PhilosopherPilot
Well-Known Member
I've done more then 3x that but I'm a dangerous weekend warrior.
I think the most I've ever done is 8000 fpm until my speed got too high. "Acey are you going to cross DIRTY at 13,000?"
"Uh...yes sir!!"
I've done more then 3x that but I'm a dangerous weekend warrior.
Correct me if wrong but the FAA investigates every near miss involving an airline.
Holy Christ. I honestly don't know if in straight and level flight I am experiencing 1 G or 0 G.Never mind, Abend responded. He is CNNs biznitch. http://www.cnn.com/2014/05/16/travel/hawaii-near-collision-ntsb/index.html?hpt=hp_t2
This Towsend guy sounds like a real tool claiming that the FAA only investigated after his article came out. Correct me if wrong but the FAA investigates every near miss involving an airline.
The comments are great and highly recommended.
as the 757 strained through the kind of maneuver meant more for a fighter jet
RAs are mandatory ASAP reports at (probably) every property out there. That means the Feds see it at an ERC meeting. Also, you are supposed to report an RA to a controller after it happens, or as it happens if you have time. I don't know how things work on that end, but I'd guess that triggers some sort of review as well.
Mr. Townsend is full of crap.
He says 6 miles over the pacific, like thats a far way out there, but i imagine if that was the case they were still on radar.
So do you pilots find those comforting, and necessary. Or with TCAS and now years of RVSM flying is this just not necessary. I always hear that head on traffic 1000ft apart looks like its coming right at you, but don't you all glance down at the TCAS way before I say something to see it is indeed 1000ft from you?
Luckily I've only had two RA's. Once over the jungle in S. America and another flying from SDF-CVG.
On a side note, the pilot error was a result of a traffic call to a foreign airliner at FL350, "traffic 12 o'clock 10 miles, opposite direction A320 at FL360" resulted in that aircraft reading back "roger FL360". Another aircraft called right after that, and both the radar controller and radar associate said " I think they are going to climb to FL360", while waiting for the check in by the other aircraft to be over with. When it was, the foreign airliner was out of FL355 for presumably FL360. As the controller said "descend now to FL350" the other aircraft at FL360 called saying "responding to an RA". They went from FL360 to FL370 in one radar sweep, that is 1000ft in 12 seconds, at time of the RA they were 3 miles apart, when they passed over head they were 1000ft apart, the foreign carrier leveled at FL360 and then descended back down presumably never getting an RA themselves, which I found odd.
I've only had one RA myself. Climbing out of PBI a Hawker off of FLL caught us from behind and was climbing out in front of us, generating a climb RA. I started the maneuver, and the boss and jumpseater got a visual. Turned 5 right and all was good.Luckily I've only had two RA's. Once over the jungle in S. America and another flying from SDF-CVG.
Climbing out of PBI a Hawker off of FLL caught us from behind