Destination was STN, diversion to EMA, emergency landing at BHX.grnkg wrote:A/c was due for landing at MME. During CatIII approach, autopilot was disengaged on short final. A/c slammed into runway, thereby ripping off RH LDG. The gear then slammed into the inboard flaps and aft fuselage.
Go-around initiated and after being airborne again, crew requested emergency landing at BHX due to weather conditions.
Krgds,
GR.
TNT accident in BHX/Birmingham U.K.
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What has been disclosed during the week end is that the plane did indeed make a first landing on auto-pilot (because of fog) at Stansted, its final destination (and not East Midlands as mentioned above). For an unknown reason, this landing did not work out as it should, and a part of the landing gear was ripped of in the grass. The plane took off again and went to an airport (Birmingham) where the weather conditions were perfect in order to try an emergencuy landing.
André
ex Sabena #26567
ex Sabena #26567
the gear ( tyres and strut) was found in EMA, like it was mentioned at the pprune.org forum not in Stansted.
RISK AVERSE wrote: Hi
A bit more information... We reported the undercarriage to EMA tower (wheel tyre and strut). They were quite surprised. The undercarriage was in the grass between the Alpha taxiway and the runway about 300m from TDZ - we were actually quite reluctant to tell ATC as we assumed that they knew already - but prudently we did.
The vis was about 350m rwy 27 and 250m rwy 09 at EMA at around 0540z, so any runway inspection may have missed the u/c in the grass. As we sit higher up we got a good view of the u/c.
This had been bugging us all day and on return to EMA for the 4th sector we had a good look at the grass with definite tyre marks in the grass - i.e. indicating that the aircraft had landed left of the runway before going around. The mayday reported gear and flap problems so I'll leave the flap problems to your imagination/knowledge of similar accidents...
Hope this info helps and that I've not made too many assumptions in the circumstances. Good luck to the pilots involved, hope they are ok.
Can I take this as 2 junior together? If so it is illegal. You must fly at least 100 hours with a not junior crewmember within 90 days or 150 hours without time limit. After this period you are junior off.I hear the copilot is relatively unexperienced and not well rated, and the pilot had only 50 hours experience behind him - real or not? To a degree, how far is crew management responsible for - eventually - assembling crews that are not cohesive enough?
Greetz,
DiverDriver
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Kantoor007
- Posts: 6
- Joined: 03 Apr 2004, 00:00
An AAIB bulletin is now available: http://www.aaib.dft.gov.uk/cms_resource ... OO-TND.pdf
Link to the Flight International article
Crash investigators reveal extraordinary story of TNT Boeing 737 accident at Birmingham
Crash investigators reveal extraordinary story of TNT Boeing 737 accident at Birmingham
Last edited by Stepha380 on 08 Jul 2006, 17:56, edited 1 time in total.
The pilots whe sacked due to " zero accident tolerance level " of TNT
link : http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/west ... 219956.stm
link : Flightmare of Boeing 737
Interesting flightpath ...
link : http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/west ... 219956.stm
link : Flightmare of Boeing 737
Interesting flightpath ...
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TCAS_climb
- Posts: 413
- Joined: 04 Jan 2004, 00:00
