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USAF airman spots leak on civilian flight
Quote:
http://www.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123149266 |
I notice 2 holes in that story.
First - Once the flight arrived in San Francisco, Sergeant Bachleda and a coworker were asked to stay back while the aircraft was deplaned. They waited for the arrival of investigators, the fire chief, and the owner of the airport to explain what went wrong. The owner on an airport went out to meet it (presumably that is SFO so no small airport) And second - Sergeant Bachleda said the captain and the crew were trying to figure out how the aircraft was losing 6,000 pounds of fuel an hour and then they knew exactly what was going on. -------- The captain said they would have never made it to Japan if it wasn't for him. If they knew they were randomly losing 6,000 pounds of fuel an hour and they couldn't stop it, then they'd know it wouldn't make it to Japan with the fuel level dropping so fast - so the comment seems very strange. |
I was going to say it was really strange the pilots "didn't know" how they were loosing so much fuel and that only after the passenger pointed it out that they realized they weren't going to make it!
I'd say, after i have read it again, its more than likely that the article has been beefed up a little. Still any idea what might cause a leak like that? |
Quote:
If I was the skipper, I would have sent my FO back into the cabin and in the most discreet manner possible have a look at the wings. Maybe getting an FA to do it first, to look for anything obvious Trying hard not to alarm the pax Having Tech Crew with a " concerned " face walking thru the cabin is not a good look. |
This story was probably translated from Japanese to English so that may explain some of the "interesting" wording/structure.
I am pretty certain that if the Captain knew he was losing 3000 litres of fuel an hour he wouldn't have continued the flight. :eek: Well I hope so anyway! |
Have a look at Air Transat Flight 236 where the pilots did not recognise that there was a fuel leak and the A330 became the "Azores Glider".
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