bjammin,
What is the big deal about diverting?!
I would say we have at least 1 PAX a quarter die during a TransPac and we will aboslutly divert to ANC or Japan depending on the direction of flight, no big deal.
while I agree that several passengers die a year on the transpac operations, and aircraft are diverted, they are not "declared dead" on the aircaft. If they are and you divert, your duty day isn't long enough to continue the flight with the ensuing headaches, thus the "they died on the jetbridge" ploy. an excersize in semantics, I agree, but an important one. Ask your captain, or your dispatcher, or when you go back to recurrent.
You wind up putting em in a forward or aft galley (or in some aircraft lower level galleys, you don't leave next to the pax) But actually dead on the flight is a show stopper if actually divert. When it happens, (the crew was already dumping fuel when the doctor onboard declared em for example) its a trip to the hotel in ANC after you finally get released and either everyone waits or a new crew is flown out... Which ever can be done faster
Furthermore, 747s and 777s have the ability to dump fuel to avoid an overweight landing. Most other aircraft do not.
This is directly from boeing on overwieght landings.
Overweight landing
inspection requirements
The Boeing airplane maintenance manual (AMM )
provides a special inspection that is required any
time an overweight landing occurs, regardless of
how smooth the landing. The AMM inspection is
provided in two parts. The Phase I (or A-check)
conditional inspection looks for obvious signs of
structural distress, such as wrinkled skin, popped
fasteners, or bent components in areas which are
readily accessible. If definite signs of overstressing
are found, the Phase II (or B-check) inspection
must be performed. This is a much more detailed
inspection and requires opening access panels
to examine critical structural components. The
Phase I or A-check conditional inspection can
typically be accomplished in two to four labor
hours.
Remember that you have duty day limitations, assuming a mechanic is ready to start a minimum 2 hour inspection before you leave, and the trouble with doing this inspection while the aircraft is in a custom's quarantine state.
So once again, who is ignorant J32?
Cheers
Wino