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Superpilots Fly 5000 Miles on Three Engines

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Any 747 Cargodogs or UAL drivers out there care to comment?

Edit: I see what I did! Guilty as charged! I forgot to mention GL sacred airline (NWA). I can feel his wrath already ...
 
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A single engine failure in a 4 engine plane is an abnormal, not an emergency. At least in the 400, there is no provision in the QRH to land at the nearest suitable airport.
 
A single engine failure in a 4 engine plane is an abnormal, not an emergency. At least in the 400, there is no provision in the QRH to land at the nearest suitable airport.

I love to watch the experts expound on things that they have no clue about. It's the main charm of FI!
 
I love to watch the experts expound on things that they have no clue about. It's the main charm of FI!

Are you disputing the factual information I have provided or disputing everyone who complained about a crew doing something completely legal and safe?
 
Unless you've flown an airplane with 3 or more engines, you're probably unaware of FAR 121.565(b):

121.565 Engine inoperative: Landing;
reporting.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph
(b) of this section, whenever an airplane
engine fails or whenever an engine
is shutdown to prevent possible
damage, the pilot in command must
land the airplane at the nearest suitable
airport, in point of time, at which
a safe landing can be made.
(b) If not more than one engine of an
airplane that has three or more engines
fails or is shut down to prevent possible
damage, the pilot-in-command
may proceed to an airport that the
pilot selects if, after considering the
following, the pilot makes a reasonable
decision that proceeding to that airport
is as safe as landing at the nearest
suitable airport:
(1) The nature of the malfunction and
the possible mechanical difficulties
that may occur if flight is continued.
(2) The altitude, weight, and useable
fuel at the time that the engine is
shutdown.
(3) The weather conditions en route
and at possible landing points.
(4) The air traffic congestion.
(5) The kind of terrain.
(6) His familiarity with the airport to
be used.

(c) The pilot-in-command must report
each engine shutdown in flight to
the appropriate communication facility
as soon as practicable and must
keep that facility fully informed of the
progress of the flight.
(d) If the pilot in command lands at
an airport other than the nearest suitable
airport, in point of time, he or she
shall (upon completing the trip) send a
written report, in duplicate, to his or
her director of operations stating the
reasons for determining that the selection
of an airport, other than the nearest
airport, was as safe a course of action
as landing at the nearest suitable
airport. The director of operations
shall, within 10 days after the pilot returns
to his or her home base, send a
copy of this report with the director of
operation?s comments to the certificate-
holding district office.
 
Are you disputing the factual information I have provided or disputing everyone who complained about a crew doing something completely legal and safe?

I was disputing everyone else. The ignorance from some of these self proclaimed professionals is staggering.
 
The beauty of ignorance, is that there is a chance it can be corrected with education. ;)



X
 
B-52 copilot: "Hey, we just lost an engine!"

Aircraft Commander: "You woke me up just for that?"


Old joke:

There's a story about the military pilot calling for a priority landing, because his single-engine jet fighter was running "a bit peaked". Air Traffic Control told the fighter jock that he was number two, behind a B-52 that had one engine shut down.
"Ah", the fighter pilot remarked, "The dreaded Seven-Engine approach".
 

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