Ryanair incident at CRL on friday evening (23/6/06)
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airazurxtror
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Ryanair incident at CRL on friday evening (23/6/06)
According to Belgian newspaper "Le Soir", an engine of the Boeing 737 operating Ryanair flight to Pisa (184 passengers), yesterday around 1915, ingested a bird at take-off and the plane had to land back at CRL.
Has anybody more infos about that incident ?
Has anybody more infos about that incident ?
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airazurxtror
- Posts: 3769
- Joined: 17 Nov 2005, 00:00
Sorry, I had not seen what had already been published here :
viewtopic.php?t=17344
and :
http://www.lesoir.be/actualite/belgique ... eroi.shtml
viewtopic.php?t=17344
and :
http://www.lesoir.be/actualite/belgique ... eroi.shtml
No problem. You were the first to publish the news in English. Let's continue here!airazurxtror wrote:Sorry, I had not seen what had already been published here :
viewtopic.php?t=17344
André
ex Sabena #26567
ex Sabena #26567
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airazurxtror
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- Flying-Belgian
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- Raphael747
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You are more than free to cross the word belgian from your comment - this is true for reporters from any country. And why? Just because the word emergency makes so much better numbers in hits or copies sold.xqxq wrote:When are belgian journalists, finally going to learn the difference, between a "precautionary landing" and an
"emergency landing" !!
Bernhard
Our building at work suffered a birdstrike tuesday evening. A Rose-ringed parakeet smacked into it. The building did not appear to be damaged, and did not need to make a precautionary landing. The bird was unconscious for a few minutes but eventually was able to resume it's flight.
Birds can't even evade stationary obstacles, never mind a moving plane.
Birds can't even evade stationary obstacles, never mind a moving plane.
Someone should show the journalists videos of how bird strike testing is peformed. They shoot frozen chickens at the planes with high velocity cannons. FROZEN CHICKENS. I think planes can surely survive unfrozen seagulls or whatever bird it was.
By the way, is there anyone on board who knows how to fly an airplane?
I think I once saw video footage of RR shooting six ducks or so at once into an engine.DFW wrote:Someone should show the journalists videos of how bird strike testing is peformed. They shoot frozen chickens at the planes with high velocity cannons. FROZEN CHICKENS. I think planes can surely survive unfrozen seagulls or whatever bird it was.
That must be a niche market for "frozen chicken manufacturers"DFW wrote:Someone should show the journalists videos of how bird strike testing is peformed. They shoot frozen chickens at the planes with high velocity cannons. FROZEN CHICKENS. I think planes can surely survive unfrozen seagulls or whatever bird it was.
- test the quality of the engine
- test the degree to which the chickens are frozen
Catch the chicken on the other side of the engine. That's how they make Chicken McNuggets.teddybAIR wrote:That must be a niche market for "frozen chicken manufacturers"DFW wrote:Someone should show the journalists videos of how bird strike testing is peformed. They shoot frozen chickens at the planes with high velocity cannons. FROZEN CHICKENS. I think planes can surely survive unfrozen seagulls or whatever bird it was.The objective is twofold:
- test the quality of the engine
- test the degree to which the chickens are frozen

You ask to be corrected, so it's "It" not "I", and "chooses" or "chose", not "choose".Stepha380 wrote:I depends on which flow the chicken chooseCatch the chicken on the other side of the engine
Regarding the flow, I'd prefer it to go through the engine core, then it's nice and roasted. If it goes through the bypass flow it will only be ground up. And if it flies out the thrust reversers, you have to scrape it off whatever it splattered on (fuselage, runway, etc).
