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Strangest/funny reason's you have refused an aircraft

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Headfake14

646 3A
Joined
Aug 6, 2004
Posts
821
All this funk in the industry lately...thought we could use a break.

So...many moons ago. I was an ATR-72 captain at ASA.

FO says there is lav juice all over the rear of the underside. I take a look, sure enough, from the aft nav light it a light/dark blue color all the way to the gear bay...which is highly unusual for the lav stains to be that far fwd. FAs, at the same time, tell me of a strong bad smell in the cabin.

Enter MTC...we open some access panels on the gear bay and about vomited instaneously...the smell was SO strong. After catching our breath and allowing the bay to vent...we could see where about a 5 inch deep pool of lav fluid had been due to the dry "water line" all over the inside belly.

NO WAY was I flying this thing...it was rancid. The Deltamatic showed reason for A/C refusal was "BAD ODOR". haha. It didn't fly for days except to MCN to get cleaned out...bad possibility of corrosion from the lav fluid. A seal on the blue juice tank failed.
 
Had the same thing happen to me in a Saab circa 2004. The lav service peeps refilled with waaay too much blue juice and it overflowed everywhere. into the belly, soaked carpet around lav, etc. took a while for MX to rinse her out...
 
I was given a 727 once that had a removed engine. Nothing in the logs about it. It was just not on the plane. So i wrote it up "left engine missing". It took 2 days for mx to figure out why and where the engine is.
 
The SF-340 Emergency Exits over the wings will fit in either L or R window, but the handles point the wrong way - and the paint doesn't match. Supposedly the handles could try to weathervane open.

Refused two planes for that li'l gotcha.
 
On a Beech 1900, maintenance had swapped the knobs on the ends of the prop and condition levers. Did the whole run-up, but couldn't figure out for a few minutes why the throttle quadrant didn't seem "right."

Whoops...
 
From CLT to LGA in a CRJ 900. No FD, No auto pilot, one radio MELed, Vertical speed mode inop, FMS inop, GPWS inop. But hey it was airworthy according to the regs. The next crew also refused the bird. In the ultimate game of pass the buck dispatch switched us into theirs and vice versa. The CP called the next crew and said why did you refuse to fly an airworthy plane? Turns out that he had also refused the same bird 3 days earlier and sent it to the hangar. He didn’t realize that it was the same bird until they started discussing the problems. He called maintenance and it went back to the hangar.
 
We refused an aircraft because the F/O saw a mouse in the cockpit during preflight. Upon closer inspection by maint, the mouse family was found to be living in the rear E&E compartment, along with a few kids and peanuts.
 
Just a relayed story I was told by the guy who was a captain on the flight. A B747 in Hawaii (cargo) was getting ready for its flight to the East.

They notice a quick movement down on the floor and damn if it wasn't a tarantula scurrying. They beat feet and called Mx. Maintenance came out and chased it up the footwell, where it disappeared.

Now it's time to go. They had an eight or ten hour flight ahead of them and no sign of the spider. They ended up going back and forth with Mx control, but finally sucked it up and headed out across the ocean, probably with their feet suspended in the air the whole way.
 
Summer time Kansas City Air Midwest Beech 1900D + cargo load of fish that leaked badly into the belly of the airplane = :puke:

It was finally taken out of service and power washed out.
 
Rampers pumped about 15 gallons of blue juice into a emb 140 lav without even dumping it first. Capacity is about 4 gallons if memory serves. The whole rear of the airplane was flooded, complete with turds sailing down the aisle!! :puke:
 
Tiller installed backwards. took me 30 minutes to figure out what was wrong with it. My hand felt very funny on it. Finally had to go look at another airplane to make sure i wasnt crazy
 
Got in a CRJ in the summer of '04, my F/O is a 20-something girl, somewhat quiet but pleasant, flew with her before. Suddenly she SHRIEKS and is out of the cockpit faster than I knew was possible without an ejection handle on the seat.

I'm freaking, looking for the poisonous snake or other equally offensive item, poised to bolt myself, and I see...

A bumblebee.

She's allergic. Deathly allergic. I kill the stupid thing with the QRH, she comes back in after I promise it's dead... and ANOTHER one crawls out of the space in between her rear window and the overhead.

Reason for refused plane: unknown numbers of bumblebees making home behind overhead panel.

Base manager calls, "You're refusing the plane for WHAT?" After I explain to him the allergy issues of my F/O and the consequences of having 3 or 4 bumblebees starting to attack you 20 kts prior to V1, he backed off. Maintenance took 3 hours to come out, pull the entire upper panel down, and killed almost a dozen of the little suckers...
 
From CLT to LGA in a CRJ 900. No FD, No auto pilot, one radio MELed, Vertical speed mode inop, FMS inop, GPWS inop. But hey it was airworthy according to the regs. The next crew also refused the bird. In the ultimate game of pass the buck dispatch switched us into theirs and vice versa. The CP called the next crew and said why did you refuse to fly an airworthy plane? Turns out that he had also refused the same bird 3 days earlier and sent it to the hangar. He didn’t realize that it was the same bird until they started discussing the problems. He called maintenance and it went back to the hangar.

That's classic.
 
I was given a 727 once that had a removed engine. Nothing in the logs about it. It was just not on the plane. So i wrote it up "left engine missing". It took 2 days for mx to figure out why and where the engine is.


LOL...THAT...is awesome. :laugh:
 
MD80 last flt out ORD to LGA, on taxi out the FA calls the cockpit, "we have a problem, you need to come back here". We pull off into the penalty box and the FA's gang up on me, 10 or so pax are complaining, they tell me that they want off the aircraft, unless one of the pax is removed. I ask what he had done, they answer nothing, but he STINKS!

I laugh and then walk back to take a wiff, the dude is pungent to say the least. He smells foul and he knows it. I sit down next to him and ask what the deal is. Turns out that he was on a hunting trip deep in the woods with the boys and a skunk came by and pissed all over his gear (clothes included). He is on a connecting flt (no place to wash clothes and gear). It a Sunday night and he needs to be at work in the morning. He smells like he was the skunk, he's embarrassed and asks what he can do.

I tell him to move to the last row, tell the FA's that they don't have to serve him and move all the pax as far forward as possible. A few squawk but when they find out it's the hotel or home because their are no more flts and I am about to time out, they back off. Did I mention that it was the last leg of a 3 day sequence for me.
 
Pax boards and take a huge steamer in the lav right behind the cockpit. Our eyes are watering and we're holding our breath. Station says they can't do a lav service. Not only that but the log wouldn't flush. Captain states he will not take the aircraft like this and gets off so he can breath - followed closely by his F/O. Finally, this ramp supervisor dons a glove and a "Thank You" bag and retrieves the offending article by hand. After a few minutes, the fog cleared and we departed.
 
Strangest/funny reason's you have refused an aircraft

'Cause Airlines suck and I didn't feel like going to work!
 
Wasn't me, but a few years ago at XJT, we supposedly had a ramper connect the A/C to the lav service valve, blowing blue juice and chunks all over the lav and the rear part of the cabin. Now I sounds to good to be true to me since the connections are different sizes, but I wouldn't put anything past a ramper.
 

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