killbilly
Vocals, Lyrics, Triangle, Washboard, Kittens
I’d be very curious about that PDTs landing weight.FWIW a PDT E145 out of Charlotte landed immediately ahead of ‘em.
I’d be very curious about that PDTs landing weight.FWIW a PDT E145 out of Charlotte landed immediately ahead of ‘em.
the minimal amt of variation in landing weight does not bury an rj 400ft into the emas, that definitely went off the end with plenty of kinetic energy.. either missed the tdz or braking action was nil after they already had the buckets out or a combination
I remember working those as a ramper. 977 and 978 were even universally dreaded and loathed among us and the gate agents.Chautauqua had some of these as well. They were X-European models that were stripped over any extras in order to save weight to pay less taxes. The MP models that CHQ had not only didnt have thrust reversers but had smaller brakes (same size as the E140). I remember it was so weight restricted that they tried pulling galley carts out and all we had was water and coffee. Automatically a 44 seat airplane despite there being 50 seats. What a giant POS.
This plane just makes me mad seeing it again. https://www.jetphotos.com/photo/6798350
Internet radio traffic and METAR updated on final indicates severe precipitation at landing.
View: https://youtu.be/MQRDtybdsnA
Maybe. As a 121 crew for a marginal runway with precip, what you would do is run landing distance numbers and figure out a minimum runway condition code/braking action that works for you. Then you would correlate that to a precipitation level and that would become your go-around/cutoff. Does that make sense?For us light GA folks, would extreme precip alone be a go around condition. I’m guessing not if two of the three continued
Maybe. As a 121 crew for a marginal runway with precip, what you would do is run landing distance numbers and figure out a minimum runway condition code/braking action that works for you. Then you would correlate that to a precipitation level and that would become your go-around/cutoff. Does that make sense?
I wasn’t clear.
I’m wondering if they actually had the performance numbers to land in the first place. 16/34 is a short runway.
EDIT: I haven’t flown that airplane in years and I honestly don’t remember anything about runway performance on that aircraft.
Rain? No. Hail, yes. Snow, yes.For us light GA folks, would extreme precip alone be a go around condition.
I've never flown the 145, but I've taken the 175 in there on numerous occasions, and it seemed unthreatening. I'd probably bang flaps full for 34, but we fly to a lot of runways shorter than that.
Are the 145s that anemic on the brakes?
Rain? No. Hail, yes. Snow, yes.
That said, sometimes really wet runways have surprisingly less adhesion than you expect, especially if you don't get WOW, or touch down too long, or with too much energy.
Which is funny because the most insane rain I have ever seen was landing in Hanoi Vietnam.Also,outside the US, not all runways are grooved, even at bigger airports, so there are lots of places where heavy rain will make a long runway unusable.
Which is funny because the most insane rain I have ever seen was landing in Hanoi Vietnam.
That's downright impressive.American Samoa is 10,000 feet... and totally unusable during a heavy rain... which is like every night.
Have you tried just breaking harder?American Samoa is 10,000 feet... and totally unusable during a heavy rain... which is like every night.
Have you tried just breaking harder?
Also,outside the US, not all runways are grooved, even at bigger airports, so there are lots of places where heavy rain will make a long runway unusable.