mangalore today
name
name
name
Thursday, April 18
Genesis Engineersnamename

 

With 370 on board, how an Air India pilot saved the day


Mangalore Today News Network

New York, Sept.18: About 370 passengers onboard an Air India flight between New Delhi and New York had a narrow escape last Tuesday as the pilot managed to safely land the plane despite the rare combination of electronic malfunction, adverse weather conditions and lack of fuel.

It was on September 11 when Air India flight AI-101 was about to land at John F Kennedy airport in New York. After a close to 15-hour uneventful flight, one of the longest direct flights in the world, what unfolded in the next 38 minutes was a pilot’s worst nightmare.


air india flig...


Captain Rustom Palia, who was commanding the flight, was decidedly calm, belying what he was telling the Air Traffic Control at JFK - “Auto land is not available. We have multiple instrument failure,” he said, followed by the equally alarming “We’re really, you know, stuck and there’s no fuel”.

The weather conditions, too, were deteriorating and what was to follow was the most critical phase of a flight – landing.

All three Instrument Landing System (ILS) receivers on board the Boeing 777-300, one of the world’s most advanced planes, had failed leaving with the commander a single source radio altimeter and a Traffic Collision and Avoidance System failure.

Other key equipment like auto-land, windshear systems, auto speed brake and the auxillary power unit were also unserviceable, the pilot told the ATC. This meant that the crew would have to manually land the massive jet without the aid of the host of systems designed to help the process.

Coupled with the cloudy weather, it became impossible to go ahead with the landing at JFK and decided to put it down at Newark, the designated alternative airport, instead. The low fuel meant the crew could not wait for the weather to clear up.

Using an out-of-the-box approach, the pilot landed the plane safely by mimicking the instrument landing system with the help of the jet’s vertical and lateral navigation systems. Neither Boeing mentions this technique in its operational guidelines, nor does Air India give its training, NDTV reported.

Air India has set up an internal inquiry committee to probe the incident. “For New York diversion, the Flight Safety department is investigating the matter. The Air India pilots have successfully handled the situation,” airline spokesperson Praveen Bhatnagar said.


Write Comment | E-Mail To a Friend | Facebook | Twitter | Print
Error:NULL
Write your Comments on this Article
Your Name
Native Place / Place of Residence
Your E-mail
Your Comment
You have characters left.
Security Validation
Enter the characters in the image above