Resolute Bay Accident - Pilots Discussion Thread
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Re: Resolute Bay Accident - Pilots Discussion Thread
@ Nutbutter
Those failsafe systems are standard even in the new NG aircraft...nothing to be alarmed about.
Those failsafe systems are standard even in the new NG aircraft...nothing to be alarmed about.
Re: Resolute Bay Accident - Pilots Discussion Thread
Did they find the black boxes ?
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Re: Resolute Bay Accident - Pilots Discussion Thread
Yes.2R wrote:Did they find the black boxes ?
Re: Resolute Bay Accident - Pilots Discussion Thread
Yes... Information available from the TSB: First Air Accident, Resolute Bay, Nunavut, 20 August 2011 - A11H00022R wrote:Did they find the black boxes ?
Re: Resolute Bay Accident - Pilots Discussion Thread
Is it true that the military was asking them several times for radial and DME information during descent. Could explain how the VOR could be tuned and perhaps quite late into their arrival. Maybe even after a checklist calls for whether your radios are set.
Re: Resolute Bay Accident - Pilots Discussion Thread
it was already stated that the dme and radial info can be taken off the fms without being tuned in on the Nav's.
Two good/popular theories from the information we have.
1. A botched circling
2. Tracking VOR instead of ILS
Both theories require the stars to align for this accident to happen though, it's hard to imagine either scenario playing out the way it did under normal circumstances. Perhaps normal circumstances/operations weren't going on at that point in the approach (an emergency or abnormal operation that contributed)?
I personally can't see why else you would be that far off track on an ILS approach, assuming the equipment was fine.
As to what was going on in the cockpit, without the recorder information its educated guess work at best, mostly by people that don't fly the hardware or the company SOP's (myself included). I think this topic has been beat to death and it will be interesting to see if one of these was the cause or if its something completely different.
Not much else to do at this point but sit and wait for a press release or leak.
Good investigation work guys
Two good/popular theories from the information we have.
1. A botched circling
2. Tracking VOR instead of ILS
Both theories require the stars to align for this accident to happen though, it's hard to imagine either scenario playing out the way it did under normal circumstances. Perhaps normal circumstances/operations weren't going on at that point in the approach (an emergency or abnormal operation that contributed)?
I personally can't see why else you would be that far off track on an ILS approach, assuming the equipment was fine.
As to what was going on in the cockpit, without the recorder information its educated guess work at best, mostly by people that don't fly the hardware or the company SOP's (myself included). I think this topic has been beat to death and it will be interesting to see if one of these was the cause or if its something completely different.
Not much else to do at this point but sit and wait for a press release or leak.
Good investigation work guys
Re: Resolute Bay Accident - Pilots Discussion Thread
+1 Aurora. Good post!
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Re: Resolute Bay Accident - Pilots Discussion Thread
They have the ILS on the wrong runway!! It should be on the other end, so when the wind is off the water and being forced upslope, creating low ceilings and visibilities, you will atleast be landing into the wind. Therefore not requiring the circling approach.
Re: Resolute Bay Accident - Pilots Discussion Thread
There is rising ground on the north end; it is unsuitable for an ILS approach. Also, the wind prevails from the North & Northwest there, so most of the time, the approach will be into wind, particularly thru the winter.
Yellowknife & Iqaluit have the same issue - when the wind comes off the water in seasonal changes, you have an upslope fog combined with a downwind landing. You simply have to deal with it as best you can.
Heavy jets don't like circling; in fact many 705 SOPs either prohibit it, or they have company circling limits that are so high above the straight-in minima that it makes it more feasible to approach straight in from the other end.
Yellowknife & Iqaluit have the same issue - when the wind comes off the water in seasonal changes, you have an upslope fog combined with a downwind landing. You simply have to deal with it as best you can.
Heavy jets don't like circling; in fact many 705 SOPs either prohibit it, or they have company circling limits that are so high above the straight-in minima that it makes it more feasible to approach straight in from the other end.
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Re: Resolute Bay Accident - Pilots Discussion Thread
aurora wrote:
If the VOR wasn't tuned up, and they weren't circling, then maybe the avionics shit the bed at the wrong time, or perhaps runaway trim or something on short final.
Any 737-200 drivers care to share their theories?
Not sure if you've ever flown something with electric trim, but a runaway event does't put you one mile abeam the runway when you're allegedly flying a LOC or ILS approach.
Re: Resolute Bay Accident - Pilots Discussion Thread
"There is rising ground on the north end; it is unsuitable for an ILS approach.........."
What part or section of TP-308 - Criterial for the design of instrument approach procedures do you base your statement on....... I will give you a hint, Volume 3.............
What part or section of TP-308 - Criterial for the design of instrument approach procedures do you base your statement on....... I will give you a hint, Volume 3.............
Re: Resolute Bay Accident - Pilots Discussion Thread
Have you been there?
I know nothing about TP-308, and my comment wasn't based on those criteria. You would get (I think) GPWS warnings if the ILS approach was on the North end.
I know nothing about TP-308, and my comment wasn't based on those criteria. You would get (I think) GPWS warnings if the ILS approach was on the North end.
Re: Resolute Bay Accident - Pilots Discussion Thread
That(TP-308) is what is used to design IAPs, being there makes no difference until the flyability flight check to confirm/revise/re-draw the procedure. There are so many variables into designs and associated terrain issue........ just suggesting.
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Re: Resolute Bay Accident - Pilots Discussion Thread
The accident aircraft, as far as I can remember, had no FMS, nor a GPWS. If the crew were getting requests for a radial/dme, they could have used the GPS for that info, or dialed in the VOR
http://www.airliners.net/photo/First-Ai ... 0651ae27a3
I think that panel on the captain's side is not an FMS but a GPS.
The overhead panel:
http://www.airliners.net/photo/First-Ai ... 9a9d1152bd
Note that in the top left corner the ability the switch to have a free gyro or slaved to magnetic.
For those of you who haven't realized, these 2 photos are from the actual accident aircraft, C-GNWN.
In my mind it's entirely possible the VOR was tuned in, thinking they had the ILS frequency up. Especially with the knowledge that the military was asking for radials/DME bearings prior to the crash.
How often have we all made a late change to the plan when something is thrown at us last minute? By that I mean, if I had an ILS tuned in, or thought I had, and once on the approach I had a G/S flag, it would be a fast and easy brief to re-brief for the LOC only approach and continue to the higher minumums(especially in an environment such as the Arctic airports)...if that was the case here, the LOC only minimums still would have put them into a hill if they were tracking the VOR.
Very, very insidious indeed.
Now top that off with no GPWS and whammo, you now have a whole bunch of links into the accident chain.
http://www.airliners.net/photo/First-Ai ... 0651ae27a3
I think that panel on the captain's side is not an FMS but a GPS.
The overhead panel:
http://www.airliners.net/photo/First-Ai ... 9a9d1152bd
Note that in the top left corner the ability the switch to have a free gyro or slaved to magnetic.
For those of you who haven't realized, these 2 photos are from the actual accident aircraft, C-GNWN.
In my mind it's entirely possible the VOR was tuned in, thinking they had the ILS frequency up. Especially with the knowledge that the military was asking for radials/DME bearings prior to the crash.
How often have we all made a late change to the plan when something is thrown at us last minute? By that I mean, if I had an ILS tuned in, or thought I had, and once on the approach I had a G/S flag, it would be a fast and easy brief to re-brief for the LOC only approach and continue to the higher minumums(especially in an environment such as the Arctic airports)...if that was the case here, the LOC only minimums still would have put them into a hill if they were tracking the VOR.
Very, very insidious indeed.
Now top that off with no GPWS and whammo, you now have a whole bunch of links into the accident chain.
Last edited by Jastapilot on Thu Sep 15, 2011 1:38 pm, edited 2 times in total.
Re: Resolute Bay Accident - Pilots Discussion Thread
This is starting to make a little more sense, because on the track they appeared to be on, they would have passed right over a high hill and that would have almost certainly triggered a GPWS warning.Jastapilot wrote:The accident aircraft, as far as I can remember, had no FMS, nor a GPWS.
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Re: Resolute Bay Accident - Pilots Discussion Thread
it's also a 7 year old picture.Jastapilot wrote: For those of you who haven't realized, these 2 photos are from the actual accident aircraft, C-GNWN.
Re: Resolute Bay Accident - Pilots Discussion Thread
Isn't GPWS mandatory on 705 machines?
Re: Resolute Bay Accident - Pilots Discussion Thread
NWN had an FMS and a GPWS.Jastapilot wrote:The accident aircraft, as far as I can remember, had no FMS, nor a GPWS. If the crew were getting requests for a radial/dme, they could have used the GPS for that info, or dialed in the VOR
http://www.airliners.net/photo/First-Ai ... 0651ae27a3
I think that panel on the captain's side is not an FMS but a GPS.
The overhead panel:
http://www.airliners.net/photo/First-Ai ... 9a9d1152bd
Note that in the top left corner the ability the switch to have a free gyro or slaved to magnetic.
For those of you who haven't realized, these 2 photos are from the actual accident aircraft, C-GNWN.
In my mind it's entirely possible the VOR was tuned in, thinking they had the ILS frequency up. Especially with the knowledge that the military was asking for radials/DME bearings prior to the crash.
How often have we all made a late change to the plan when something is thrown at us last minute? By that I mean, if I had an ILS tuned in, or thought I had, and once on the approach I had a G/S flag, it would be a fast and easy brief to re-brief for the LOC only approach and continue to the higher minumums(especially in an environment such as the Arctic airports)...if that was the case here, the LOC only minimums still would have put them into a hill if they were tracking the VOR.
Very, very insidious indeed.
Now top that off with no GPWS and whammo, you now have a whole bunch of links into the accident chain.
Re: Resolute Bay Accident - Pilots Discussion Thread
You can clearly see the GPWS panel on the lower left side of the F/O instrument panel.