BobDDuck Island Bus Driver Oct 11, 2012 #3 So they are saying the captain became dizzy because she had a cold and looked down at the center panel radios. I can buy that. They are saying the FO became dizzy because she started hyperventilating due to the fact the captain was dizzy and potentially becoming incapacitated. Ab initio is AWESOME!
So they are saying the captain became dizzy because she had a cold and looked down at the center panel radios. I can buy that. They are saying the FO became dizzy because she started hyperventilating due to the fact the captain was dizzy and potentially becoming incapacitated. Ab initio is AWESOME!
Minuteman “Dongola” Oct 11, 2012 #5 It is weird that the article does not name the airline involved. Should it be pretty much implicit based on the Heathrow-Glasgow city pairing? I'm more of a colonial a.nutter. Edit: Here's the report: http://www.aaib.gov.uk/publications/bulletins/october_2012/airbus_a321_231__g_euxl.cfm It was a British Airways A321.
It is weird that the article does not name the airline involved. Should it be pretty much implicit based on the Heathrow-Glasgow city pairing? I'm more of a colonial a.nutter. Edit: Here's the report: http://www.aaib.gov.uk/publications/bulletins/october_2012/airbus_a321_231__g_euxl.cfm It was a British Airways A321.
seagull Well-Known Member Oct 11, 2012 #6 F/O might just have been an empathetic psychosomatic response. That is what my wife's thought was.
jmc4 Well-Known Member Oct 11, 2012 #7 Minuteman said: It is weird that the article does not name the airline involved. Should it be pretty much implicit based on the Heathrow-Glasgow city pairing? I'm more of a colonial a.nutter. Edit: Here's the report: http://www.aaib.gov.uk/publications/bulletins/october_2012/airbus_a321_231__g_euxl.cfm It was a British Airways A321. Click to expand... aaib.gov said: Date of occurrence:20 December 2011 Click to expand... was that two separate occasions?
Minuteman said: It is weird that the article does not name the airline involved. Should it be pretty much implicit based on the Heathrow-Glasgow city pairing? I'm more of a colonial a.nutter. Edit: Here's the report: http://www.aaib.gov.uk/publications/bulletins/october_2012/airbus_a321_231__g_euxl.cfm It was a British Airways A321. Click to expand... aaib.gov said: Date of occurrence:20 December 2011 Click to expand... was that two separate occasions?