Discovering A SERIOUS Problem On The Aircraft's Tail | Flying On Empty | Mayday: Air Disaster

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  • Опубликовано: 12 июл 2022
  • Thompson, 53, and Tansky, 57, are among Alaska’s most experienced pilots. Shortly after takeoff, they discover a serious problem with the aircraft’s tail. The stabiliser, the horizontal surface on the tailplane, won’t move.
    What episode would you like to see on the OFFICIAL Mayday channel?
    From Season 1 Episode 6 "Flying On Empty": On January 21, 2000, Alaska Airlines Captain Ted Thompson and First Officer Bill Tansky prepare for a routine flight to San Francisco, unaware of a crucial weakness in the plane’s structure.
    The stabiliser plays a vital part in controlling the angle of the plane in flight. The pilots struggle to keep the plane level. The stabiliser in the tail is jammed, pushing the aircraft toward the ground. To compensate, they have to pull back on the control column. The plane is unstable. The pilots request to divert from San Francisco to the nearer airport in Los Angeles. They try again to free up the jammed stabiliser. The plane shudders violently and dives 7000 feet in one minute at a 90-degree angle as the pilots fight hard at the controls.
    After the terrifying plunge downward, Alaska 261 has a reprieve. But aware that they have a full emergency, the pilots request to be routed out over the ocean. If the worst happens, they don’t want to kill people on the ground as well as the plane. The plane plunges out of control again, upside-down and tumbling, the pilots continue to try to control the plane as it crashes into the ocean.
    Welcome to the OFFICIAL Mayday: Air Disaster RUclips Channel.
    Mayday: Air Disaster is a dramatic non-fiction series that investigates high-profile air disasters to uncover how and why they happened. Mayday: Air Disaster follows survivors, family members of crash victims and transportation safety investigators as they piece together the evidence of the causes of major accidents. So climb into the cockpit for an experience you won’t soon forget.
    Subscribe to the OFFICIAL Mayday: Air Disaster channel here: bit.ly/2PQnaMI
    #MaydayAirDisaster #MaydayInvestigation #AirEmergency #MaydayEpisodes #planecrashes #airplanecrashes #aviationaccidents #Fullepisode #airplanedisasterdocumentary #aircrashinvestigation #FlyingOnEmpty #AlaskaAirlines
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Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @MaydayAirDisaster
    @MaydayAirDisaster  Год назад +160

    What episode would you like to see on the OFFICIAL Mayday channel?

    • @cezarcristiangheorghe997
      @cezarcristiangheorghe997 Год назад +42

      All episodes are fantastic and plenty interesting, but seeing a successful landing in a damaged plane sure does bring a tear to the eye 🥺

    • @999-98
      @999-98 Год назад +23

      Are you able to do China Eastern flight 5735?

    • @onemorething100
      @onemorething100 Год назад +15

      A flight from Chicago to Pittsburgh That crashed killing everyone on board. I think it was in 1994-95. I was almost on the flight coming home from US Navy in Great Lakes.

    • @lanalook9200
      @lanalook9200 Год назад +7

      This isn't official A. B, AN FULL EPISODE NOT BROKE UP

    • @MatchingUser
      @MatchingUser Год назад +2

      I’d like to see ComAir 5191, of course if there’s been a documentary made by you guys on that specific accident.

  • @upulaherath7204
    @upulaherath7204 7 месяцев назад +46

    This style of storytelling in documentaries is rare and special!

  • @sharonread7674
    @sharonread7674 9 месяцев назад +263

    My father was a British Airways engineer/fitter. He retired early due to stress. He new the weight of the responsibility of people's lives in his hands. As he got older he just couldn't cope with that stress anymore. He passed away over 20 years ago now. Bless you dad. Miss you. ❣

    • @lindinle
      @lindinle 6 месяцев назад +1

      Why not just be a small time pilot then ?

    • @daveseville7394
      @daveseville7394 6 месяцев назад +8

      @@lindinle let him rest FFS

    • @user-dp5tk4zu3h
      @user-dp5tk4zu3h 4 месяца назад +1

      Ameen

    • @lisaendress724
      @lisaendress724 3 месяца назад +1

      I think the 6th passenger knew he was stuck in his seat and didn't want to waste time for the other survivers and handed them the rope. Poor guy! So sad!

  • @peterclancy3653
    @peterclancy3653 Год назад +788

    I was on a Dash 8 seated in the last row and as we taxied at Perth I noticed a liquid leaking from the port engine. I thought it might have been accumulated moisture from the previous rain. As we commenced take off run the flow increased and I immediately told the cabin crew behind me that the engine was leaking fluid and she communicated this to the pilots. At this point the aircraft had rotated and was climbing but immediately levelled out and began a circuit to land again. We landed and the pilots stopped on a taxiway the fire crews attended the aircraft and we stayed there for quite. Due to the quick response of the pilots I believe they became aware of the problem after the aircraft had rotated. Good outcome anyway!

    • @camila8031
      @camila8031 Год назад +15

      do you know what was the fluid? was it a leak or just moisture?

    • @peterclancy3653
      @peterclancy3653 Год назад +101

      @@camila8031 it was a fuel leak. Apparently a ferrule nut had failed and as the engine came up to full power the leak got really bad. Delayed the flight for about 6 hours until another aircraft became available!

    • @camila8031
      @camila8031 Год назад +41

      @@peterclancy3653 oh.. glad everything turned out well in the end!

    • @ErenYeager-zf3td
      @ErenYeager-zf3td Год назад +71

      You are a hero and you saved anyone from a possible catastrophic crash .

    • @davidcarrington63
      @davidcarrington63 Год назад +30

      I second that, (you are the hero) as well. The passenger here that is leaving this comment and spotted the fuel leak is the true hero. Thanks to your observance to detail you were the key to saving everyone's lives on that plane. We don't know if it would have crashed and burned, but it very well could have. It could have taken the pilots a long time to figure that leak out, if at all. You sir, alerted them right away! Way to go!

  • @karanhdream
    @karanhdream Год назад +357

    They don't say this in this film but Robert Piché was more than "somewhat out of the ordinary". He had glider experience, had been trained by old school pilots in the Great North yes, but he was also a very complex character. He had been in jail for flying a plane loaded with drugs from South America to the US (look into it if you're interested, it's a complicated story) and a drinking addiction. By the time of the events of this flight, his personal life was falling apart and this was a life-changing moment. After that, he managed to kick his addiction, began helping other addicts and saved his broken family.
    That flights was a moment of truth, the likes of you get once in a lifetime. A do or die moment. Commander Piché is a flawed man, far from without reproach. But when the chips were down, he pulled through and saved 306 lives. I salute you commander.
    Edit : A lot of people comment how the pilots made a critical mistake and how they would never make such a dumb call... Well insight is a wonderful thing. We make decisions based on what we know at that moment. It's easy to say you'd act differently but truth is we don't know. Did they make a mistake? Yes, absolutely. But part of the reason Piché did not 100% trust the computer is also part of how he was able to make that miraculous landing. He was a kind of pilot that is now a dying breed, pilots with amazing flying skills and diverse flight experience. Those are the kind of pilots who can save a plane when disaster strikes.

    • @timtapscott8737
      @timtapscott8737 Год назад +12

      Wow thanks for the info. I could never do that job.

    • @jamierutledge8877
      @jamierutledge8877 Год назад +6

      Wow I didn’t know that I’ll take a look at it. Thanks for sharing that’s very interesting

    • @souldevil6997
      @souldevil6997 9 месяцев назад +9

      Sounds like a movie script....wait I saw a movie like this... somewhere 😢

    • @JoJoGranum
      @JoJoGranum 9 месяцев назад +12

      I salute you too Commander Piche. It takes a brave man to kick his flaws and come through like a professional

    • @HeavyBrocks
      @HeavyBrocks 8 месяцев назад +9

      He was actually the reason they ended up as a glider. Naaaahhh it’s just a computer malfunction, go ahead and cross the fuel over. *loses engine* Doesn’t shut off the cross feed. Naaaaaah it’s a computer thing is all. No hero there.

  • @UnknownUzer
    @UnknownUzer Год назад +346

    25:12 You are NOT supposed to inflate your life preserver when you hit the water, you are supposed to wait until you are OUTSIDE the plane.
    Inflating the preserver while inside the plane, could possibly cause you to float to the ceiling and get pinned, and can also make it to where you cannot get your head under water to exit the plane if it's flooding, and the plane will drag you down with it.
    Get out of the plane first THEN inflate your flotation collar.

    • @CynthiaSchoenbauer
      @CynthiaSchoenbauer Год назад +3

      If that is a protection, rather than a criticism so you will feel smarter, then I will listen. Otherwise, keep it to yourself please.

    • @UnknownUzer
      @UnknownUzer Год назад +1

      @@CynthiaSchoenbauer I don't give a Fk whether you listen or not.
      Not only is it the official procedure for a water landing, but it is common sense for anyone with a basic grasp of simple physics.

    • @LindaStevensBZ
      @LindaStevensBZ Год назад +109

      @@CynthiaSchoenbauer ---- That is the correct procedure for a ditching. Many people have died because they failed to follow.

    • @371stone
      @371stone Год назад +54

      That's the correct procedure. Inflate only when clear of the aircraft.

    • @nsrailfann4life91
      @nsrailfann4life91 Год назад +94

      @@CynthiaSchoenbauer it's legitimately the correct procedure..... Why such a snarky reply to someone who was just trying to pass along educational life saving information?
      I bet you are real fun at parties.....

  • @cayrick
    @cayrick Год назад +90

    Capt. Pichet is right up there with Sully and Pearson of the Gimli glider.

    • @dashcan8479
      @dashcan8479 Год назад +10

      No he is not. He clearly let the transfer of fuel happen with a suspected leak. I would never do that. EVER

    • @cayrick
      @cayrick Год назад +14

      @@dashcan8479 Initially they had no reason to suspect a leak.

    • @ahdon3
      @ahdon3 Год назад +2

      Captain is at fault. He looks arrogant too.

    • @ahdon3
      @ahdon3 Год назад +4

      No reason to suspect leak? Why did he ask the air hostess to check from window? And he is dumb to know that they can't see from window in dark.

    • @unknownaviation1845
      @unknownaviation1845 Год назад +2

      @@ahdon3 At least he saved 300 people's lives. Sheesh, dude.

  • @Theyliewesleep
    @Theyliewesleep Год назад +175

    It's fascinating when you consider all of the things that can happen and are going wrong that will lead to your demise but just as equally fascinating is all the things going wrong that lead to you not dying. The variables although seemingly inconsequential at the time end up being so profound that it is literally the difference between life and death. And that just blows my mind.

    • @sharoncassell9358
      @sharoncassell9358 Год назад +6

      I believe in proper parts too. The landing gear was being ground tested after a change. The trainee next to me installed a cotter key but I told him it was too small & handed him the thick one I had stored in my pocket. He brushed it away and the mechanics swung the gear on jacks and the key broke. The line burst and hydraulic fluid under 1500 psi sprayed all over me and in my eye. I went to the ER after I flooded my eye with water. Still can see and retired after 40 years of work.

  • @craigphillips4205
    @craigphillips4205 2 месяца назад +6

    Absolute KUDOS to the 2 pilots for their heroic landing... that was some hairy situation. And also a life saving call by air traffic control to change the route. Without that call, this episode becomes a tragedy...

  • @taleburtalks3206
    @taleburtalks3206 Год назад +130

    MayDay is one of the most favourite shows of all time. The wonderful portrayal by the team. Very happy to see all of the lives alive. My wishes on their way from Bangladesh

    • @no_name4796
      @no_name4796 2 месяца назад

      It's nice that if you read what actually was said and done, this show portays it very accurately, with very little hollidow style bs

  • @cm9247
    @cm9247 19 дней назад +3

    No fuel, no weight. Still, the pilots had one shot, and no margin of error in calculating the glideslope to the runway. Excellent job!

  • @capnrico8877
    @capnrico8877 Год назад +449

    To call the Ethiopian ditching “controlled” is misleading. There was still a struggle between the pilots and the hijackers actively going on all the way down to the water. Otherwise the pilots would have put it down wings level, it probably wouldn’t have broken up so extensively, and there’d probably have been more survivors (of course it wouldn’t have ended up running out of fuel and ditching if it hadn’t been hijacked!).

    • @davidgapp1457
      @davidgapp1457 Год назад +39

      Although you are partially correct the pilots were faced with an unenviable situation. Ideally you do NOT want to land parallel to the waves (which increases the chance of catching a wing or engine). On the other hand, he wanted to keep the aircraft as close (to the beach) as possible in the hope of saving lives if/when the fuselage broke up. I have to say I've extensively practiced crash landing on the ocean (simulator of course) in various configurations, various weather and ocean conditions, and with various aircraft ranging from the 330 to 777. The best outcome was the 330 however all other attempts ended in catastrophic damage to the aircraft. The engines tear away on touch down but almost invariably the aircraft either dives in or cartwheels or slews so violently the fuselage disintegrates. It's not until you get down to aircraft with smaller engines that you stand a reasonable chance of surviving. In the case of the Ethiopian ditching, a significant issue was the number of passengers who inflated their jackets before (trying to) exiting the aircraft. Many were trapped in the water-filled fuselage and, panicking, failed to realize they need to remove their jackets in order to escape.

    • @potato1907
      @potato1907 Год назад +28

      didn't everybody survive the initial impact but then drowned due to some inflating their life jackets

    • @smswiere
      @smswiere Год назад +31

      @@potato1907 not everyone but a good number did survive then died due to drowning because they activated their lifejackets before exiting the plane.

    • @touristguy87
      @touristguy87 Год назад +1

      details

    • @acts238isthetruth
      @acts238isthetruth Год назад

      O ok

  • @adrpals2324
    @adrpals2324 Год назад +314

    The captain sounds so cool, especially confronted with an extremely stressful situation. Good job gentlemen.

    • @beringstraitrailway
      @beringstraitrailway Год назад +37

      The captain finally came to his senses at the end, but his refusal at first to believe that a fuel leak could be happening put many people's lives at risk!

    • @williamtran3208
      @williamtran3208 Год назад +1

      @@beringstraitrailway WDYM, & what're you talking about?!

    • @originflightstudios2863
      @originflightstudios2863 Год назад +17

      @@beringstraitrailway Its easy for you to say that on the ground and nothing happening, but put yourself in his shoes with the distressing situation that is becoming bigger by the second, would you have made the right decision? I don't think so.

    • @rockwithyou2006
      @rockwithyou2006 Год назад +6

      @@originflightstudios2863 He probably wouldn't have, but he doesn't have a commercial pilot license either. A pilot is expected to have this much common sense. He could have always emergency landed the plane on one engine.

    • @jackfitzpatrick8173
      @jackfitzpatrick8173 Год назад +3

      Some years ago there was a British Airways 747 which,while flying through unexpected volcanic ash (from a nearby eruption),had all four of its engines shut down. The Captain got on the PA and,calmly,said to the passengers something like "I hope you're not too distressed".

  • @abasilioss
    @abasilioss Год назад +248

    Amazingly the crew were able to glide the airplane for this long distance and were able to land the airplane under all this stress and save all these people's lives...they didn't know that there was a fuel leak in the system

    • @elizabethriparip9234
      @elizabethriparip9234 Год назад +4

      The number one lesson is here no matter how busy it is make sure all airplane must have inspection before going out to fly anywhere it is responsibilities of the owner to make sure all plane are fixed and properly maintenance done to it like putting or changing part the right parts for the pane that I have problem take time examine the airplane make sure all the parts are all put in properly oz you don't want your airplane flying with lots of minor defects coz nobody care enough to take care of it with bunch of mechanic doing maintenance they should do heavy inspection coz it is their responsibilities for it's safety before departure it is costly for the consumer as well for the airplane owner it cost lives for failures of maintenance for the plane itself they should make a check list for the present problemsitmay have and they have in the future inspection is a must and maintenance is a must don't forget it's a big responsibilities for any airlines to make sure all the equipment is properly installed and the right parts for the airplane all defects must be recorded and reported prevention to avoid destruction for the plane and death for the people to save lives at the same time good day to all who read this Mrs Elizabeth k riparip I'm not accusing any body it is my opinion and suggestion only

    • @expansionone
      @expansionone Год назад +24

      the captain was very naive still considering a computer glitch after the first engine flame-out. It was pure luck that he made it to the Azores

    • @ChancetheCanine
      @ChancetheCanine 10 месяцев назад

      Wander what the glide angle was??

    • @g_pazzini
      @g_pazzini 8 месяцев назад +4

      the pilots forgot to close the X FEED which caused the lost of all remaining fuel from the left side tanks

    • @haz1013
      @haz1013 7 месяцев назад +4

      I think HE IS A HERO ..if it true no one died or injured all 300 people safe on the ground.Only destroyed all 8 tires because of the mechanical error not them. I bet it stressful not knowing what's the caused???

  • @fredericksullivan7925
    @fredericksullivan7925 Год назад +84

    The pilots have my full respect and praise for saving everyone onboard and this is by far my favourite of these shows.

  • @patriciakelly69
    @patriciakelly69 Год назад +42

    Those pilots were amazing. They kept their cool and prevented a catastrophe. Well done 👏..

    • @derser541
      @derser541 Год назад +6

      SMH. It was partially their fault for getting into that situation.

    • @FRED-dq8jf
      @FRED-dq8jf Год назад

      @@derser541 u don’t know the aircraft, u were not in the pilot’s position that time, so shut up.

    • @derser541
      @derser541 Год назад

      @@FRED-dq8jf read the report, muppet

    • @jonathansellars885
      @jonathansellars885 Год назад

      @@derser541 how??? They cant control this error. Gtfo

    • @clarysstoryboard3317
      @clarysstoryboard3317 Год назад +2

      @@jonathansellars885 yeah they can't control mechanical failures, but once they realized that the fuel imbalance wasn't righting itself they should've closed the cross feed valve immediately.
      Instead of going with the most likely theory of a fuel leak, at least the captain kept pushing the computer error thing which impaired them in their decision-making.

  • @tinsu5894
    @tinsu5894 Год назад +31

    Opening the wing cross feed valeve was a huge mistake. Had the pilots left it closed, they could of still fly with 1 engine. Fortunately, they were able to land with no power on both engines.

  • @kayotang2099
    @kayotang2099 7 месяцев назад +21

    There’s always human error that caused accidents again and again. As a frequent flyer, I can only avoid boarding any irresponsible airlines as much as I can. Yet who could tell what is going to happen. Thanks for the fantastic report.

  • @Britt4ny
    @Britt4ny Год назад +10

    18:00 makes me laugh each time, the "oh uh oh.. oh oh uh oh". Great voice acting.

  • @williamyoung369
    @williamyoung369 Год назад +9

    I see the time length on these videos & think, am I going to watch this whole thing, then once I start watching, I can't stop. It's edge on your seat content.

  • @xjcrossx
    @xjcrossx Год назад +17

    Part of the title and description are wrong...they are for "Cutting Corners," not "Flying on Empty."

  • @konyasriram
    @konyasriram Год назад +57

    Great job! Saved 300 lives with zero fuel gliding 150 kms! In Medicine, similar situations (with no clear diagnosis) - we are always trained to work on a broad differential diagnosis and never get fixated on a "Single Diagnosis". I am not a Pilot but interestingly Anesthesiology & Piloting a Plane has lots of similarities. I have learnt a lot watching Aviation accidents.

  • @debbielwilliamson8546
    @debbielwilliamson8546 Год назад +25

    I've watched several of these videos.
    In a large percentage, the issue always goes back to cost.
    The airline industry is much like the automotive industry in that way.
    Money always wins.

    • @nutsackmania
      @nutsackmania 8 месяцев назад

      uh yeah if "money" wasnt a constraint we'd all be dancing around on the moon having a lot of fun right now

  • @kentbummerm5586
    @kentbummerm5586 Год назад +34

    This is by far one of my all time favorite series!!

    • @BrettonFerguson
      @BrettonFerguson Год назад +3

      The only thing that sucks about this series, I've seen every episode. Some episodes more than once.

    • @bizichyld
      @bizichyld Год назад

      Lol, “one of my favorite by far” is an odd way to put it.

    • @samanthagomez7074
      @samanthagomez7074 10 месяцев назад

      Ik me 2

  • @Theyliewesleep
    @Theyliewesleep Месяц назад +3

    3mm = 0.11811 of an inch.
    The tolerances are seemingly insignificant, but they exist and should be followed because they are not insignificant.
    So happy these people all survived.

  • @CptMoroni35
    @CptMoroni35 Год назад +306

    Given the situation and their knowledge at that time, I don’t blame the pilots one bit. They handled the crisis with professionalism and saved everyone onboard. 👍🏻

    • @davidgapp1457
      @davidgapp1457 Год назад +26

      Rubbish. The pilots were a major contributor as they failed to follow airbus procedures. If you want a more accurate assessment of the crew's actions, head over to the wikipedia entry or read the official report. The blame was apportioned to poor maintenance procedures and pilot error. They were treated as national heroes on return to Canada but in my opinion they should've lost their pilot's licenses.

    • @woutertje026
      @woutertje026 Год назад +24

      @@davidgapp1457 You know the saying nobody is perfect? Guess not. It was a very unusual situation for both pilots, and the crossfeed was in the manual, and they decided to override the readings of the computers with this. Turned out the computer was right but they couldn’t know. They also couldn’t see the leak. It’s funny how you blame the pilots behind your keyboard, despite a lot of professional pilots claim they did an good job and saved everyone. As with everyone, they are not perfect and can make mistakes. But that doesn’t mean they didn’t handle probably, they did an good job. Have an nice day.

    • @superchicken5285
      @superchicken5285 Год назад +15

      @@woutertje026 lf you fill up your car and 1/2 an hour later your down to a 1/4 of a tank are you just going to fill it back up, or are you going to find out why ? Yes, l know they couldn't stop and look, but that is what gage's are for. Put an eyeball on it, if it's going down then there must be a reason, so don't throw more fuel in it and say, Ok, that will fix it. What is so hard about using you're head, especially when you are flying plus being over the ocean. This was STUPIDITY on parade!

    • @combcomclrlsr
      @combcomclrlsr Год назад +11

      The pilot was much too stubborn.

    • @rockwithyou2006
      @rockwithyou2006 Год назад

      @@woutertje026 Stubborn pilots. Distrust on computers.

  • @RayT70
    @RayT70 Год назад +13

    I'm glad these stories sometimes have a happy ending 👍

  • @michaelndungu5386
    @michaelndungu5386 11 месяцев назад +8

    can't believe it glide all that long.. unbelievable.. 👏 👏 👏 for the pilots

  • @SuperLordHawHaw
    @SuperLordHawHaw Год назад +21

    He was landing like the space shuttle which was also a glider. It did a bunch of S turns to burn off speed on the way in.

  • @ryanm7263
    @ryanm7263 10 месяцев назад +4

    That lady, lol. "Yeah we flew with Air Transat before and it kinda sucked. But this flight impressed us, was a nice new plane, no delays, crew was really nice. Then it ran out of gas over the Atlantic ocean and we almost plunged to our deaths. One star."

  • @thomasmccormick3730
    @thomasmccormick3730 Год назад +7

    He is a hero with no doubt and his mate they did everything perfectly when engine quit

  • @AadidevSooknananNXS
    @AadidevSooknananNXS Год назад +8

    This was the first ever Air Emergency story I ever saw on NatGeo back in the day

  • @o.portista
    @o.portista 3 месяца назад +5

    A flight we'll never forget, espically those who are Portuguese, and often fly from Toronto to Portugal, or Portugal to Toronto, I fly often, returning home to Portugal, and to work, and when this occured, first thing I thought, this could of been me, or someone that I know. I wish they got more of the Portuguese passengers side, and Portugal's investigation.

  • @billieribot6339
    @billieribot6339 4 месяца назад +3

    omg, this episode was like giving birth to octuplets!!! I suffered through it all the way!!!!! Amazing crew... they are the reason not a single life was lost. Hats off.

    • @jaylee6083
      @jaylee6083 4 месяца назад

      Uhh... i wouldnt say you'd be birthing 8 babies of a life or death situation

  • @mikulitsi1819
    @mikulitsi1819 Год назад +6

    What a captain... Bravo to him and the first officer

    • @gavcom4060
      @gavcom4060 Год назад

      Captain was an idiot for the first half.

  • @tearainey1
    @tearainey1 23 дня назад +1

    Even if the captain had immediately recognized and trusted that a fuel leak was occurring, it would still be unlikely that they had enough time and fuel to divert to a closer airport. He did take the time to try and investigate, he tried to use other means to verify a fuel leak rather than a computer error, so I won't say he was completely incompetent in that matter. You can't always trust that the computers are correct. In the end he reacted well and saved all those people, a lesser experienced pilot may not have been able to save them at all. I think he deserves to be recognized for his skill and heroics.

  • @russell6022
    @russell6022 Год назад +79

    You'd think the instruments would indicate an abnormally high fuel flow to the right engine and it seems that the crew should have been quicker to realize that there was indeed a leak. Fortunately it ended well though.

    • @KiRiTO72987
      @KiRiTO72987 Год назад +20

      That was one of the fixes airbus added as a result of this accident actually

    • @ScoutSniper3124
      @ScoutSniper3124 Год назад +6

      At the very least the second a fuel leak was suspected close the Cross Feed and shut down the engine on the side of the suspected leak.
      For no other reason than the risk of fire, which would have ended this QUICKLY with complete loss of all onboard.

    • @johncantwell8216
      @johncantwell8216 Год назад +1

      If the fuel flowmeter was located between the engine and the leak, the fuel flow would appear normal.

    • @dncook1955
      @dncook1955 8 месяцев назад +1

      Then, no, now, they do. This was identified, added an alarm "if fuel level depletion rate is higher than max capable fuel consumption, an alarm will sound"

  • @ynohtnazehcnas91
    @ynohtnazehcnas91 Год назад +13

    Captain and 1st Captain were incredible!!!! Congratulations to those two heros

  • @jamest6837
    @jamest6837 Год назад +119

    Real aviators were flying this airplane on that day! Incredible skill and guts!

    • @alexc4924
      @alexc4924 Год назад +15

      yeah but they ignored an obvious fuel leak for TWO HOURS and that's while they were checking fuel every 15 minutes!
      Like, every 15 minutes they were like "not enough fuel sir" "ok"

    • @christiankansichi6622
      @christiankansichi6622 Год назад +4

      @@alexc4924 Exactly! How could they not trust the information that they had?

    • @abhishek9354682116
      @abhishek9354682116 Год назад +4

      @@alexc4924 oil temp low n oil pressure high not indication of fuel leak.

    • @abhishek9354682116
      @abhishek9354682116 Год назад

      @@christiankansichi6622 because those information were incomplete.

    • @beckramsey7746
      @beckramsey7746 Год назад +1

      @@abhishek9354682116 however, basic konwledge of an engine will tell you that contaminating hot oil with cold fuel with cause low temp and high pressure. its my opinion that they should have been able to deduce a fuel leak immediately from the fact that there was such an imbalance in the L/R tanks and that the x bleed valve didn't help it.

  • @Kim-mz8co
    @Kim-mz8co Год назад +16

    Intense episode. I've flown over oceans more times than I can remember. Even though I knew they would be okay since survivors were being interviewed, this one had me on edge. Greetings from Cambodia and thanks for the upload.

  • @abhiverma4167
    @abhiverma4167 Год назад +29

    While watching this episode , I was continuesly thinking about that fuel crossfeed , which was wasting the reserve.
    Excellent pilots no doubt.

    • @agairinc
      @agairinc Год назад +3

      Yes. Sending fuel to the side leaking it out. Should have left cross feed closed , let #2 run out with fuel still left for #1

    • @KBS117
      @KBS117 Год назад

      Excellent idiots. They knew the fuel was dropping too fast. They followed the wrong checklists. This is what happens when you train monkeys to push buttons and fly a computer with wings. Any pilot that needs a checklist to fly an aircraft really doesn't understand how the aircraft funtions. He is just a monkey pushing buttons. Real.pilots, understand the mechanics of their aircraft, and can make proper decisions. Sitting in the left hand seat and wondering if you followed the proper checklist procedure isn't being a pilot.. I see the same thing in semi trucks today. They train people who should be working at Walmart, to drive 40 ton missiles down the hiway. These people understand nothing about, brakes, fuel systems, tires, engines...... when a problem arises, they cannot reason their way through an incident.. I don't fly anymore.

    • @volodumurkalunyak4651
      @volodumurkalunyak4651 Год назад +3

      That isnt exellent pilot's job. Every ordinal pilot is expected to fly in direction of closest (or most suitable one within reach) airport if he (or she) find themself flying without fuel. Pilots are also expected to make it to the runway and land if possible. Those pilots were just lucky for running out of fuel while having airport in reach.

    • @KBS117
      @KBS117 Год назад +1

      @@volodumurkalunyak4651 if they had run out of fuel 2 minutes sooner, they would all be dead.. that's really cutting it close.

  • @StevoE7
    @StevoE7 8 месяцев назад +4

    Hey this episode has a description of an Alaska Airlines incident but the episode uploaded is Air Transat. Thanks!

    • @Andrew-iv5dq
      @Andrew-iv5dq Месяц назад

      Alaska doesn’t fly A330s and doesn’t fly across the Atlantic.

  • @moviesandsmoothies3600
    @moviesandsmoothies3600 9 месяцев назад +3

    I love it when everyone survives !

  • @Killerbee67
    @Killerbee67 Год назад +7

    Great video! Kept me on pins and needles! Love it when everyone lives!

  • @AtomicQBomb
    @AtomicQBomb Год назад +12

    That captain is such a badass LMAO "told you we'd make it."

  • @alechamid235
    @alechamid235 Год назад +7

    An amazing cockpit crew.

  • @JustinaDatta
    @JustinaDatta 9 месяцев назад +3

    Thank you for the excellent re-creation of the events.

  • @silvertemba4806
    @silvertemba4806 11 месяцев назад +1

    My favorite captain since started watching MayDay

  • @beringstraitrailway
    @beringstraitrailway Год назад +190

    Unless the fuel imbalance is impairing the ability to handle the plane, it would be a good idea tocheck the fuel consumption again, before cross feeding the tanks! Even then, you should just turn on the feed for a few seconds, and then recalculate the fuel consumption. If those steps are not part of the checklist, then they should be!
    Edit: Ok maybe turn on the crossfeed for a minute or two, but don't just leave the crossfeed switch turned on!
    Even if there's not a leak, then the engine on one side is consuming fuel more rapidly than it should, which is also not got, so maybe that engine should be shut down, for as long as possible.

    • @originflightstudios2863
      @originflightstudios2863 Год назад +31

      Xfeed for a few seconds would not have done anything to help with the calculations. Xfeeding for a few minutes will give you accurate results. It had a warning that said to not Xfeed in a fuel leaking situation, however the leak was not detected due to the oil pressure and oil temp lights, how do the pilots know there is a faulty part that broke? They don't. Checklists evolve overtime and everyone cannot think of every situation that will occur in the air.

    • @xiami8693
      @xiami8693 Год назад +5

      agree they should keep waching and not turn on xfeed.

    • @scotcoon1186
      @scotcoon1186 Год назад +18

      The 5 minutes til the next fuel check was sufficient.
      Shutting off the crossover would have verified the fuel leak, which side it was on, and given them plenty of time to make a powered landing.

    • @mathewng1988
      @mathewng1988 Год назад +1

      @@scotcoon1186
      I guess they did. Cross feed valve was opened at 10:13, and shown to have been closed at 12:56.

    • @briantamer6233
      @briantamer6233 Год назад +2

      The pilot should not have been stubborn and keep blaming the computer readings. He should have compromised and give it a try to calculate the fuel consumption every couple of minutes after deploying the fuel transfer system. Or ignoring the fuel imbalance and keeping xfeed off will result in shutting down the damaged engine which will help him to find out that indeed there is a leakage

  • @virago41
    @virago41 9 месяцев назад +15

    Both pilots are certified heros
    God bless them
    😊👍🙏🇮🇳

  • @jinjinb528
    @jinjinb528 Год назад +57

    The pilots were badasses....they still saved many lives despite the couldve wouldve should've of the messed up fuel tanks and their judgement

    • @petperthecommenter3364
      @petperthecommenter3364 Год назад +3

      they are incompetent

    • @originflightstudios2863
      @originflightstudios2863 Год назад +6

      @@petperthecommenter3364 I want to see you fly that plane and make the calculated decisions they did. I bet $100 you will end up crashing in the ocean.

    • @petperthecommenter3364
      @petperthecommenter3364 Год назад

      @@originflightstudios2863 they drained the fuel tanks ..idiots

    • @rockwithyou2006
      @rockwithyou2006 Год назад +2

      @@originflightstudios2863 he wouldn't as he wouldn't have opened the cross feed to begin with. None of what you say justifies the actions of someone who has the license to fly. Comparing people who have the license vs people who don't is unfair to begin with.

    • @potocatepetl
      @potocatepetl Год назад +2

      @@rockwithyou2006 if people don't have a license (or aren't engineers in the field) to understand how planes work, than they should keep their uniformed opinions to themselves.

  • @jamesoncurry5224
    @jamesoncurry5224 11 месяцев назад +2

    Exceptional airmanship

  • @LectronCircuits
    @LectronCircuits 2 месяца назад +1

    This reinforces that time-tested maxim, "As always, it's better to have gas than to have a gas problem." Cheers!

  • @charityfernandez65
    @charityfernandez65 Год назад +19

    I'm burst in tears, they truly hero... I salute them for saving the plane and all the passenger... Amazing work... Good job👍👍👍👍👏👏👏

  • @moseskimani3616
    @moseskimani3616 Год назад +5

    feeding the leaking tank was a mistake...but I believed they recovered by bringing down plane safely....thus saving lives......

  • @sarkinyakinjabo7607
    @sarkinyakinjabo7607 9 месяцев назад +1

    Impressed by the confidence of the pilots

  • @michaelmeyer6306
    @michaelmeyer6306 Год назад +66

    As a former Jet engine mechanic, I figured out there was a fuel leak in the engine just by the oil temp and pressure fault indications. Cold oil gets thicker when it is cool so the pressure goes up and fuel evaporates so it cools. The fact that it was a turbofan engine means there has to be a transition pipe for both fuel and oil to go into the core of the engine (where all the oil wetted bearing are and combustion takes place) through the fan duct and the fuel line has to be upstream of the oil line. If it had been DAYLIGHT the flight attendant should have been able to see that fuel was streaming out of the engine. I don't believe the crew could have known these very technical things about the engines, however not shutting the crossover valve when things didn't correct pretty quickly was a big mistake. Especially when there was a warning in their manual that said NOT to do this procedure if fuel leak is suspected (even though it wasn't suspected at first they should have undone that step when it was obvious). As far as the wrong part being put on the engine as depicted in the show, the blame should be on supervisor. The lack of clearance between the two lines IS the fault of the mechanics. Chaffing is a big deal for all jet engine mechanics and there are many ways to correct it (especially if you know the wrong part is being put on).

    • @michaelmeyer6306
      @michaelmeyer6306 Год назад +7

      @Schooey The mechanic did and told the supervisor, who insisted that it be used.

    • @gazgaz6737
      @gazgaz6737 Год назад +3

      Great review.
      Thank you

    • @timsiragusa9096
      @timsiragusa9096 Год назад +1

      Weird that the fuel levels were fine in the initial check?

    • @michaelmeyer6306
      @michaelmeyer6306 Год назад +8

      @@timsiragusa9096 It broke after the initial fuel check. It happened at the time they got the oil temp and pressure warnings. As I said before, I would not have expected the pilots to make the connection between the oil warnings and a fuel leak (very technical). What I would expect them to know, is that when the crossover valve switch was opened and the problem didn't improve within a minute or so, to shut that valve.

    • @MuteObserver
      @MuteObserver Год назад +1

      Thank-you for sharing!

  • @howmathematicianscreatemat9226
    @howmathematicianscreatemat9226 Год назад +14

    Once they put on their black sun glasses, it felt really confident they would make it. Such men just truly cannot fail :)))

  • @originflightstudios2863
    @originflightstudios2863 Год назад +62

    It's funny when people say "He should have done that" as they know better. Yes, pilot error exists, it happens, but flying a plane and understanding what the plane is doing is no cakewalk. If you were put in that same situation as the captain with no knowledge of this event, would you make the right decision and save all those lives? Most likely not.
    Me being on the ground and thinking "he should have closed the Xfeed" but they were probably dealing with multiple issues that seemed to get bigger and even though the video makes it longer than it was, time in an airplane (When flying it) speeds up drastically due to all the jobs the pilots have to do. When the first engine flamed out, the critical situation at the time was to get to a lower altitude as 39,000ft was not doable with the single-engine, this caused an increasing problem that diverted away from seeing if there was a fuel leak.
    Flying a plane can be difficult, especially a jumbo jet, as it's more complicated to deal with than your typical Cessna 172.

    • @scotcoon1186
      @scotcoon1186 Год назад +2

      There's two things in common between a truck and an airplane.
      They both don't get along so well without fuel
      You trust your gauges individually til each one gives you reason not to, not because another one isn't working.
      The fuel system and the engine lube system are unrelated, beyond the fact that the connectors for the sensors being filled with fuel likely caused the odd readings.

    • @almorris171
      @almorris171 Год назад +8

      Their flying was superb once the fuel was gone. However the captain should not have assumed the computer was in error. They are taught to trust their instruments. He made a very foolish decision out over the ocean many miles from land.

    • @sekacity3425
      @sekacity3425 Год назад +13

      You forget everyone on youtube are all experts in any given field in any given situation ... if only they were there to advise.

    • @emiliepotvin5690
      @emiliepotvin5690 Год назад

      @@almorris171 o

    • @dakotaanderson7905
      @dakotaanderson7905 Год назад +4

      My favorite quote was from the AeroPeru flight when the investigator said “it’s easy now, in an office with clear visuals and in no immediate danger it’s easy to say this is what they should’ve done”

  • @skye1212
    @skye1212 Год назад +3

    The title has this mixed in/up w the Alaska Airlines flight off California that had the defective screw jack in the rudder mechanism.

  • @jamesstreet228
    @jamesstreet228 Год назад +31

    A Delta flight just turned back 2 hours into a trans Atlantic flight for a fuel imbalance. They turned around and returned to JFK. Thankfully everything went well.

    • @gavcom4060
      @gavcom4060 Год назад

      Good. Always assume the worst

  • @CynthiaSchoenbauer
    @CynthiaSchoenbauer Год назад +19

    I think the pilots did the right thing. The captain leveraged the idea that he might wrong with what he was doing. In his mind he kept his options open for the possibility that he was doing the wrong thing. That was instinct not just to fly but also instinct to survive. And those things make him a hero pilot. I think it is possible that if this happened on the original flight path, he still would have made it because he made it so that he had room to spare. Yay! I celebrate him, and them, as heroes.

  • @danielbishop1863
    @danielbishop1863 Год назад +7

    "If you can walk away from a landing, it’s a good landing." - Chuck Yeager
    BTW, the airplane involved (registration: C-GITS) was repaired and returned to service.

  • @nairatina2960
    @nairatina2960 Год назад

    This is my most favorite episode. Watched it many times 🥰🥰🥰

  • @markmckinney1924
    @markmckinney1924 16 дней назад +2

    The pilots are heros.

  • @MGower4465
    @MGower4465 Год назад +26

    No way you are going to make a flight from Alaska to Portugal on short-to- medium haul airliners without a refuel, even if you transform your Alaska Airlines MD-80 Into an Airbus under charter halfway across Canada.

    • @dashcan8479
      @dashcan8479 Год назад

      ??? duh what?

    • @abbyl749
      @abbyl749 Год назад +1

      they were not going to Portugal from Alaska.

    • @MGower4465
      @MGower4465 Год назад +1

      Read the description. A flight from Alaska with a stabilizer failure on an MD 80, but the video is about an Airbus running out of fuel.

  • @yambo59
    @yambo59 Год назад +33

    It might well have been a fortunate occurrence that they blew eight tires, seems grinding down the runway on the rims would slow the plane down much faster than if all eight tires has stayed free rolling. Just throwing it out as a non-pilot, but once you knew you had both an engine problem AND a fuel leak in the right wing seems that would have been the time to close the cross feed and save remaining fuel in the left tank - instead leaving the cross feed open just let all the fuel tanks empty out the right wing leaving severely limited options.

    • @carriebizz
      @carriebizz Год назад

      Yes the tyres blowing helped the plane stop thank god

    • @rampar77
      @rampar77 Год назад +1

      They needed the #2 engine to fly. Captain would have made better decision if he didn't blame the computers.

    • @almorris171
      @almorris171 Год назад

      Knowing that cliff was there, I would have seriously considered leaving the landing gear up and landing on the engines. There was no fuel to catch fire which is the deadliest part of crash landings.

    • @stanpatterson5033
      @stanpatterson5033 Год назад +1

      @@almorris171 Absolutely zero control once the plane has landed on the engines. Lowering the gear (while still in the air) provides a minor amount of drag, but I still believe that not lowering it until the last moment was the best choice, and landing on the gear is ultimately better than landing on the engines.

    • @mathewng1988
      @mathewng1988 Год назад +1

      The tyres are not free wheeling. Ram air turbine does provide enough power for basic control. It's akin to driving a car, but without power steering, and losing brake booster after a few use.

  • @glenmcneill1675
    @glenmcneill1675 6 месяцев назад +2

    My feeling is the maintenance staff should have been able to understand the ramifications of the pump fitting miss-match. Kudos to the flight crew!

  • @dannyrichards6233
    @dannyrichards6233 Год назад +1

    Thx 4 sharing. Plz make new ones. Thx.

  • @electricturtle3326
    @electricturtle3326 Год назад +12

    6:28 "The flight crew, Air Transant, and the accident investigators declined to comment on what happened next" why?

    • @FrederickMarcoux
      @FrederickMarcoux Год назад +2

      Because Air Transat had a bad reputation of avoiding questions. Look up its owner back then and what he does now...

    • @butterpecan1938
      @butterpecan1938 Год назад

      @@FrederickMarcoux Legault or Lemay?

    • @FrederickMarcoux
      @FrederickMarcoux Год назад

      @@butterpecan1938 Both

  • @arober9758
    @arober9758 Год назад +14

    Very good job fellows!! Congratulations.
    Never having flown an aircraft, but having stayed at a Holiday Inn Express, let me say that I would not have fed that fuel to the leaking tank.

    • @sharoncassell9358
      @sharoncassell9358 Год назад +1

      Why not close feed valve & fly on one engine? I guess they couldnt think of it at the time.

  • @Bklyn988
    @Bklyn988 23 дня назад +2

    The actor who plays the pilot reminds me of sting 😂😂😂

  • @carriebizz
    @carriebizz Год назад +2

    Geezus now they are amazing pilots!

  • @glenwhatley7366
    @glenwhatley7366 Год назад +4

    The oil temp was low due to the fuel absorbing the latent heat of the oil. Thus was another indicator of a fuel system issue because it was entering and contaminating the oil system.

  • @Zinnie988
    @Zinnie988 Год назад +3

    Why would crew and flight investigators decline to be interviewed, very odd? Usually they oblige.

  • @robnordal1906
    @robnordal1906 Месяц назад +1

    Cheaping out on repairs too. How many times do we hear about this on this show. I hope those passengers and crew were compensated.

  • @meganflanagan9017
    @meganflanagan9017 Год назад +2

    The description does not match the episode and the title seems to combine two different events as well. Just wanted to comment this here hoping it will get fixed. I am hooked on watching these!

  • @mrmustangman
    @mrmustangman Год назад +5

    seen it before and you uploaded the wrong video.... "come on, man.!!!"

  • @markyesh5763
    @markyesh5763 Год назад +4

    I fly with a captain that says he knows the captain of this flight. They were good freinds at some point.

  • @samiraperi467
    @samiraperi467 Год назад +2

    45:52 They did in fact NOT follow Airbus procedures. It clearly says "CAUTION: Do not apply this procedure if fuel leak is suspected."

  • @semipsychotic4982
    @semipsychotic4982 Год назад +1

    Love when they put on their aviator glasses, bad ass!

  • @hudayikaya1442
    @hudayikaya1442 Год назад +3

    What a scary situation

  • @davidpowell3347
    @davidpowell3347 Год назад +19

    At the first unexpected fuel imbalance reading,the assumption should probably have been that fuel was being lost as in leaked or uncommanded dumping until shown to be otherwise? Certainly became most probable once fuel level failed to rise appropriately when cross feeding began?

    • @dashcan8479
      @dashcan8479 Год назад +2

      Exactly David. As the other Airbus pilot said it should have rectified immediately.

  • @thepanel2935
    @thepanel2935 11 месяцев назад +1

    *_"At the end of the runway is a 400-foot cliff" -- !!!_*

  • @user-ff7ud3tr3r
    @user-ff7ud3tr3r Месяц назад +1

    The irony is this happened because of cutting cost and in the end, Air Transat paid more (a quarter of a million dollars) than it would have cost them to wait for the proper parts.

  • @johnwatson3948
    @johnwatson3948 Год назад +19

    More likely the first officer would go back with flashlight not tell a flight attendant to do it. On a DC-10 I once returned to Dallas after an engine quit - FO came back to where I was sitting looked out at the engine and joked “yep it’s still there” - this was not long after the Chicago engine loss disaster.

    • @potato1907
      @potato1907 Год назад

      which airline were you flying?

    • @johnwatson3948
      @johnwatson3948 Год назад

      American - but when I said not long after might have been a couple or few years

    • @3dburst244
      @3dburst244 Год назад +2

      The flight attendant are also well trained

    • @SuperPickle15
      @SuperPickle15 9 месяцев назад +1

      the DC-10 has a flight engineer, who could continue troubling shooting with the captain. The A300 is a two flight deck crew. The FO would've been busy troubleshooting to go look themselves.

  • @nsrailfann4life91
    @nsrailfann4life91 Год назад +14

    I'm no pilot, but just a question.... If it was determined that the situation was still deteriorating after opening the cross-feed, why not close the cross feed?
    I would think that closing the cross-feed back would have preserved fuel and even after the engine with the leak flamed out, having that cross-feed closed would have allowed the remaining engine to be adequately fueled. I believe that multi-engine aircraft are designed to maintain flight with 1 engine.
    Like I said, I am not a pilot or an expert. Just an observation that, to me, would have made more sense 🤷‍♂️

    • @alamjim6117
      @alamjim6117 Год назад +1

      Exactly what I was thinking. They could stop the faulty fuel valve and bypass the remaining fuel to the other tank. One engine was sufficient to fly this plane. But they thought it was a computer error and killed both engines.

    • @charlesbosse9669
      @charlesbosse9669 Год назад

      @@alamjim6117 There's a guage for both fuel tanks, so why not monitor both and see that one is emptying faster than the other. I don't know what a pilot thinks while they're doing their jobs. I don't think it's easy to fly a plane of that size, that's why they go through so much training.

    • @FRED-dq8jf
      @FRED-dq8jf Год назад +2

      U already know the answer before u ask the question. But the pilot didn’t know what happen that time, they could only make decisions according to the flight manual, their judgment and experience. In the case the pilots did follow the flight manual but could not see any fuel leaking due to the darkness. Aircraft is so complicated, sensor problem, computer problem is normal, pilots could not do the test during flight. All rely on pilots judgment and experience. In that situation it’s hard to make right decision.

    • @Official_Ecto
      @Official_Ecto 8 месяцев назад

      bro exactly what I was thinking. The crossfeed made them lose both fuel tanks, instead of just the right leaking one. But then again we know stuff that the pilots didn't know that night.

  • @jijovarghese2886
    @jijovarghese2886 Год назад +1

    Great job Done by the pilots

  • @ruthlinwilson7643
    @ruthlinwilson7643 Год назад +2

    Great job pilots I felt like I was on board of that flight I was screaming also

  • @I7470
    @I7470 Год назад +7

    Until something like this happens nobody knows a work force which is working day and night to keep these aircrafts flying. They are the unsung heroes called aircraft mechanics. Let's take a bow.

    • @donswier
      @donswier Год назад

      It's a shame that people fail to realize how many, many things have to be near perfect for air travel to exist.
      A wrong bearing clearance, or two hoses abrading can mean the difference between life & death.
      Props to the unsung heroes behind the scene in aviation.

    • @mathewng1988
      @mathewng1988 Год назад

      Not every thing has to be near perfect. There's a list of "broken things allowed" while the aircraft can still fly. It's called "minimum equipment list".

    • @mathewng1988
      @mathewng1988 Год назад

      That's the dilemma with any maintenance crew. Things performing well, "they had it easy" / "they're not doing their job". Things breakdown, also "they're not doing their job".

  • @davidpowell3347
    @davidpowell3347 Год назад +5

    At about 32:00-------a whole lot better to have extra speed and/or altitude relative to the glide to the deadstick landing vs. not having enough

  • @eagleMMMm
    @eagleMMMm Год назад

    Incredible force landing

  • @caoeason9102
    @caoeason9102 Месяц назад +1

    They should install spotlights at each end of the wing close to the fuselage

  • @raysutton2310
    @raysutton2310 Год назад +4

    Not mentioned as a factor in this flight but the though occurs that a crew controlled lock on the overhead bins would prevent people taking luggage off the plane in an emergency.

  • @markemanuele1929
    @markemanuele1929 Год назад +19

    I once had an incident flying from Trenton, NJ to Montreal, PQ. This was in the middle of January so it was very cold outside.
    The aircraft was a Piper PA-31 Navajo Chieftain. I was flying right seat, and my instructor was PIC. We had the heater on full blast as it was -20F OAT (Outside Air Temperature).
    It turns out that this was an early production PA-31 and in that aircraft the heat was provided by burning some of the fuel normally out of the right wing tank. The problem was that the fuel was taken PRIOR to being recorded in the fuel flow meter so the amount of fuel used was not easily seen. This was not a big problen because normally the fuel used was a miniscule amount.
    About 3/4 of the way to YUL (Montreal Dorval Airport - Now Pierre Trudeau Airport) the right engine quit. I quickly opened the crossfeed valve (as this was a "memorization item" on the checklist) and the engine roared back to life. I wondered where all the fuel went because the fuel flow on both left and right engines was identical.
    When we landed, I noticed that there was a streak of black soot trailing the heater exhaust. The control valve for the heater was suuck open and the fuel/air mixture in the heater was extremely rich causing an abnormally high use of fuel that was not noticed. This was because of the design of the fuel metering system not taking in account of fuel used by the cabin heater.
    In the case of the A330, the pilots were not given the training of how the oil was cooled. There is a heat exchanger to cool the oil using the cold fuel to cool it.
    When the tubing opened up and the fuel flow was high, that meant much more cold fuel flowed through the heat exchanger making the oil temp to fall. Because the temp of the oil fell, it increased its viscosity, making the oil pressure to increase.

  • @zedekiaturipikarutjindoaus8439

    Trained or not trained is a situation l wouldn't like to impose on anyone. Bravo to the crew that night.

  • @7GADMUSIQVEVO
    @7GADMUSIQVEVO 7 месяцев назад +1

    Give these pilots an award man , God damnnn they really came tru 👆🏽💗💞💯

  • @joinjen3854
    @joinjen3854 Год назад +5

    About 2 weeks before 9/11, when aviation changed forever.

    • @karlhaese7183
      @karlhaese7183 10 месяцев назад +1

      Finally. First thing I realized they had to go thru hundred commments before someone saw that too. And no, this Airbus A330 did NOT crash. It was a controlled landing.

  • @razaqalmarsoomi6757
    @razaqalmarsoomi6757 Год назад +3

    I became hilariously glad that they landed safely 🙏.

  • @yoyo50515
    @yoyo50515 2 месяца назад +2

    The biggest crime in this whole thing was the cooperation being fined $250,000! ARE YOU KIDDING ME A QUATER MILLION DOLLARS WHAT A JOKE