Moderators: richierich, ua900, PanAm_DC10, hOMSaR
BWIAirport wrote:How common are commercial jet ops at non-towered airports in the US? I can't think of many besides HDN.
BWIAirport wrote:How common are commercial jet ops at non-towered airports in the US? I can't think of many besides HDN.
BWIAirport wrote:How common are commercial jet ops at non-towered airports in the US? I can't think of many besides HDN.
joeblow10 wrote:What’s really puzzling is how both aircraft should have been IFR and even at an untowered airport, this should never have happened, unless there was some major mix up in ATC/void/clearance instructions.
What seems most likely - is that the B6 crew frantically departed (and hit something or runway), the 350 did not spot them and therefore never reported anything, and the B6 crew was trying to keep it hush hush. I seriously doubt ATC cleared an opposite direction departure by mistake for B6, but I guess nothing is impossible
phatfarmlines wrote:joeblow10 wrote:What’s really puzzling is how both aircraft should have been IFR and even at an untowered airport, this should never have happened, unless there was some major mix up in ATC/void/clearance instructions.
What seems most likely - is that the B6 crew frantically departed (and hit something or runway), the 350 did not spot them and therefore never reported anything, and the B6 crew was trying to keep it hush hush. I seriously doubt ATC cleared an opposite direction departure by mistake for B6, but I guess nothing is impossible
Even in IFR, B6 would have to declare takeoff intentions on the common frequency for non-towered opps? Maybe they had the wrong frequency?
joeblow10 wrote:phatfarmlines wrote:joeblow10 wrote:What’s really puzzling is how both aircraft should have been IFR and even at an untowered airport, this should never have happened, unless there was some major mix up in ATC/void/clearance instructions.
What seems most likely - is that the B6 crew frantically departed (and hit something or runway), the 350 did not spot them and therefore never reported anything, and the B6 crew was trying to keep it hush hush. I seriously doubt ATC cleared an opposite direction departure by mistake for B6, but I guess nothing is impossible
Even in IFR, B6 would have to declare takeoff intentions on the common frequency for non-towered opps? Maybe they had the wrong frequency?
You’d be surprised how often airline crews mess something up on untowered comms - or at the very least, make it unclear what they’re trying to say. For many, it’s been many years since they ever had to do anything of the sort. And legally, unless there is some 121 specific rule I don’t know about, they don’t have to say anything at all.
BWIAirport wrote:How common are commercial jet ops at non-towered airports in the US? I can't think of many besides HDN.
BWIAirport wrote:How common are commercial jet ops at non-towered airports in the US? I can't think of many besides HDN.
BWIAirport wrote:How common are commercial jet ops at non-towered airports in the US? I can't think of many besides HDN.
ytib wrote:In looking at ASRS there was almost a similar situation about a year ago at HDN. ACN: 1784371
"Event happened at Yampa Valley Colorado. Contributing factors were a weather pause for both incoming and outgoing traffic. As we were trying to take off Denver Center was trying to sequence arrivals and departures. The aircraft in front of us was cleared to take off by Denver Center. We were asked if we could take off and be airborne within 90 seconds due to an inbound aircraft. We had an aircraft in sight and believed that to be the aircraft which we were cleared in front of. Contributing factor was Pilot in command was on ATC frequency but not on CTAF frequency. First officer was on both frequencies, but VFR aircraft was not transmitting position in pattern. As we took the runway and began our takeoff roll, chatter on the CTAF frequency alerted us to the traffic conflict. First Officer began giving vectors to Pilot Flying to avoid possible conflict. Due to being on takeoff roll we did not have visual on conflict aircraft. After getting airborne and getting in a safe flight configuration we took a slight left turn to displace ourselves from the TCAS information. We did not receive an RA likely because we were too low. Situational Awareness of Pilot Flying was increased dramatically once on both frequencies. Both pilots were under the impression clearance to depart was given with the aircraft we had in view to be the called traffic."
Passenger on plane
By Tangela Byrd on Thursday, Jan 27th 2022 05:02Z
I was a passenger on this aircraft. Being seated in the back of the plane this was a very frightening and horrific experience for myself, husband, 2 sons, granddaughter, and pregnant daughter in law. We felt the hit and was actually filming our granddaughter and how much fun she was having flying at 2.5 years old, when the tail strike happened. We knew something abnormal happened but had to wait 20 minutes for anyone to say anything. The pilot then told us it was an air strike due to avoiding collision with another aircraft. When told we were going to Denver to have the plane checked out, our anxiety intensified while we were flying in a plane with no idea the damage we had! Upon departing at Denver, no one checked to see if anyone needed medical attention. After all, this was more than a bump on the runway. There was no one from Jet Blue at Denver and when calling Jet Blue, no one could give us an estimated time before our next flight. We sat at Denver Airport over 9 hours.
N766UA wrote:If it was IFR, then one of those airplanes should not have been doing what they were doing. Given the positively massive number of mindblowing, boneheaded, downright dangerous things I’ve seen GA do over the years… I’m lookin’ at you, King Air.
That said, there isn’t a lot of info here. The report you cited doesn’t even mention a “near-miss” like your title suggests. In fact it seems to dismiss it.
TWA902fly wrote:I have to say this all isn't quite adding up. There seem to be two events that are being connected by speculation on this board and on AvHerald. We have no proof that the tail-strike and near-miss were related to each other. Was the tail-strike really an "avoidance maneuver", or just something that happened at the same time? Likely that the two events added a lot to the crew's workload. It will be interesting to see the root causes which I am sure will come out after investigation and interviews with the crew.
And based on that video - the above post saying that the crew might not have felt the tail strike I find odd, but don't discount 100%. That was a decent shake. Perhaps they did the same thing the QR aircraft did in MIA? AA at JFK? Pretend it didn't happen? Maybe the KingAir that landed on the runway at HDN after them saw some debris? On the trackers it looks like they were past DEN to the east by the time they elected to divert.
Either way, a lot of unanswered questions.
'902
BlueBaller wrote:TWA902fly wrote:I have to say this all isn't quite adding up. There seem to be two events that are being connected by speculation on this board and on AvHerald. We have no proof that the tail-strike and near-miss were related to each other. Was the tail-strike really an "avoidance maneuver", or just something that happened at the same time? Likely that the two events added a lot to the crew's workload. It will be interesting to see the root causes which I am sure will come out after investigation and interviews with the crew.
And based on that video - the above post saying that the crew might not have felt the tail strike I find odd, but don't discount 100%. That was a decent shake. Perhaps they did the same thing the QR aircraft did in MIA? AA at JFK? Pretend it didn't happen? Maybe the KingAir that landed on the runway at HDN after them saw some debris? On the trackers it looks like they were past DEN to the east by the time they elected to divert.
Either way, a lot of unanswered questions.
'902
If you watch the video it’s clearly a landing and not a takeoff though. It may be the diversion into DEN that was filmed and it was vaguely titled to suggest it was the tail strike on takeoff. If you slowly scrub between seconds 4-5 you can see objects the window indicative of a descent. The internet bats no better than .500 when it comes to reliability.
We actually heard these guys on Denver center as we were climbing out of ASE. They told center they had a tail strike due to trying to avoid an incoming aircraft and needed to divert. So they definitely felt it and knew about it.
ALTF4 wrote:BlueBaller wrote:TWA902fly wrote:I have to say this all isn't quite adding up. There seem to be two events that are being connected by speculation on this board and on AvHerald. We have no proof that the tail-strike and near-miss were related to each other. Was the tail-strike really an "avoidance maneuver", or just something that happened at the same time? Likely that the two events added a lot to the crew's workload. It will be interesting to see the root causes which I am sure will come out after investigation and interviews with the crew.
And based on that video - the above post saying that the crew might not have felt the tail strike I find odd, but don't discount 100%. That was a decent shake. Perhaps they did the same thing the QR aircraft did in MIA? AA at JFK? Pretend it didn't happen? Maybe the KingAir that landed on the runway at HDN after them saw some debris? On the trackers it looks like they were past DEN to the east by the time they elected to divert.
Either way, a lot of unanswered questions.
'902
If you watch the video it’s clearly a landing and not a takeoff though. It may be the diversion into DEN that was filmed and it was vaguely titled to suggest it was the tail strike on takeoff. If you slowly scrub between seconds 4-5 you can see objects the window indicative of a descent. The internet bats no better than .500 when it comes to reliability.
From another board, a user stated:We actually heard these guys on Denver center as we were climbing out of ASE. They told center they had a tail strike due to trying to avoid an incoming aircraft and needed to divert. So they definitely felt it and knew about it.
BWIAirport wrote:How common are commercial jet ops at non-towered airports in the US? I can't think of many besides HDN.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:The passengers that took the video were pretty definitive that it was taken on take-off from KHDN,
GalaxyFlyer wrote:The KA, given the weather, was on the approach and had the airspace until landed or on the missed approach unless Denver Center screwed up and released the JBU flight with the KA on final. CTAF is really irrelevant here because JBU could not have been released.
QXorVX wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:The KA, given the weather, was on the approach and had the airspace until landed or on the missed approach unless Denver Center screwed up and released the JBU flight with the KA on final. CTAF is really irrelevant here because JBU could not have been released.
Looking at the FlightRadar24 playback, it shows that King Air squawking 1200 (VFR) around 1854Z after having a discreet code assigned (1666) while enroute. They likely had the airport in sight and cancelled IFR with the center. Looks like they were several miles from the airport, but still fairly close. Assuming that data is correct, you have an IFR out and a VFR in, which is a legal operation and release. Safety depending on the appropriate use of CTAF and situational awareness by both pilots. Obviously something was missed there. I can't tell if this is being investigated? I consider this a little more of an imminent situation than the tailstrike.
Thousands of daily operations occur safely at CTAF airports, with jets and props, IFR and VFR. It is a perfectly acceptable form of operation at many, many airports. Even with pax service. However, this kind of situation is exactly what control towers are for. When you have enough of a mix in types of traffic, experience levels, and especially large jet operations, seems like a tower would be a good addition to the airport. There are plenty of much slower airports without the complexity and seasonality staffed with the world's most bored air traffic controllers. Doesn't make much sense a ski country airport with multiple 121 carriers doesn't deserve at least a seasonal tower. Imagine if this had been a little closer, what is the justification in not having a tower out there?
BlueBaller wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:The passengers that took the video were pretty definitive that it was taken on take-off from KHDN,
It wouldve helped to solidify that claim had the video kept running. Instead it immediately pans away from the window and ends a few seconds later. I’m not saying one thing or another, only that in moments such as what was described as happening in that takeoff, passengers these days are known to document every detail, especially in an incident like this.
Watching the ground disappear and that aggressive right hand turn on climb out, would’ve better corroborated the authenticity.
Passenger on plane
By Tangela Byrd on Thursday, Jan 27th 2022 05:02Z
I was a passenger on this aircraft. Being seated in the back of the plane this was a very frightening and horrific experience for myself, husband, 2 sons, granddaughter, and pregnant daughter in law. We felt the hit and was actually filming our granddaughter and how much fun she was having flying at 2.5 years old, when the tail strike happened. We knew something abnormal happened but had to wait 20 minutes for anyone to say anything. The pilot then told us it was an air strike due to avoiding collision with another aircraft. When told we were going to Denver to have the plane checked out, our anxiety intensified while we were flying in a plane with no idea the damage we had! Upon departing at Denver, no one checked to see if anyone needed medical attention. After all, this was more than a bump on the runway. There was no one from Jet Blue at Denver and when calling Jet Blue, no one could give us an estimated time before our next flight. We sat at Denver Airport over 9 hours.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:Anybody have link to the FR24 playback, please?
Boeing727 wrote:BWIAirport wrote:How common are commercial jet ops at non-towered airports in the US? I can't think of many besides HDN.
UPS operates into uncontrolled Albany, GA (ABY) every evening and morning with A300 & B757 Aircraft….
FLLspotter747 wrote:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7TKAPAo602w
Found a video. You can see a rather aggressive rotation when the exposure corrects itself and then.... BANG!
BlueBaller wrote:If you slowly scrub between seconds 4-5 you can see objects the window indicative of a descent.
airplanedriver6 wrote:BlueBaller wrote:If you slowly scrub between seconds 4-5 you can see objects the window indicative of a descent.
IMHO, your conclusion is incorrect.
During any takeoff the aft end of the fuselage 'descends' toward the runway during rotation. And that's what we are seeing in the video as the tailstrike occurs exactly when we would expect it to happen.
BWIAirport wrote:How common are commercial jet ops at non-towered airports in the US? I can't think of many besides HDN.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:CTAF is really irrelevant here...
hivue wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:CTAF is really irrelevant here...
Hope that's not what JetBlue were thinking as they taxied out to 10.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:hivue wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:CTAF is really irrelevant here...
Hope that's not what JetBlue were thinking as they taxied out to 10.
That comment was based on both crews being under IFR, the post above using FR24 or Flight Aware, it appears the KA cancelled IFR close in to the airport and neither crew were aware of each other.
bigb wrote:BWIAirport wrote:How common are commercial jet ops at non-towered airports in the US? I can't think of many besides HDN.
Very common at lot of served by regional carriers with limited Tower hours of ops.
CRJ200flyer wrote:bigb wrote:BWIAirport wrote:How common are commercial jet ops at non-towered airports in the US? I can't think of many besides HDN.
Very common at lot of served by regional carriers with limited Tower hours of ops.
At a Delta regional airline I flew regularly untowered into/out of MBS, GNV, CSG, BQK, ABY and EVV (if we were late) to name a few. BQK is completely untowered, the others were departures before tower opened or after it closed.
DN4CAAD wrote:CRJ200flyer wrote:bigb wrote:
Very common at lot of served by regional carriers with limited Tower hours of ops.
At a Delta regional airline I flew regularly untowered into/out of MBS, GNV, CSG, BQK, ABY and EVV (if we were late) to name a few. BQK is completely untowered, the others were departures before tower opened or after it closed.
When does GNV go untowered? There’s some pretty late scheduled flights into the airport nowadays.
CRJ200flyer wrote:bigb wrote:BWIAirport wrote:How common are commercial jet ops at non-towered airports in the US? I can't think of many besides HDN.
Very common at lot of served by regional carriers with limited Tower hours of ops.
At a Delta regional airline I flew regularly untowered into/out of MBS, GNV, CSG, BQK, ABY and EVV (if we were late) to name a few. BQK is completely untowered, the others were departures before tower opened or after it closed.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:Pretty much, they cancelled IFR and proceeded as VFR traffic, no ATC clearance. Now, to cancel the clearance, you have to have visual weather conditions. In VFR flight, the pilot “clears” the flight visually without an ATC clearance, but you can request ATC traffic advisories and following.