I wonder whose bright idea that was?! I can’t believe the airport authority went along with that.
If the weather was questionable, AKA not VFR, we would have drivers at RIL and EGE set up just in case we diverted to either. The 91 guys I was flying for at the time was " convenience over cost." 99 percent fo the time we ended up in ASE, but occasionally, the winds wouldn't be great or the vis or something would be up and down, we would just shoot over to RIL or EGE and he would be on his way shortly after. Driver already there.I usually notified clients over an hour out of my plans to divert. It pretty much came down to the ceilings being high enough where we would have field in sight by Red Table by the time of arrival. I elected to divert to RIL if it were lower than that. This gives the clients' ground transportation enough time to drive over and be there by the time we landed.
I really didn't leave it up for debate with the management companies honestly. I'd send them a message letting them know of my intentions. Some would haggle, but I didn't change my mind once it was made up. I've even had it where a company would contact ATC and tell them they wanted me to go to ASE, but I would not change it once we got ground transportation rolling towards RIL. These are the type of pressures corporate pilots have to deal with.
If the weather was questionable, AKA not VFR, we would have drivers at RIL and EGE set up just in case we diverted to either. The 91 guys I was flying for at the time was " convenience over cost." 99 percent fo the time we ended up in ASE, but occasionally, the winds wouldn't be great or the vis or something would be up and down, we would just shoot over to RIL or EGE and he would be on his way shortly after. Driver already there.
RIL has a TON of short notice drivers available as well. They are used to it...
My “proud father” moment was when I was CC’d on an email chain after a trip confirmed. The pax were all aware of our duty and flight time limits and worked to fit their itinerary around our FOM limits without even needing to ask me.At my shop we had set company minimums quite a bit higher than the approach mins, almost up to VFR. PIC's had to have done prior trips into KASE before going there as captain. Definitely no green-on-green. Sim training at KASE every year. (At one point I was considering "airport in sight crossing Redtable" as minimums.) (Later, after I had backed out of the D.O. position, the standards group relaxed the company ceiling/vis minimums somewhat, a decision I wasn't crazy about, but I think they might have tightened up the"prior experience" requirements(?).)
We had company minimums and limitations at quite a few (a dozen?) airports. And they were clearly communicated to customers when booking flights, so the pressure was removed (at least partially) from the crews. Pilot management stressed to the crews that we expected them to follow company minimums/limitations and praised them when they made those hard decisions. Trying to establish a strong safety culture is huge.
My “proud father” moment was when I was CC’d on an email chain after a trip confirmed. The pax were all aware of our duty and flight time limits and worked to fit their itinerary around our FOM limits without even needing to ask me.
KSNA? The last 121 accident I remember at KSNA was an Air California 737 in 1981.They do make crash recovery cranes, even specifically for that such as “Tilley” on aircraft carriers. Some of the larger airport ARFF departments have their own crash recovery cranes, such as Orange County Fire at KSNA. Other larger ARFF depts have their own air-stair trucks in their depts, complete with emergency lights etc.
Seems they just threw something around the nose strut and Leroy Jenkins’d it….
Well, at least they have chicken....
Seems they just threw something around the nose strut and Leroy Jenkins’d it….
Old geezer, back to the gen X threadI literally grew up watching tractor pulls most summer weekends.
KSNA? The last 121 accident I remember at KSNA was an Air California 737 in 1981.
Yea, that's a total.
![]()