United flight hits vehicle while landing
United flight hits vehicle while landing
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Discussion

Jader1973

Original Poster:

4,982 posts

226 months

Monday 4th May
quotequote all
I saw the headline and thought it was another vehicle on the runway / taxiway incident.

It wasn’t - the truck was on a road outside the airport yikes

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cp8p3r8dek1o

Starfighter

5,327 posts

204 months

Monday 4th May
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https://youtu.be/4T4xgvWPtVw?si=O4NKUoBFhpM4QXv0

Some dash cam footage care of Maximus.

interstellar

4,886 posts

172 months

Tuesday 5th May
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he had a lucky escape!

WH16

8,194 posts

244 months

Tuesday 5th May
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Why would they have been flying a circular visual approach?

Assuming no PAPI or ILS cues, how is glideslope maintained and monitored during that kind of approach? Just distance from RWY threshold and height?

Wrong pressure setting perhaps?

smallpaul

2,063 posts

162 months

Tuesday 5th May
quotequote all
The runway seems to have an unusually short displaced threshold.



According to my calculator, if aiming for just beyond the threshold an aircraft would be roughly 12 metres above the roadway on a 3 degrees glide-slope. Assuming the roadway sits on the same level as the runway.

WH16

8,194 posts

244 months

Tuesday 5th May
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Here's the approach from AVherald.

48k

16,855 posts

174 months

Tuesday 5th May
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Not the first aircraft that has been too low in to Newark, probably not the last either.

speedy_thrills

7,853 posts

269 months

Tuesday 5th May
quotequote all
We'll have to wait for the final report here, that truck might have been flying too high.

The insurance company are going to love this:

"Can you describe the vehicle that collided with you, sir?"

KTF

10,561 posts

176 months

Tuesday 5th May
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Captain Steeeve (sic) has put a good video together about it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IZE88BsKwqA

Crumpet

5,170 posts

206 months

Tuesday 5th May
quotequote all
smallpaul said:
The runway seems to have an unusually short displaced threshold.



According to my calculator, if aiming for just beyond the threshold an aircraft would be roughly 12 metres above the roadway on a 3 degrees glide-slope. Assuming the roadway sits on the same level as the runway.
You’d be aiming for the aiming point, which are the big white rectangles 1000 feet down the runway from the threshold. This is where the PAPIs bring you down. This should give you a threshold crossing height of about 50 feet and would mean you *should* be more than 50 feet above the highway / motorway.

It’s not unusual for PAPIs to be out of service, which can be somewhat annoying. But on a visual approach you’d still set up some kind of backup that would give you some vertical profile guidance - like tuning the ILS or loading the last segment of an RNAV approach for the landing runway. I haven’t read too much detail but I assume they were doing the ‘stadium visual’ approach to 29 rather than a circling approach.

At the end of the day an approach like this is going to be hand flown and will often have you turning to final at 2 miles and about 600 feet. You’d never really call them a stable approach and in challenging conditions it’s very easy to find yourself below the vertical profile and with ‘three reds’ on the PAPIs. But that’s why we execute missed approaches and go around for another try. We’ve probably all been there, though, and on most airports you’d get away with three - or even four - reds showing on the PAPIs, just not here.

I’m afraid it’s just another example of practices in the USA that just don’t really go on at major airports elsewhere. The only place you routinely do something like this in Europe is Nice, but you don’t have American ATC pressuring you and it’s done in a fairly orderly fashion.

48k

16,855 posts

174 months

Tuesday 5th May
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Crumpet said:
At the end of the day an approach like this is going to be hand flown and will often have you turning to final at 2 miles and about 600 feet.
How about establishing on final at 375 feet and 1 mile out? laugh





Edited by 48k on Tuesday 5th May 10:44

the tribester

2,872 posts

112 months

Tuesday 5th May
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Didn't the aircraft strike a street light on the highway, that then stuck the vehicle. Still pretty low though.

Crumpet

5,170 posts

206 months

Tuesday 5th May
quotequote all
48k said:
Crumpet said:
At the end of the day an approach like this is going to be hand flown and will often have you turning to final at 2 miles and about 600 feet.
How about establishing on final at 375 feet and 1 mile out? laugh





Edited by 48k on Tuesday 5th May 10:44
Our stabilised criteria for a circling approach used to be 300 feet, so I’d say ‘good job’! biggrin (Funnily enough they changed it to 500 feet because the data wasn’t looking so stable!)


normalbloke

8,668 posts

245 months

Tuesday 5th May
quotequote all
the tribester said:
Didn't the aircraft strike a street light on the highway, that then stuck the vehicle. Still pretty low though.
Truck got hit by the mlg wheels. Aircraft also hit a lighting column that then hit another vehicle (‘jeep’).

CrgT16

2,489 posts

134 months

Tuesday 5th May
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Why didn’t the pilot abort the landing of glide angle, etc was not ideal?

48k

16,855 posts

174 months

Tuesday 5th May
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There's going to be a meeting without tea and biscuits after this.


Crumpet

5,170 posts

206 months

Tuesday 5th May
quotequote all
CrgT16 said:
Why didn t the pilot abort the landing of glide angle, etc was not ideal?
That’s something only the crew will know.

Possible reasons include fatigue (don’t underestimate how tiring long haul flying is and how it affects judgement, decision making and reaction time), weather (sometimes the aircraft just sinks or balloons up), PAPIs inoperative (so limited guidance) and reach all the way to negligence.

Any experienced pilot will have, at some point in their career, continued an approach which they’ve subsequently looked back on and realised they should’ve gone around - I certainly have. Making that call to go around at the end of a 12 hour flight is tougher than you might think, especially if you think you can easily make it in. But we get paid to make that decision, so it should be a no-brainer really. I went around off a couple of unstable approaches last year and there’s always a moment of hesitation where you think ‘it’s fine, I’ve got it’ and consider continuing - maybe that’s what they did here.

MarkwG

5,894 posts

215 months

Tuesday 5th May
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Crumpet said:
That s something only the crew will know.

Possible reasons include fatigue (don t underestimate how tiring long haul flying is and how it affects judgement, decision making and reaction time), weather (sometimes the aircraft just sinks or balloons up), PAPIs inoperative (so limited guidance) and reach all the way to negligence.

Any experienced pilot will have, at some point in their career, continued an approach which they ve subsequently looked back on and realised they should ve gone around - I certainly have. Making that call to go around at the end of a 12 hour flight is tougher than you might think, especially if you think you can easily make it in. But we get paid to make that decision, so it should be a no-brainer really. I went around off a couple of unstable approaches last year and there s always a moment of hesitation where you think it s fine, I've got it and consider continuing - maybe that s what they did here.
I'm pondering whether the outcome would have been much different, even if they had gone around? If the rate of sink markedly increased close in, to the point of a g/a, then perhaps they'd still going down enough to hit whatever they hit anyway, before climbing away.

butchstewie

65,422 posts

236 months

Tuesday 5th May
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normalbloke

8,668 posts

245 months

Tuesday 5th May
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Is it just me, or what with this and the devastating fire at the Warburtons factory there’s a bit of a bread conspiracy going on. Even ‘Dave’ in his chopper has been in on the action..