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Remember 25 years ago?

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T206driver

Just a 135 pilot/brat
Joined
Mar 28, 2004
Posts
79
I found this on av web. I often wondered what happened to the crew and airplane. Now they are in retirement. Congradulations.

[FONT=arial,helvetica,geneva]Boeing 767, The 'Gimli Glider' Finally Retired[/FONT]

Click for a larger image

Air Canada has retired one of the most famous Boeing 767s in pilot lore. Fleet no. 604 was flown to a storage area in the Mojave Desert, Thursday, 25 years after surviving, along with its crew of eight and 61 passengers, one of the most amazing dead-stick landings ever attempted. After the computerized fuel gauges on the then state-of-the-art aircraft failed because of a faulty solder joint, the ground crew decided to dip the tanks to ensure there was enough fuel for the 2,000-mile trip from Montreal to Edmonton. What they didn't know is that the dip gauges were calibrated in centimeters rather than inches and since a centimeter is less than half an inch, nowhere enough fuel was put on board. Sure enough, about half way through the trip, near the border of Ontario and Manitoba, both engines quit. Fortunately, Capt. Robert Pearson was a trained glider pilot and what happened next earned a footnote in airline history.

Pearson and First Officer Maurice Quintal calculated the glide potential of the airliner and determined they wouldn't make it to Winnipeg, the nearest airport of any size. Quintal, a former military pilot had served at an abandoned air force base in the small town of Gimli, Manitoba and the numbers, along with a long runway, looked good to both men. Pearson was high and hot on final but side slipped the 767 to a rough but safe landing that collapsed the nose gear but did little damage. The landing intruded on a day at the races for some go cart enthusiasts who were using the abandoned concrete but no one was hurt. The plane was flown away after two days of repairs and remained in uneventful service until Pearson, Quintal and several of the flight attendants on board that day accompanied it on its final flight to California.
 
That is truly awesome. I'd bet that not one passenger from that flight thinks Capt Robert Pearson is overpaid. Too bad stuff like this gets very little airplay.

PIPE
 
That is truly awesome. I'd bet that not one passenger from that flight thinks Capt Robert Pearson is overpaid. Too bad stuff like this gets very little airplay.

PIPE

And if it does get airplay its usually negative!!

Cool story BTW.:beer:
 
That is truly awesome. I'd bet that not one passenger from that flight thinks Capt Robert Pearson is overpaid. Too bad stuff like this gets very little airplay.

PIPE


NO DOUBT!! How easily people forget! Just look at 9/11. TRULY SAD!:(
 
I assure you, at the time, it got LOTS of airplay and was the subject of a TV movie in the mid-nineties with William Devane as the Captain. 25 years later...a footnote.
 
I read a book on it 15 yrs ago. Great story.

JC,
You've never read anything in your life besides "Gay Trucker" magazine!
 
Back around 1999,2000 I flew a mechanic down to Port au Prince to work on an Air Canada plane. Turns out it was the Gimli Glider. I climbed the stairs and walked on board just so I could one day write about it on a pilot web board. Man, I need a hobby!
 

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