yep that is the one
Not a near miss at all. Whilst the controller had cut it pretty tight, that's not abnormal. I think he went around too soon. The smaller aircraft was rotating as the 777 started to go around...so, I'd have landed.
So in this example are you suggesting the decision to go-around was most likely made by the pilots and not directed by ATC?jb747 said:ATC are generally masters at juggling this sort of thing.
So in this example are you suggesting the decision to go-around was most likely made by the pilots and not directed by ATC?
My concern (from my arm-chair, so totally unjustified) would be if the 777 continued and made a late go-around for an unrelated reason, would that put the 777 and metroliner in a situation where minimal separation became a problem? Or does the go-around flight path include a turn to ensure the 777 would not encroach on the metroliner route even if the go-around was initiated later and at a lower altitude?
Thanks JB, I have to say I'm a little shocked at how close you say the planes normally get. I'm sure you are all confident and well qualified and know what you are doing, it just seems very close to me. I suppose that why you fly the planes and I sit in the back.
Become a banker, and buy an aircraft for fun on the weekend. I can't see the sort of career that I've had being available in a world in which pilots are becoming consumables. I wouldn't recommend it to my son. If he wants to fly, the military is the best training that money can't buy.
The shortage has supposedly been coming for many years, and perhaps it might exist in Asia. But, it really seems to be blurb that is fed to people by flying schools that are simply trying to sell their training.
Just saw this video pop up in a feed and thought it was pretty ballsy flying by the AirBerlin pilots (not knowing the airport [Madeira in Spain] or actual wind conditions at the time).
[FONT=&]https://au.news.yahoo.com/video/watch/28097428/raw-plane-lands-in-crazy-conditions/
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Until he skews right (back to an almost perfect forward landing on the centreline - but it appears to be on the RHS wheels), I thought "nah, surely he should be considering a go around". To our forum pilots - is this considered a normal crosswind landing??
No way I want to be a pilot trying to do that - so thanks and hats off to jb747, Boris and all the other pilots here. I'll happily pay you more to get me on the ground in those conditions...
Looking at the various images of the 777X one point stands out - the wings have no winglets at all on them.
Am I missing something here?
Or is Boeing waiting until it has been patented every which way before revealing the true end wing structure?
Even though they are folding back I would have thought that the tip turbulence would still be worth a 3-5% fuel saving.
Have a look at the 787 wings vs the 777X.
View attachment 49329
Seems different to the 787 variants shown.
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The wingtip features (sharklets, winglets, etc) are there to disrupt the spanwise flow of air that is a function of lower pressures above the wing and high-pressures below. This movement of the air creates the wingtip vortices which causes induced drag. However, the strength of the vortices and thus amount of induced drag is a function of many different factors (wing shape & size, aspect ratio, even the shape and design of the fuselage and how that interacts with airflow over the wing).
Therefore it's not a given that some sort of wingtip feature is an essential part of a new aircraft design. Remember that adding any extra pieces of bodywork at the end of the wing will always create form-drag and add weight (reducing fuel efficiency), irrespective of whatever good work the part is doing in lowering induced drag (which increases fuel efficiency). It's a balancing act...
The current 777 doesn't have any, because Boeing must have worked out that benefit they offered was outweighed by the negatives. And the technology was there - the 747-400 complete with it's winglets started commercial service in 1989, 6 years before the 777.
Note the new-ish 747-8 doesn't have any form of winglet, but the 744 did
Looking at the various images of the 777X one point stands out - the wings have no winglets at all on them.
Am I missing something here?
Even though they are folding back I would have thought that the tip turbulence would still be worth a 3-5% fuel saving.
Have a look at the 787 wings vs the 777X.
Yes but due to the extra length they give to the new 777 series Boeing need to add the complexity and weight of folding wing tips, a la naval carrier aircraft, to them so they cn fit inside the existing airport infrastructure. IIRC correctly Boeing did offer earlier 777 with a similar feature as to allow the 777 to be used in smaller domestic gates but no airline took up that option.
Here is my question, has anyone else noticed that the Airbus newer engined aircraft have dropped the cheverons (jagged teeth), seen on the 787, 777x and 747-8, on the engine bypass cowling's trailling edge. These were to reduce the noise signature but at the expense of fuel efficiency as the cheverons created that little bit of additional drag and the 787, 747-8 have not be given a lower noise grading to allow for curfew operations.
Everything is a balance in aviation......f