Seggy
Well-Known Member
Lots of individual circumstances belying an underlying problem is what he's getting at -- I think.
Yeah, it still makes no sense.
Lots of individual circumstances belying an underlying problem is what he's getting at -- I think.
The vast majority of the Asiana fleet is widebody, so I'd imagine, at least as second or junior first officers, many new-hires go straight into the 777, 767, A330, or 747 over there. Many are hired on with wet commercials from the states after completing 141 programs, so I doubt they have much more than 250 hours. How long the upgrade is to being full fledged right seat in the heavies, I'm not sure, but guys on pprune claim pilots have ended up in the left seat of wide-bodies with less than 10 years at the company. Not that surprising since Asiana hasn't been around all that long compared to most Asian airlines serving the US and they expanded rapidly with mostly big airplanes.
No, I was suggesting that statistics could be used to identify potential problems. Obviously, you need to compare apples with apples. Certainly, you would expect more go-arounds in some regions.Yeah, I know you were specifically looking at carrier's go around rates, which still makes no sense. For example, Alaska Airlines does a lot of flying in Southeast Alaska. Are you saying we should look to see what the problems are at Alaska if they go around more than say Spirit does?
Thanks for your contributions to the thread.Yeah, it still makes no sense.
I'm not sure if they have normalized for aircraft type, time of day, weather conditions, runway, landing aids, etc.
Yikes, if thats true, that's pretty sketchy.
If you're talking about go-around rates at the same airport, then sure. Last I checked, Spirit doesn't serve Yakutat.Yeah, I know you were specifically looking at carrier's go around rates, which still makes no sense. For example, Alaska Airlines does a lot of flying in Southeast Alaska. Are you saying we should look to see what the problems are at Alaska if they go around more than say Spirit does?
If airline A has to go-around twice as much as everyone else going into a given airport, then clearly they're having a problem with that approach that nobody else is having. The original post was about go-arounds in SFO, not system wide.
Weather and traffic don't discriminate against one airline.Do you know the reason for the go arounds Asiana supposedly had in SFO? Maybe it was for traffic on the runway? Maybe it was weather related?
Once again the number of go arounds are pointless. The number of unstabilized approaches an airline has are the number we should be focusing on.
pete2800 said:Weather and traffic don't discriminate against one airline.
Unstable approaches lead to go-arounds. For the purposes of a news article, it's likely easier to count go-arounds than it is to try to explain FOQA and stabilized approach criteria to the general public. I do agree with you, though... For useful investigation, unstabilized approaches should be the target rather than just counting the GA's.
There is enough of a correlation between the two that excessive go-arounds are still worthy of attention, though.
No one claimed we should look at it pilot-by-pilot. Trends are important. What is excessive? It's relative to the other operations in the environment.Once again, what is an excessive go around rate? How do you identify that? Four out of my eight (from what I remember) go arounds in the 121 world have been in BOS, is that excessive?
I've done 3 go arounds this week. Should I have landed on the airplanes that were on the runway so you guys wouldn't question my competency?
No one claimed we should look at it pilot-by-pilot. Trends are important. What is excessive? It's relative to the other operations in the environment.
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No, it's really not. Again, traffic conflicts wouldn't cause one carrier to have wildly more issues than any other carrier at the same airport.What? That's the path you're all taking..
No, it's really not. Again, traffic conflicts wouldn't cause one carrier to have wildly more issues than any other carrier at the same airport.
Source? Law of averages. Why would one airline be a constant traffic-magnet over an extended period of time? That makes no sense. We're all separated by the same controllers.Source?
I've done 3 go arounds this week... I have done a total of 6 go arounds in my last 1000 hours. Could be a string of bad luck. Or I'm a hack...