Indeed. It's called a "brown alert", which is a step up from "red alert".Frank Hipper wrote:That isn't "White Knuckle", that's "Brown Underwear".
Yes. Have experienced some hair-raising cross-wind landings as both passenger and pilot, although I've yet to scrape a wing on the ground.Darth Wong wrote:Can you imagine being a passenger on that plane and experiencing that?
There's worse than that possible, though fortunately such things are very rare.
Either that, or surgical removal of the seat cushion if your rectum has a panic-seizure as opposed to passing out and going limp.The Vortex Empire wrote:I'd need new pants?
Did I hear my name?FSTargetDrone wrote:I suspect Broomstick or one of the other pilots here will be contributing to this thread soon enough, but there can be sudden wind shear effects or "microbursts" happen suddenly, if that is what happened here. There are ways to detect these sorts of events, at least to give some warning, but I don't know the details and will leave it to the experts.
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There are devices to detect things such as low-level windshear, and the more we know about weather the better able we are to predict such things as microbursts, but none of these systems is foolproof. This is why even early training teaches how to deal with sudden wind changes and potential crosswind emergencies. It's also why airplanes are supposed to arrive at their destination with sufficient fuel to make it to an alternate, in case they can't land at the intended place for whatever reason, including high winds.
I think there's a bit of poor judgement here, true, however, in bad weather (and I understand there was storm in the vicinity) conditions can change extremely rapidily, between one airplane landing and the next. Conditions were apparently marginal at best, which descrease the margin of error.lPeregrine wrote:I don't know exactly what the point of no return is on a plane like that, but the pilot should've aborted the landing and tried a better runway. Unless he was just too low to go to full power and climb out of it, that was an incredibly dangerous approach. The wind gusts were moving the plane around enough to make a really hard landing and/or crash if one hit at the wrong time. There's just no reason to force an approach like that, especially when there's a better runway available at the same airport.
So in my (very inexperienced) opinion, that wasn't skill, that was reckless stupidity and a lot of luck. A bit less luck here, and we'd be reading about a crash with no survivors.
I'm not a jet pilot, but I believe Wicked is - my information is that jet engines do not move from low to high power as rapidly as piston engines.- combined with the inertia of such a large mass as an airliner, it can be very difficult to change direction quickly. An airliner is not as maneuverable as a smaller airplane. There is a noticable lag between going to full power and turning a descent into a climb.
Windshear is used as a boogey-man by the media, but all it means is two different air masses are moving in two different directions. This is actually a common occurance - but usually not a violent one. As an example, winds on the ground might be blowing at a compass heading of 200 degrees and several hundred meters above the ground at a heading of 240 - the transition may be gradual, or it may be abrupt. If the winds are moving at similar speeds there is windshear, but not enough to cause a violent effect. Even in the cockpit you might not notice more than a need for a minor course correction. And then there is windshear of the sort that destroys aircraft - it's a spectrum from mild to horrible. By the way - windshear can be on any plane from horizontal to vertical - it can throw you up, down, or to either side.Resinence wrote:It was just a strong crosswind I think, windsheer would have caused a stall or sudden loss of altitude, and a microburst would have shoved it down into the ground or caused a sudden gain in lift (both extremely dangerous). Though I'm sure broomstick will be along soon to tell both of us we are idiots
Gusty conditions and/or turbulence always (in my experience) has a degree of windshear involved, but again, it's usually not severe and is easily handled.. What you're looking at in the video is unquestionably an extreme condition.
I don't know if this is common with pilots of large aircraft, though it wouldn't surprise me - on final, pilots of my sort will often move all the controls more than strictly necessary for compensating for wind both to make sure that all controls are working properly, but also because the way the airplane reacts can give information about local conditions and how the machine is reacting. That may or may not be what you're seeing at that point in the approach. Or it could have been difficulty in managing the approach - I can't tell from looking at it. It could even be some of both.Arthur_Tuxedo wrote: We must have been watching different videos. I saw the plane make huge lateral movements near the beginning of the video, well before it got dangerously close to the ground. The pilot should have aborted the attempt right there.
In theory, the pilot has the right to refuse to land on a runway and to request a different one (assuming there is another one at the airport). Personally, I wouldn't hesistate to do so, or even go to another airport. However, in the US we have many, many more airports than any similar sized location in Europe, making diversion easier. Also, ATC in Europe is different - my information is that pilots are typically charged every single time the wheels touch pavement, whether a full-stop landing or not, and possibly for things such as each approach, go-around, whatever - in the US, even at a place like O'Hare, the landing fee is just for an actual landing, not for an approach. These fees are triple or even four-digit sums whether you're talking dollars, pounds, or euros. I prefer to believe that financial factors were not at play here, but I'd be a fool not to at least consider the option. Airlines don't like to their pilots to do go-arounds, because even without fees that's fuel that has to be burned and fuel is money. A lot of money. Of course, airlines like it even less when the airplane crash, which is why they put up with go-arounds - even at thousands of dollar/pounds/euros they're still cheaper than a crash.
So yeah, between schedules and money pilots are definitely under pressure to land it quickly and to it the first approach. Even at my level of aviation you get this pressure. With the airlines it's orders of magnitude worse.
Yep, they can! Sometimes we do it delibrately, for fun (but not too close to the ground)Darth Servo wrote:Damn, never knew planes could fly sideways.
See, that bothered me a great deal - here in the Chicago area, which is noted for wind activity, even the big airports shut down around 45 knots of wind, crosswind or no. For the metric types, 45 knots is 83 kph and 48 knots is 89 kph. It is certainly possible to fly in higher winds (I know a couple pilots who landed a Piper Cherokee, a small four-seater, in a 55 knot/102 kph headwind - yes, another "brown" experience I was happy not to be a part of) but the risk goes up considerably.Spin Echo wrote:I've been reading a pilots forum and the crosswind was 48 knots! The pilot really should have been using his superior judgement to avoid having to use his superior skills and requested another runway.
I have to agree with Wicked - although the pilot made a good recovery there was some bad judgement here. If the wind is 48 knots and the runway is perpendicular to the wind ask for another runway BEFORE attempting to land. And for Og's sake, don't screw up the touchdown!Wicked Pilot wrote:The pilot made a very basic error, he didn't keep his crosswind correction in throughout the landing roll. Instead it appears he removed it right after the main landing gear touched down. Just because you have contact with the surface it doesn't mean you don't need to still 'fly the airplane'. On most days doing that sort of fuckup just means you roll down the runway leaning slightly, with this sort of wind it means a wingtip striking the pavement.
Instead of being called 'hero', the pilot should instead be refered to as 'first officer' for a few weeks.
It was beat into my head from day one if the airplane is moving at all consider it flying. Think about driving your car down the road on a day with strong, gusty winds - you can feel the effects on the vehicle, some rocking back and forth, headwind/tailwind. This effect is MUCH greater in an airplane. Wind gusts can, and have, flipped over airplanes taxiing at low speed. Back in the 1990's in my area a business jet was flipped over on take-off due to a gust of wind - actually, conditions not too disimilar from what is seen in the linked video. Except that in that case the wingtip dug in, the airplane cartwheeled, and everybody died. Maybe that's what bothered me most about that video - I've seen the aftereffects of what happens when an airplane wing digs in at those speeds in real life.
Wicked Pilot wrote:And we can reasonably assume the crosswinds where within the aircraft's operating limits or dispatch would have sent the jet somewhere else.
I don't know how the airlines make their rules, but when I'm planning to land I use the upper gust limit, not the speed without the gust. You can't count on the elements cooperating and playing nice while you're landing.Spin Echo wrote: I can't say I know the crosswind limitations personally, but the pilots over on PPRuNe say the A320 has a crosswind limit of 33 gusting 38 knots. The METAR at the time put the crosswind components at 31 gusting 48 knots. So technically underlimit... if you don't get a gust of wind.
I will also mention that many airplanes CAN handle a crosswind component above the demonstrated crosswind component (that figure means a trained test pilot in a new airplane managed that degree of crosswind without a crash - it's up to the manufacturer if they want to push the limit during testing or not). However, that's not fun, not at all, would probably scare the shit out of a non-pilot (and probably a lot of actual pilots) and is really getting quite foolish. You don't want a foolish person in the cockpit. That limit is typically set low enough to give you some margin of error, not to allow you to go all the way up to the ultimate limit.
Remember that Wicked flies for the US Air Force - it's a different world compared to either private pilots or the airlines. Me, I often land at fields that don't have towers and my weather information is either from a tower located at some distance, an automated unit at the field (which may or may not be well positioned) and may be old, or, on occassion, my own judgement based on how the corn in the fields is blowing. Back in my ultralight days we'd sometimes carry streamers attached to and wound around clothespins - over a field with no weather reporting you toss one of those down and observe how it falls. I doubt anything that primative was being used, but there is the possibility of equipment not being in working order, misspeaking by a controller, or various other things. Which is why incidents like this are investigated. If the pilot screwd up that's one thing - if the weather machinery or the tower are issuing bad weather reports that's a possibly on-going problem.Spin Echo wrote:I wish I had your faith in the Tower.Wicked Pilot wrote:What tower was calling at the time is what really matters.
Old aviation "joke" - how is ATC and being a pilot the same?Wicked Pilot wrote:ATC in North America and Europe is top notch, but by god it's not their lives in they fuck up.
If the pilot fucks up, the pilot dies.
If ATC fucks up, the pilot dies.