would be running the show.
One reason and one reason only (according to my former NTSB investigator wife). Political pressure. If the powers that be from above feel this is a "high visibility" incident, or the facility has had problems in the past (i.e. US Air/Skywest), then the NTSB will investigate it as an incident.chperplt said:Why would the NTSB investigate this?
The NTSB investigates accidents while the FAA investigates incidents. IF this really happened, the FAA would be running the show.
http://www.airdisaster.com/cgi_bin/airline_detail.cgi?airline=Cathay+Pacific+AirwaysCathay747400 said:Um, all Asian airlines are NOT created equal. CX does not "smash" aircraft.