A retired major widebody captain has the skillset to pull that off after a lifetime of ILS approaches?My hypothesis is a very recently retired AA/UA captain who gets hired as a contractor for mammoth freighters. Does a ‘practice approach’ gets a little carried away…
Impressive.
You can do whatever you want, on your last flight.
“Remember kids, if it only ends up in a fine, that means it’s legal for a price”.Reminds me of something I tell my kids often.
"You can do anything you want. Once."
considering the roll before the pull with that little wingtip clearance, id assume more luck than goodA retired major widebody captain has the skillset to pull that off after a lifetime of ILS approaches?![]()
Other way aroundThis was a former Delta jet, N705DN. It left AFW, flew southwest to do the low pass in Horseshoe Bay, then continued Grissom Aeroplex north of Kokomo, IN.
was gonna say the same thing...looks at video and realizes how bad it could have been.considering the roll before the pull with that little wingtip clearance, id assume more luck than good
Probably IFR the whole time. Files the airports involved requests an approach takes it to a go around stays low and climbs up on whatever “missed appr” instructions they gave them and moves on.Has anyone put together the "how" on this yet? How did this work with an IFR clearance? As in, how did they deviate 200 miles off course for a VFR low pass then re-enter the NAS IFR?