Is that true?Hence the reason we don't fly to Canada anymore
I dunno, the cliffs notes that I read below seem to indicate a failure to go around when the aircraft was still airborne 2500+ feet down the wet runway, not necessarily a fault of the Canadians.Hence the reason we don't fly to Canada anymore
I dunno, the cliffs notes that I read below seem to indicate a failure to go around when the aircraft was still airborne 2500+ feet down the wet runway, not necessarily a fault of the Canadians.
How polite of him to request.The captain requested the first officer to apply maximum braking, too...
Their ops manual has them add the full gust factor? Interesting. I can see your point about having 10,000 feet of runway, however I'm still curious why they didn't go around when wind shear had them adding full power for 7 seconds after having descended within 20' of the runway. I don't fly jets but from what little I know of their flight characteristics wouldn't it be generally considered to be a bad idea to continue a landing attempt after such a point?The touchdown zone is generally defined as the first 3000 feet of the runway or the first 1/3 of the runway, whichever is shorter. Runway 32 in Ottawa is over 10,000 feet. This aircraft's first touchdown was at 2700 feet and the second (final) touchdown was at 3037 feet.
I'm also not following the criticism of a "higher than recommended vRef" in the report. The crew calculated a vRef of 128 with a VAPP of 133 (standard). At about 1000 AGL they were told of a 10 knot gust so they upped VAPP to 140 to account for the gust. Yes, the correct number probably would have been 138, but this was at 1000 AGL. Furthermore, the aircraft crossed the threshold at 139 KIAS which is one knot above VAPP with 5 knots of gust factor.
They don't know how to paint markings either.Canada doesn't groove their runways do they? I'm pretty sure every runway I landed on in Canada was not grooved. YUL, YHZ, YYZ, YOW.
I remember I would always feel the anti-skid kick in and reduce braking and would have to resort to reverse thrust to get the a/c slowed when the runway was even just wet. In the US, on a grooved runway, a wet runway is almost no different than a dry one.
Their ops manual has them add the full gust factor?
I'm still curious why they didn't go around when wind shear had them adding full power for 7 seconds after having descended within 20' of the runway. I don't fly jets but from what little I know of their flight characteristics wouldn't it be generally considered to be a bad idea to continue a landing attempt after such a point?
I guess really the discussion of runway length is moot since they went off the side, not the end.