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Quoting LY777 (Thread starter): Sorry if this has been discussed but I wonder why the A330s were not grounded after the AF447 crash. Indeed, even before this crash, many airlines reported problems with airspeed indications which could have lead to crashes. |
Quoting LY777 (Thread starter): Sorry if this has been discussed but I wonder why the A330s were not grounded after the AF447 crash. Indeed, even before this crash, many airlines reported problems with airspeed indications which could have lead to crashes. |
Quoting upperdeck (Reply 3): I believe an AD was issued to replace the pitots, |
Quoting upperdeck (Reply 3): |
Quoting upperdeck (Reply 3): It took months to locate the black boxes, so an immediate grouding wasn't a possibility. The cause of the crash was more pilot error and misjudgement than equipment failure in my opinion. I believe an AD was issued to replace the pitots, Airbus were asked to update their checklists etc but grouding wasn't ever considered. |
Quoting cedarjet (Reply 5): The question should be, especially as 447 came in the wake of 4590 and 358, monumental f*** ups all, why weren't Air France grounded? |
Quoting cedarjet (Reply 5): No carrier on the EU blacklist has killed a tenth as many passengers since 2000 |
Quoting ikramerica (Reply 12): Oh, and please don't tell me that it's because we didn't know what happened that the A330 couldn't be grounded. |
Quoting cedarjet (Reply 5): No comparison - firstly, it is possible for any aircraft to have unreliable airspeed; secondly, it should not be overly dangerous (look up the phrase "pitch and power"). Just a bad day at the office. |
Quoting strfyr51 (Reply 9): The AF A330 is as well equipped as any of the other airplanes and they Had Doppler radar. Why didn't they turn away like American or go around like Iberia?? |
Quoting ikramerica (Reply 11): that the AD didn't solve the problem, and we can throw a few coulds and mights around to make it sound catastrophic. |
Quoting UALWN (Reply 14): The problem with the 787 is that the cause of the fires is not known. |
Quoting UALWN (Reply 13): How was 4590 an AF monumental f*** up? |
Quoting UALWN (Reply 13): How was 4590 an AF monumental f*** up? You could blame AF4590 on CO, CDG, the designers of Concorde, the certifying agencies, or any combination or those, but not on AF. |
Quoting jayunited (Reply 10): However the 787 situation is completely different having a fire start in flight in a compartment that has no fire suppression system could compromise part of airframe and regardless of the experience of the flight crew that fire could result in an aircraft being brought down. |
Quoting cedarjet (Reply 17): Oh and the tank burst was almost certainly caused by the aircraft being overfuelled. Typical reckless Air France operation - take any one of these elements out of the picture and AF 4590 would have made it to New York and 113 people would still be alive |
Quoting tdscanuck (Reply 19): Not to conflate the threads but unless something is really wrong with the design, a battery fire can't bring the aircraft down. That was a design condition from the FAA from many years back. |
Quoting denverdanny (Reply 20): Perhaps if there had been a second or even third unexplained crash in a short period. The Comet and Electra had multiple unexplained crashes within short periods. Would grounding the 330 have accomplished anything? |
Quoting StarAC17 (Reply 21): If that fire can't be suppressed of course it can bring a plane down and it doesn't take much. Hopefully after Swissair 111 the 787 isn't using that insulation but a fire spreading is a huge possibility. |
Quoting ikramerica (Reply 11): And if we are to use the new standard the FAA all of a sudden is setting, they should ground the A330 after the LY incident because an argument can be made, no matter how flimsy, that the AD didn't solve the problem, and we can throw a few coulds and mights around to make it sound catastrophic. |
Quoting VC10DC10 (Reply 18): Actually, that's not true at all. The loss of that aircraft was in large part due to severe negligence on the part of Air France maintenance. |
Quoting ikramerica (Reply 12): That's the same excuse being use TO ground the 787. |
Quoting LY777 (Thread starter): Is the A330 not grounded because there are so many A330s in service? I am sure that if 800 787s were in service, the 787s wouldn't have been grounded. |
Quoting cedarjet (Reply 5): The question should be, especially as 447 came in the wake of 4590 and 358, monumental f*** ups all, why weren't Air France grounded? No carrier on the EU blacklist has killed a tenth as many passengers since 2000 (and let's ignore their six 707 crashes, five of which had no survivors - so this isn't a recent phenomenon either). |
Quoting KC135TopBoom (Reply 28): There were some 400 DC-10s in service (worldwide) when it was grounded. |
Quoting cedarjet (Reply 17): They were at least 3t overweight, but that became the equivalent of 10t when they decided to perform a downwind takeoff (rather than taxi to the other end of the field), the FE shut down an engine without telling the captain, and AF hadn't done mods recommended by Airbus which BA had done, which might have avoided the gear troubles altogether. |
Quoting cedarjet (Reply 17): Oh and the tank burst was almost certainly caused by the aircraft being overfuelled. |
Quoting cedarjet (Reply 17): Typical reckless Air France operation |
Quoting cedarjet (Reply 17): ake any one of these elements out of the picture and AF 4590 would have made it to New York |
Quoting VC10DC10 (Reply 18): The loss of that aircraft was in large part due to severe negligence on the part of Air France maintenance. |
Quoting LY777 (Thread starter): Is the A330 not grounded because there are so many A330s in service? I am sure that if 800 787s were in service, the 787s wouldn't have been grounded. |
Quoting KarelXWB (Reply 8): In fact, Air France was already replacing pitot tubes on some aircraft prior to the crash. |
Quoting strfyr51 (Reply 9): They lost Air data indication and really had only Inertial reference indication so their window was a VERY small one to get out of it safely. |
Quoting strfyr51 (Reply 9): The AF A330 is as well equipped as any of the other airplanes and they Had Doppler radar. Why didn't they turn away like American or go around like Iberia?? |
Quoting strfyr51 (Reply 9): I wonder what Air France's operations was doing?? |
Quoting cedarjet (Reply 17): They were at least 3t overweight, but that became the equivalent of 10t when they decided to perform a downwind takeoff (rather than taxi to the other end of the field), the FE shut down an engine without telling the captain, and AF hadn't done mods recommended by Airbus which BA had done, which might have avoided the gear troubles altogether. Oh and the tank burst was almost certainly caused by the aircraft being overfuelled. Typical reckless Air France operation - take any one of these elements out of the picture and AF 4590 would have made it to New York and 113 people would still be alive and Conc would have died a natural death due to high fuel prices a few years later, her record intact. But with all this against her, all it took was one piece of FOD and the outcome was certain disaster. That's Air France for you. |
Quoting cedarjet (Reply 17): They were at least 3t overweight, but that became the equivalent of 10t when they decided to perform a downwind takeoff (rather than taxi to the other end of the field), |
Quoting cedarjet (Reply 17): the FE shut down an engine without telling the captain |
Quoting cedarjet (Reply 17): AF hadn't done mods recommended by Airbus which BA had done, which might have avoided the gear troubles altogether. |
Quoting cedarjet (Reply 17): Oh and the tank burst was almost certainly caused by the aircraft being overfuelled. |
Quoting cedarjet (Reply 17): Typical reckless Air France |
Quoting cedarjet (Reply 17): one piece of FOD and the outcome was certain disaster |
Quoting VC10DC10 (Reply 18): The loss of that aircraft was in large part due to severe negligence on the part of Air France maintenance. |
Quoting LY777 (Thread starter): Sorry if this has been discussed but I wonder why the A330s were not grounded after the AF447 crash. Indeed, even before this crash, many airlines reported problems with airspeed indications which could have lead to crashes. |
Quoting awthompson (Reply 35): I have read the comments of others but I tend to agree with you on both your Air France safety history point (it's dire) and the Concorde accident. Its so long since I read the report and watched various documentaries, but I recall, I think, that there were a total of seven different factors that culminated in the crash. If any one of them had been eliminated (I don't think the passengers would have reached New York) but the plane may have made back to a runway. The overweight situation, the tail wind, the confusion on board (seems to always feature in Air France hull loss/fatal accidents), the shutting down of good engines(s) although most crews would have fallen for that trap as indications made it appear that there was an engine fire when the source of the flames was from elsewhere, wheel spacers not fitted after recent maintenance which gave the plane a tendency to pull to one side on the runway, the debris on the runway, the gear line modification, etc. |
Quoting AirAfreak (Reply 38): here we are back again in Autumn 2011 |
Quoting cornutt (Reply 37): Look, I'm an ex-Boeing employee, but I try not to be needlessly partisan. I could argue with the grounding, but I also understand the FAA's reasoning |
Quoting Pihero (Reply 40): Very respectable attitude, if I may... |
Quoting cedarjet (Reply 17): That's Air France for you. |
Quoting Viscount724 (Reply 27): When the DC-10 was grounded for 37 days in June/July 1979 after the AA191 crash at ORD there were 281 DC-10s in service. And that grounding turned out to be unwarranted as the cause of the crash was determined to be faulty AA maintenance procedures. |
Quoting rfields5421 (Reply 33): The B787 issue is different because (1) it is a new aircraft without the extensive operational history of the A330 at that time; and (2) there is an identifiable issue which could likely cause the loss of an aircraft in flight. |
Quoting Wisdom (Reply 39): We can ask the same question about the BA B777 G-YMMM crash. Why didn't the FAA ground all B777's after the BA B777 suffered an uncommanded roll-back on both engines? |
Quoting a380900 (Reply 43): But when the type is new and there are 150 batteries bricked after less than 18 months flying... |
Quoting LY777 (Thread starter): I am sure that if 800 787s were in service, the 787s wouldn't have been grounded. |
Quoting PGNCS (Reply 45): On what basis do you believe that? |
Quoting Pihero (Reply 36): In all these years with A.net, I've seen hateful posts but this # 17 is probably the worst. To the extent that I wonder why the poster claims belonging to the population of aviation fans. |
Quoting Pihero (Reply 40): I, probably among a lot of people would love to see you and your friend provide some reference to that kind of bull. If not, I suggest you paid more attention to what aviation is in reality,; and not the usual drivel found on some books / sites / TV programs that are only for the thrill seekers and the ghouls. |
Quoting LY777 (Thread starter): I am sure that if 800 787s were in service, the 787s wouldn't have been grounded. |
Quoting Pihero (Reply 36): 1/ They were 1.1 T overweight if one considers the average 84 kg / pax, or 657 kg if we allowed the 88 /70 / 30 kg standard in the industry worldwide or just 300 kgs for a charter average.... even then, to know an aircraft weight down to the kilo is pure fallacy. |