414Flyer
Down with Chemtrails!
- Joined
- Jan 20, 2002
- Posts
- 4,948
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I don't consider continuing an approach in "severe" icing conditions a way to exit those conditions.
Again, I wasn't in their cockpit; I question whether the conditions were actually severe based on my standards--highly subjective obviously.
The conditions covered a very small part of the atmosphere, very difficult for me to see how severe icing could have occurred. Maybe the CL65 ices up differently from a 1900 though.
I think we have a winner.One time on an approach we encountered some pretty bad Vanilla Ice. Nasty stuff. It can slice like a ninja and cut like a razor blade so fast..other captains say "daaaamn". But I just kept my composure and the ice kicked loosed, magnatized by the heat while I kicked in the juice. Yo Denver approach...lets get outta here. Word to your mother. Ice ice baby too cold, too cold....
Anyone heard of going missed? It is this procedure where you set go around thrust, ensure spoilers are in, set flaps 8 and climb like your life depended on it. It works real well if either pilot is close to the ground and has to exceed normal bank angles to get the landing gear over a paved surface.
This isn't an icing incident. This is an inexperience incident. There are many people who are now coming into this job who have never seen any ice, let alone severe icing and who really have no idea how to deal with it. First, an extra 5 or 10 knots (providing you are landing at a long runway) is a good idea. Hand flying the approach so you have a better feel for what the aircraft is doing is a good idea. Having the more experienced (on this case, less inexperienced pilot) fly an approach to minimums in icing conditions is a good idea. Considering another destination is also a good idea.
In almost 6,000 hours I've only seen icing on the severe side of moderate twice. Going slow always makes it worse, particularly in the RJ. My experience is that severe icing is hard to find in the real world and easy to get away from. Like thunderstorms, you learn to recognize the characteristics and take action to avoid the hazardous condition. Waiting 15 minutes can make all the difference.
Now days that longevity and experience are considered a bad thing at SkyWest (at least the ASA division of SkyWest) there are few who have seen any hazardous icing conditions and few Instructor Pilots who know enough about the stuff to teach their students how to deal with it. Only a few of the experienced IP's at my airline fully understand how important it is to stay on profile, most have never considered how ice is kept off the fan.
The sad fact is that airlines will continue hiring with 200 / 50 and upgrading IP's with only 1,000 hours in the aircraft, while trying to chase away the IP's with almost 20,000 hours total time & and a little uncommon sense. In my opinion this report really highlights the dangers of inexperienced crews out flying together.
In Comair 5191 the experienced guys get on the airplane focused on finding another job. In other incidents we read about inexperience like this nearly leading to a crash. Wouldn't it be nice if this was a profession where pilots flying airline passengers were paid reasonably and their experience appreciated by management?
I'm not criticizing these pilots, they apparently did not know any better. I am asking if this would have happened with a more experienced crew and I think we all know the answer.
If the ice in DEN was as bad as these other posters act like it was - yes. But it wasn't.
I like where this thread is going. It's pretty much all over the place and we've covered a few of the standard flightinfo issues. I actually have a serious question though.
The CRJ doesn't have a whole lot of surface area available to pilots to determine the severity if icing conditions. It has the "ICE" warning on the EICAS the windshield wipers and not much else. I've never flown the -200, but you sure can't see much on the wing tips in the -700. In addition, the controls are hydraulic and provide an artificial feel that makes it impossible to determine anything about the flying characteristics of the aircraft other than the fact that it's out of trim. Bottom line, the only guidance you really have is to turn the cowl anti-ice in precipitation (including clouds) when the TAT is -10 or below, to turn the wings on in the same conditions below 230 KIAS, and to turn everything on when "ICE" is annunciated. My company (Comair) teaches that you can detect supercooled large droplets (SLD, aka severe icing) by the presence of ice on the side windows. I have only seen this once, which was in the descent into CVG somewhere over Indiana. We reported it, got the fudge out of there, and didn't think much of it other than it was quite rare.
SLD on approach is a different story. I'd still want to "get the fudge out of there", but heading toward the ground doesn't seem like the best option at that point. Which leads me to my question. Do other companies teach about SLD and how to identify it? I would suspect that every company has a winter weather course, what kind of stuff is covered?
Oh yeah, I almost forgot. Mesa sucks! Ha!