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ATC Handling of Low-Fuel American Flight
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ATC Handling of Low-Fuel American Flight
This was on my local news last night. I gotta wonder if the approach
controller told the local controller that there was an emergency declared, it didn't appear on the video but my have been edited out. Bottom line, the AA pilot owned the airport, he should have made a bee line for 17 center and landed the plane. They were lucky that whatever fuel issue they had didn't cause a disaster in the extra minutes flying a pattern to the opposite runway. I've had one emergency in my flying career and the tower we declared with was great. Everyone got shooed out of the airspace or landed and we owned the airport.. cleared to land any runway. They equipment was waiting for us (which fortunately we didn't need) and other than giving name/phone numbers that's the last we heard of it. If you (any of you) have a serious doubt to the safe outcome of the flight, don't be afraid to declare the emergency and do whatever it takes to get yourself and your passengers safely on the ground. Robert Sam Spade wrote: http://www.kvue.com/sharedcontent/Vi...2817&catId=104 |
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ATC Handling of Low-Fuel American Flight
On 2/23/2007 9:01 AM, Robert Chambers wrote the following:
I gotta wonder if the approach controller told the local controller that there was an emergency declared, it didn't appear on the video but my have been edited out. and what was AA squawking? A 7700 should have made sure everyone knew. |
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ATC Handling of Low-Fuel American Flight
Mitty wrote:
On 2/23/2007 9:01 AM, Robert Chambers wrote the following: I gotta wonder if the approach controller told the local controller that there was an emergency declared, it didn't appear on the video but my have been edited out. and what was AA squawking? A 7700 should have made sure everyone knew. That would have gotten their attention, too. |
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ATC Handling of Low-Fuel American Flight
Doesn't matter what he was squawking.. he was on a discrete squawk
anyway so they knew who he was. He declared an emergency, that's all it takes to get anything you need to meet your situation. Mitty wrote: On 2/23/2007 9:01 AM, Robert Chambers wrote the following: I gotta wonder if the approach controller told the local controller that there was an emergency declared, it didn't appear on the video but my have been edited out. and what was AA squawking? A 7700 should have made sure everyone knew. |
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ATC Handling of Low-Fuel American Flight
"Robert Chambers" wrote in message . .. Doesn't matter what he was squawking.. he was on a discrete squawk anyway so they knew who he was. He declared an emergency, that's all it takes to get anything you need to meet your situation. Well, that's all it SHOULD have taken. |
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ATC Handling of Low-Fuel American Flight
"Mitty" wrote in message ... and what was AA squawking? A 7700 should have made sure everyone knew. No more so than declaring it via the radio. |
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ATC Handling of Low-Fuel American Flight
Steven P. McNicoll writes:
No more so than declaring it via the radio. Actually, a radio declaration would make it more obvious, as only ATC sees squawk codes, whereas everyone in the area hears radio transmissions. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
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ATC Handling of Low-Fuel American Flight
In article , Mitty
wrote: On 2/23/2007 9:01 AM, Robert Chambers wrote the following: I gotta wonder if the approach controller told the local controller that there was an emergency declared, it didn't appear on the video but my have been edited out. and what was AA squawking? A 7700 should have made sure everyone knew. If you've already told the controller you have an emergency, squawking 7700 doesn't add anything to the situation. The 7700 stuff is for when you're out of radio contact. |
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ATC Handling of Low-Fuel American Flight
On 2/23/2007 6:21 PM, Roy Smith wrote the following:
If you've already told the controller you have an emergency, squawking 7700 doesn't add anything to the situation. The 7700 stuff is for when you're out of radio contact. Au contraire. With a 7700 squawk then if the emergency situation wasn't mentioned in the handoff (which it possibly wasn't) then the next controller would still have known something was seriously wrong. (Now possibly if AA had squawked 7700 he would have been asked to switch off that code at some point, but we don't even know from the video whether he tried it.) |
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