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#18
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Newps wrote:
What exactly are the tires you use made of...Jello? They just don't fail with the regularity that you are worried about. I no longer rent from the FBO that maintained the plane I was flying when the tire failed, so it isn't terribly convenient for me to check to see if the tires are jello. I expect I'd have noticed this sort of thing during the preflight, but - given that I don't preflight with a spoon and whipped cream - perhaps not. More seriously: I've only had a tire fail once during my 400+ hours of flying, so perhaps it isn't terribly likely. However, I have been waved off in the past for other reasons. Perhaps these can all be classified as "controller missequencing", but - given that a lot of students are flying around my "home" airport - I'd be surprised if none of the blame falls to those students. But this is all beside the point (although interesting). The fact is that controllers do occasionally have to wave off an aircraft previously cleared for landing. Someone - not you, BTW - claimed: In the US, controllers would sequence the arriving aircraft so that a go around would not be necessary. I was merely pointing out that this was usually, but not always, the case in my country which also happens to be called "the US". - Andrew |
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