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#8
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Agreed, but it was a stupid thing to do, MDW is marginal on
good VFR days. IFR caused by low ceilings and visibilities are not really a problem either, you either see and land on a dry or wet runway or make a missed approach. But snow and icy runways have poor braking, runway light obscured, white-out conditions with attendant landing problems. Airline pilots are well trained and regimented. This can be good or bad. When "company pressure" makes non-operational needs, such as the companies bottom line or on-time record, more important issues can take a backseat. PIC means that you take the heat, if necessary, from passengers, chief pilot and upper management when you spend a few hundred or thousands of dollars diverting. A good chief pilot will support a well reasoned decision to divert. There should be a pat on the back for a good safe diversion, but often it is "chicken, we got in OK, why did everybody else except you land." [The fact is that is rarely true, lots of pilots divert or delay, but since they didn't crash, who knows.] -- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P "beavis" wrote in message ... | The fact that this is the airline's first fatal crash in nearly 35 | years of operation speaks volumes about its safety culture. I'd put | its record up against any airline's. |
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