Back to Squawk list
  • 20

AA flight 1051 MD-80 Horizontal Stab jammed on ORD-AUS flight today...

제출됨
 
Best possible outcome - a safe landing.. My wife emailed & texted me in terror this afternoon. Pilot informed passengers of malfunction. Passengers prepped for emergency landing, flight circled for fuel burn. Thank you pilot and crew! AMR - please keenly maintain and inspect your aircraft especially with all the business distractions right now. Please accelerate the retirement of your aging fleet. (flightaware.com) 기타...

Sort type: [Top] [Newest]


[This poster has been suspended.]

preacher1
preacher1 1
They laid that one off to poor maintenance i.e., not lubing the HS enough. Not quite the same but wasn't that jackscrew found to be the culprit in those 737 crashes at Pittsburgh and in Colorado?

[This poster has been suspended.]

preacher1
preacher1 1
10-4. I'll try and call that up on the tube when I get a chance
AccessAir
AccessAir 1
No..the poorly lubricated jack screw was what caused the Alaska MD-80 top crash..
The United and USAir 737 rudder hard over were caused theoretically by a jammed servo push/pull rod that is used to make rudder deflections one way or the the other...
markearl1
Pitch trim run-a-way and jammed stabilizer are part of your flight sim training. Good checklist and CRM procedures are nessasary in the cockpit. Part 25 certified aircraft can fly with these malfunctions. A well trained crew can deal with it.
THRUSTT
THRUSTT 3
"Please accelerate the retirement of your aging fleet???"
PUBLIC, DIG DEEP INTO YOUR POCKETS AND PAY FOR A TICKET, DON'T EXPECT $59 TO FLORIDA!!!
preacher1
preacher1 0
You told me to settle down earlier so I dind't blow no O ring.lol. what's good for the old goose is good for the young gander.LOL
THRUSTT
THRUSTT 0
Yeah but my rings are still in production... What's going on with you?
preacher1
preacher1 0
Well, I went to Prescott AZ and back on Monday and to Liberal KS on Tuesday and have set on my butt the rest of the week. One of my newby's quit to go back down close to Houston, where him&wife are from. He said he got him a job as a line dog with United. Gonna do all their training thing and work a reserve board, for about 2 grand a year of what he had here and about 1/2 the benny's. Oh well!
preacher1
preacher1 0
I'll probabably find out tomorrow afternoon what we are doing next week.
SWEATINTHSWAMP
Weird. Nothing in the Austin Staesman as you would expect and no link other than to a flight aware schedule. Links?
outlaw20
funny how i am not finding this incident noted on Aviation Hearld or any of the other aircraft incident reporting sites, or even one single news story. let's face it press eats up anything bad about American Airlines. I hate to say without documentation of the incident, I question it even happened. Furthermore, without any documentation of the incident out there, do I dare say we have another case of disgruntled staff or former staff trying to cause issues?
mcarterred
Considering I was on the flight I was quite suprised I didn't see it in the news either. We landed with 4 firetrucks waiting and escorted us to the gate once they cleared us. It was a smooth landing and the pilot confirmed that it was a landing WITH a jammed horizontal stabilizer..At that point we all clapped. Not a full flight but definitely others there.
preacher1
preacher1 1
I wouldn't disagree with you, BUT, on down in this thread are a couple of comments, one from someone on the filght and another noting that it is an item trained for and can be handled with good CRM and a well trained crew. That said, I have never had one jam on me but I daresay I don't think it would be any fun, regardless of who was in the cockpit. That said, why it is not published in the usual rag sheets I dunno.
mcarterred
I was on that flight and thank goodness for a terrific crew that landed us safely in Austin. We circled for about 25 minutes and then the pilot came on and told us the news. We prepared for emergency landing- removing heels, getting into crash landing position, and learning how to operate plane doors. It was terrifying but so very thankful for the crew. No thanks to the old TWA plane.
THRUSTT
THRUSTT 2
What's being an old TWA plane have to do with a mechanical??? You ever had a flat tire or dead battery in an old car???
I've had a jammed stabilizer an a 30 year old Learjet, it's a machine, it will break!!!
preacher1
preacher1 3
I have never had one but I can bet it wouldn't be any fun. You definitely need to know how to fly your plane cause all the checklists in the world probably wouldn't help you on that, let alone having time to read them.
THRUSTT
THRUSTT 1
The one I had a couple years ago, I could kinda laugh about now. The airplane kept climbing and there were guys above just getting out of our way. I looked down at the ocean as it was happening wondering if that day was going to be the day.
Obviously the guy above wanted me to suffer some more in 135, so I'm still here...
preacher1
preacher1 1
I guess it was better climbing than going down, at least for a bit, but like is asked below, how did you gt it down? Maybe you won't suffer too bad.LOL.

[This poster has been suspended.]

preacher1
preacher1 2
Dat oughta work.LOL
rarebear14
and what did you do to get safely on Terra Firma ????

로그인

계정을 가지고 계십니까? 사용자 정의된 기능, 비행 경보 및 더 많은 정보를 위해 지금(무료) 등록하세요!
FlightAware 항공편 추적이 광고로 지원된다는 것을 알고 계셨습니까?
FlightAware.com의 광고를 허용하면 FlightAware를 무료로 유지할 수 있습니다. Flightaware에서는 훌륭한 경험을 제공할 수 있도록 관련성있고 방해되지 않는 광고를 유지하기 위해 열심히 노력하고 있습니다. FlightAware에서 간단히 광고를 허용 하거나 프리미엄 계정을 고려해 보십시오..
종료