- Joined
- Oct 13, 2013
- Posts
- 15,429
As usual social media now replete with their favourite clickbait "plunged 6000 feet".
Probably died from the stress of reading the off-topic argument in this threadCNA reporting 73 year old British male was one of the deceased. Given reports of a defib being used, possible it may be the stress of event caused cardiac etc.
I've read about it happening before in business jets (which are of course more affected by turbulence), but I've certainly not heard about a death in large commercial aircraft before.OMG....never heard of a fatality due to turbulence before!!
Agreed that area is really bad for turbulence. I find the area south of Tokyo is also very bad (last ~45min of flight from AU or NZ to Tokyo). In fact some JAL flight attendants were injured due to turbulence 150km from Narita not too long ago Four JAL Flight Attendants Injured Apparently Due to Turbulence at Altitude of 5,200 Meters En Route from Melbourne to NaritaHappened over the Bay of Bengal. I’ve experienced very bad turbulence that lasted close to an hour that was pretty unbearable. I can’t imagine though what it must’ve been like on this flight.
Well no normal person would be googling this kind of statistics unless it were presented directly to them. Hence the only source for me was from Air Crash Investigations from Nat Geo. Those were definitely prime time material still remember it to this day (rest of the TV channels are dead on any given day)
And yet it seems you didn't pay attention to that either...because they did episodes on all 3 incidents you seem to have been completely unaware of based on your ramblings in this thread.Well no normal person would be googling this kind of statistics unless it were presented directly to them. Hence the only source for me was from Air Crash Investigations from Nat Geo. Those were definitely prime time material still remember it to this day (rest of the TV channels are dead on any given day)
As you can tell it has been 10 years since I last watched TV. I do remember the footages but not the specific airlines that it represents cause I have no reason to back then because I only fly a select few airlines so no other airlines register with me unless it is something that everyone else knows about. Only the major ones from the past few years came to my mind (the trans-Tasman flight) and the major ones OZ SFO and the two MH ones. The typical ones that everyone knows/hears about. Shocked to hear that the SQ event happened this century too and with 80 fatalities not sure how I missed up on that. The only reason I would choose SQ over other Asian airlines is probably their safety record without it it is interchangeable with CX/ANA/JAL and the likes. All fits the same purpose.And yet it seems you didn't pay attention to that either...because they did episodes on all 3 incidents you seem to have been completely unaware of based on your ramblings in this thread.
I actually had to google that up
EDIT: How in the world do you attempt to take off on a wrong runway and collide with an immobile construction equipment is beyond my imagination
The caviar being smeared all over the walls would be even worse.Geez, that's one hell of a belting. Imagine F with all that Krug dripping from the ceiling,
- A 73-year-old British man has died after a flight from London to Singapore hit turbulence, forcing it to make an emergency landing in Bangkok, Thailand.
- A student on board the plane said there was a "very dramatic drop", which launched some people into the ceiling and knocked their heads on the baggage cabins overhead.
- What's next? Singapore Airlines said 18 people were hospitalised, including a crew member, with DFAT confirming eight Australians among them.
This is a good reminder that if it’s good enough for the pilots to keep their seatbelts fastened whilst seated, it’s good enough for passengers too.
AFF Supporters can remove this and all advertisements
Better it drip from the ceiling than being hit by the bottle.Geez, that's one hell of a belting. Imagine F with all that Krug dripping from the ceiling,
I think it's hard to argue that this situation could have been better handled by almost any other airline.What I mean is I would happily pay $50 for a "safer" airline given with a good safety track record. I mean it is the most rational choice as opposed to a more budget-conscious choice which is also rational considering which variable you value more: safety versus money? I would trust a company that is too big to fail to take all precautions from these types of situations happening. As for other companies that could dissolve any minute probably less so.
And that's if the backpack was actually 7 kg. We all know that the average weight is likely more than that (some are probably as heavy as checked bags).No point speculating. Seatbelts help but they won't save you from a 7kg backpack to the head if someone else has stood up and is getting their bag out at the wrong time.
Sending best to the passengers, I'm sure it has been a very traumatic experience, most of all for the relatives of the deceased.
I thought I read in the "Ask a Pilot" thread once that radars detect weather and storm cells but it doesn't really give a strong indication of how bad that weather region might be in terms of turbulence. You could fly through stormy weather and be relatively fine, whereas another area (which may not have storms) is quite choppy. And then there's an argument for how long the turbulence could be (you might be fine taking a bit of chop for 2 minutes, as opposed to something that might be more sustained).Geoffrey Thomas says severe turbulence has increased by 55% over the past 40 years because of climate change. Obviously the BoB is a bit of a hot spot.
Questioned how the on board radar didn't pick up the severity of the storm involved, and why the pilots couldn't get around it.
I wonder which lounge(s) they'll be treated to?We have also arranged hotel accommodation or lounge access for them to rest until their next flight.
Anecdotally, I always found BA/Qantas to be a bit more reassuring when it came to turbulence. Captain would announce that they'd become aware of rough air ahead and they'd be changing route accordingly, whereas SA cabin crew would tell you "Captain has turned on the seatbelt sign" and you'd bounce through it.I think it's hard to argue that this situation could have been better handled by almost any other airline.
From the few photos made available, it looks like the overhead bins did their job!No point speculating. Seatbelts help but they won't save you from a 7kg backpack to the head if someone else has stood up and is getting their bag out at the wrong time.