Collision over Europe? 19 Seconds to Survive (Boeing 777 Almost Crashes into an Airbus A319)

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  • Опубликовано: 13 май 2024
  • An Airbus A319 takes off from Spain for a flight to the UK. While in the cruise with the autopilot and autothrust systems engaged, a failure of the electrical system occurs, which causes numerous systems to become degraded or inoperative. Meanwhile, the plane nearly collides with an American Airlines Boeing 777. Here's the story of easyJet Flight 6074.
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    Chapters
    0:00 Intro
    0:20 Departure
    0:58 London - Alicante Leg
    3:07 Alicante - Bristol Leg
    8:40 Near Collision
    11:10 Approach and Landing
    12:15 Investigation
    This video has been recorded and edited in 4K resolution and 60FPS.
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Комментарии • 762

  • @chriscooper654
    @chriscooper654 Год назад +641

    Kudos to the Airbus flight crew in staying calm and professional in an extraordinary situation. They did their jobs and got everyone in their care to safety.

    • @aurorea2008
      @aurorea2008 Год назад +4

      Les PNT sont formés pour cela. Vous pouvez leur faire confiance à tous

    • @xtremenortherner
      @xtremenortherner Год назад +16

      Yes, in a very critical situation of no radio communication and the aircraft's locator beacon disabled, rendering it invisible to ground tracking (why can't the private airlines resort to primary radar finding, as the military does?! (I just can't fully understand the reasoning behind this policy)

    • @olinballentine7870
      @olinballentine7870 Год назад

      Agreed.

    • @leopeper5874
      @leopeper5874 Год назад

      *I find funny these thumbnails that kind of screams "I'M FAKE, I'M FAKE".*

    • @isabellind1292
      @isabellind1292 Год назад

      I know! If it wasn't bad enough they lost all communications but that at any moment they could have F15s breathing down their neck. (Don't pilots have cellphones w/a direct line to someone on the ground when they lose all instruments)?

  • @flybywire5866
    @flybywire5866 Год назад +161

    This shows what a human crew in the cockpit is good for.

    • @Suzumi-kun
      @Suzumi-kun Год назад +8

      watch greedy ceo's on their yacht still try their hardest to get a zero pilot cockpit going just to save what is essentially pennies to them

    • @christerry1773
      @christerry1773 Год назад +3

      That wont' stop manufacturers from still trying though. It's a matter of time before you start seeing more single pilot cockpits.

    • @fortcrafterbossbehold9027
      @fortcrafterbossbehold9027 11 месяцев назад +5

      ​@@christerry1773 Germanwings Flight 9525 should be a clear indicator that this is a no go solution...

    • @christerry1773
      @christerry1773 11 месяцев назад

      @@fortcrafterbossbehold9027 what does that have to do with this topic? Also….just out of curiosity do you even know how many commercial flights worldwide there have been in the last 10 years? Do not say it doesn’t matter, because it does!

    • @grmpEqweer
      @grmpEqweer 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@christerry1773
      Anyone can potentially lose their marbles, simply make a bad judgement call, be a bit fatigued, or just not catch something.
      It's the same reason one-man train crews are a really bad idea?
      One person can easily miss something small, but vital.
      The amount of work it takes to land a plane, or to keep it in the air if things go sideways, simply requires two people.
      AI isn't anywhere near advanced enough to do the job of a human brain.
      Will it get there? Maybe. But that's vaporware.
      AI is inherently _different_ from human cognition. It's alien. I certainly want to see what it develops into. I just note it isn't a human.

  • @jackpayne4658
    @jackpayne4658 Год назад +183

    That crew was very calm and skilful, and also very lucky. To see all those screens go blank must have been scary.

    • @wirdy1
      @wirdy1 Год назад +13

      A competent crew become more focused, rather than scared; but we've all seen many of these videos where the crew become distracted or are judt5 plain incompetent. Not this crew though, handled perfectly.

    • @luuduonghy659
      @luuduonghy659 Год назад +6

      Too many problem with this flight
      From system failure to almost an mid air collision
      Lucky they are survive but this will be the flight they want to forget in a hurry

    • @christerry1773
      @christerry1773 Год назад +3

      And having to fly with limited protections at a high altitude. Scary! At least it was during the day time.

  • @verticalgyno
    @verticalgyno Год назад +500

    The airplane had been in contact with Brest ATCC (France), when the controller noticed the secondary radar signal was lost about 10 minutes prior to a scheduled shift change. He tried to contact the Easyjet Airbus several times on radio without success. Attempts were made to contact the aircraft via another Easyjet on the company frequency and on the emergency frequency, without success. The ATC personnel feared a catastropic event. A westbound aircraft, flight AA-63, checked in shortly afterwards at FL320. The controller realised that there was a potential conflict with the Easyjet and commanded the American Airlines to descend to FL310 asking, whether they could see the Easyjet on their TCAS, which was replied to in the negative. The shift change took place, the oncoming controller reissued the clearance to immediately descend to FL310 to the American. The American now started their descent, the crew reported a few moments later, that they had seen an "Easyjet 737" pass overhead without being visible on their TCAS. ATC were relieved, that the airplane had been located but concerned about the close proximity to another aircraft. A few moments later the transponder signal of the Easyjet reappeared, one minute later the transponder code changed to emergency.
    The AAIB reported, that while the AC ESS FEED push button selector switch failed to reconfigure the electrical system in flight disabling the crew to restore power to the left electrical network, the system operated normally on the ground during subsequent testing. The crew could not verify the current selections of a number of systems, as the captions of the switches had disappeared and the switch positions did not change (significantly) with selection.
    An intermittent fault was found in an electronic component of the #1 Generator Control Unit (GCU 1), which probably caused the #1 generator trip on the outbound flight to Alicante. Recurrence of the GCU 1 fault probably caused the de-energisation of the AC BUS 1 and the following severe electrical system disruption.
    The GCU1 had been repeatedly been rejected from service, possibly because of the same intermittent fault, and returned to service without the fault being found. No system was in place at the GCU manufacturer's repair organisation to identify units repeatedly rejected from service and not found faulty or identify units suffering repetitive faults.
    Both audio cards of all three Audio Management Units (AMU) rely on supplies from the DC essential bus. The unit ceases to function when both audio cards are unpowered. Loss of the DC essential bus as result of the loss of the AC BUS 1 and AC essential bus renders all three VHF radios inoperative. Airbus have stated, that in the light of this finding they are evaluating if the power supply to the AMUs needs to be modified.
    Ciao ;)

    • @wirdy1
      @wirdy1 Год назад +34

      Thanks for the report summary. During my time in avionics maintenance, there were occasionally rogue-LRU's that always passed SST but failed on-aircraft, even after extensive soak-checks. More often these units were yellow-banded & became 'ground use only' or bay slave items.

    • @scottlarson1548
      @scottlarson1548 Год назад +38

      Great that they have all radios on one bus.

    • @scottfranco1962
      @scottfranco1962 Год назад +9

      Nice detail, thanks.

    • @BanFame
      @BanFame Год назад +33

      @@scottlarson1548 Sort of funny that inflight entertainment system has more redundancy than the plane's radios have. They also saved several cents on springs for the buttons in the cockpit so they couldn't tell by touch if the buttons are depressed or not.

    • @scottlarson1548
      @scottlarson1548 Год назад +14

      @@BanFame So I guess the Airbuses don't have the windmill thing you can drop to generate electricity in an emergency?

  • @lunayoshi
    @lunayoshi Год назад +360

    I've been watching this channel for a long time because I have a morbid fascination with plane crashes. But instead of a fear of flying, they make me aware of things that can go wrong and how they either force change in routine plane management/design or they end well despite some big problems. I don't think I've ever felt safer. Thanks for covering the happier endings, TFC!

    • @brmpbrmp
      @brmpbrmp Год назад +8

      Same!

    • @lynnecamp3268
      @lynnecamp3268 Год назад +8

      Me, too.

    • @beachem1
      @beachem1 Год назад +5

      Wow. Glad to hear something positive ❤

    • @mindfulness123
      @mindfulness123 Год назад +15

      That's exactly how I feel and why I watch.

    • @dimitri1515
      @dimitri1515 Год назад +7

      Assuming the pilots do a good job. There was a nighttime crash over the everglades where just two seconds before impact the first officer says "we're still at 2000 feet right?"

  • @hecdavid11
    @hecdavid11 Год назад +184

    Thank God they didn't collide, and this is once again proof that pilots are real life heroes. The amount of things they have to deal with, analyze, decide and act upon during situations like these!

    • @jetmelt
      @jetmelt Год назад +3

      Some pilots yes others not so much

    • @se-kmg355
      @se-kmg355 Год назад +8

      More the air traffic controller that kept the separation even tho he did not know easy jets location.

    • @hecdavid11
      @hecdavid11 Год назад +11

      @@se-kmg355 Not gonna lie. Good ATC are heroes too

    • @hecdavid11
      @hecdavid11 Год назад +5

      @@jetmelt True. Some pilots' negligence have cost the lives of thousands of people

    • @kycone
      @kycone Год назад +2

      Lol. People will slap a “hero” label on literally everyone these days

  • @lorikantziper5184
    @lorikantziper5184 9 месяцев назад +29

    I wonder if the passengers realize how lucky they were to have such a skilled crew in the cockpit. Incredible!!!

  • @lynx-lynx
    @lynx-lynx Год назад +108

    It's really scary to know that a simple little electrical problem can cause a very serious plane crash. Hopefully, these incidents will allow the manufacturer to correct these problems for increased aviation safety.

    • @raikoafm702
      @raikoafm702 Год назад +14

      Incidence's like this always cause revisions and changes to aircraft. There's a saying "Aircraft manuals are written in blood" All the accidents get analyzed so we can make sure they don't happen or have a reduced chance of happening again. Whether its a change in aircraft design or aircraft operation, these revisions help make the skies safer.

    • @pierredepardieu5169
      @pierredepardieu5169 Год назад +8

      As an Airbus pilot I can say this is not "a simple little electrical problem". That was an highly unlikely failure of several of the redundant electrical systems. And it didn't caused a crash...

    • @raikoafm702
      @raikoafm702 Год назад

      @Pierrot LFSN as an airbus mechanic there was definitely something going on with the DC Bus, willing to bet there were no issues with the idg or apu generator. And had they deployed the rat, which they didn't need to, that would have eventually been another item to fail due to the actual issue. Wish I could review what they corrected

    • @deepthinker999
      @deepthinker999 11 месяцев назад +3

      What about all the problems that we don't hear about that the pilots resolve on their own.

  • @themugwump33
    @themugwump33 Год назад +196

    Even when you’re 30,000 feet in the air flying your own tomb, the first troubleshooting step is still “have you tried unplugging it and plugging it back in?” Damn.

    • @malcolm5514
      @malcolm5514 Год назад +4

      RIGHT!??! That was my thought exactly! I would've been like 'Thanks ECAM, I could've thought of that one!' XD

    • @carmeng5421
      @carmeng5421 Год назад +12

      DRIVING CARS IS MORE DANGEROUS THAN FLYING.

    • @tortie789
      @tortie789 Год назад +2

      @@carmeng5421 no it isnt

    • @deletebilderberg
      @deletebilderberg Год назад +9

      WRONG
      Harvard study
      Odds of dying in a plane crash 1/1,000,000 (a MILLION)
      Odds of dying in a car crash
      1/5000 (Five thousand)

    • @askarmuk
      @askarmuk 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@tortie789 Yes it is.

  • @GoutamDAS-ls1wb
    @GoutamDAS-ls1wb Год назад +20

    Hats off to the pilots who kept calm and landed the aircraft safely. Pilots are amazing people who do extraordinary things and hardly receive any recognition.

  • @daybyday0731
    @daybyday0731 Год назад +40

    This is one of the best channels ive seen...Never was their a video I didn't like... everything is just so put together perfectly....the.chills and tears i get at the end are because it really draws you in as if you were the passengers😢or the families...as soon as i see 'the flight channel' pop up i drop everything and watch....keep up thre amazing works.This was way too close for comfort.. excellent job to the flight crew

    • @MikeFloutier
      @MikeFloutier Год назад +4

      Absolutely, Day by Day, I was just about to post, including the words “chills” and “tears”; wonderful channel, thank you! ✈️🍾❤️

    • @daybyday0731
      @daybyday0731 Год назад +2

      @@MikeFloutier ❤️❤️❤️

  • @robertbate5790
    @robertbate5790 Год назад +20

    Sheer skill and judgement got the through. They deserve a medal !! 🏅🏅🏅

  • @las2665
    @las2665 Год назад +21

    I never heard of this incident before, sure it must be forgotten. Thank you for the reminder.

    • @wirdy1
      @wirdy1 Год назад +1

      Maybe it was deemed an air-prox initially, until the CAA were informed of the totality of circumstances with the aircraft serviceability.

  • @dx1450
    @dx1450 Год назад +6

    "AVOID ADVERSE CONDITIONS" That's always good advice.

  • @ryantantalo4233
    @ryantantalo4233 Год назад +11

    That had to be terrifying for the flight crew. Despite that, and despite the fact that the plane was significantly harder to fly, they brought it down perfectly. Im sure the passengers didn't even know there was a problem. Those are top shelf pilots right there

  • @lynnecamp3268
    @lynnecamp3268 Год назад +22

    Great pilots! Well trained, excellent crew resource management, and calm decision making in the face of potentially deadly problems. I'd fly with them anytime. 👍❤️

  • @shatteredshards8549
    @shatteredshards8549 Год назад +5

    Well done to the EasyJet crew involved in this flight. A good example of CRM, with the Captain handing control over to the First Officer when he realized that the FO had some flight displays, when we've all seen other unfortunate accidents where the entire crew got distracted in the troubleshoot process.

  • @TonyPerez816
    @TonyPerez816 Год назад +7

    The skies are actually a mess of traffic. I can't imagine the feeling of knowing that all meters and comm have gone dark and you are just on your own. Anything could have happened. Thankfully, the crew showed superior airmanship, awareness, and used their training to get their craft on the ground and everyone in it safely.

  • @r12004rewy
    @r12004rewy Год назад +36

    How lucky were those passengers, the Easyjet crew did a brilliant job in bringing the aircraft home under extreme pressure, the fight deck crew were hopefully congratulated .

    • @jessysun6730
      @jessysun6730 10 месяцев назад

      😢😢😢😢🙈❤🌈🌍

  • @mercster
    @mercster Год назад +34

    Dear Lord. Glad everyone got on the ground safely. Could have gone very differently.

  • @BGI_guy
    @BGI_guy Год назад +14

    The peak of Airbus vs. Boeing competition

  • @chickennuggets3364
    @chickennuggets3364 Год назад +13

    I wish to be a pilot, and these videos are extremely helpful for teaching about common mistakes and malfunctions. Thanks a lot TFC

    • @leeriches8841
      @leeriches8841 Год назад

      Good luck! I hope you get to become a pilot one day. I had flying lessons when I was younger but then a completely unrelated event changed the trajectory of my life so that was my dream of becoming a pilot out the window.

    • @christerry1773
      @christerry1773 Год назад

      That was my dream job. But I think I'm better off living vicariously through others. Good luck to you though.

  • @joshh8704
    @joshh8704 Год назад +2

    I knew I wasn’t dreaming. For the first time this channel reconstructed an event that includes a Jet2!

  • @alexandersinko8582
    @alexandersinko8582 Год назад +9

    Great channel, man! Wishing you all the best, further development of your channel and wish all your dreams come true!
    I’ve been watching your vids for approx 3 years, and all of the are top tier. Even though I have no relation to aviation at all.

  • @iAPX432
    @iAPX432 Год назад +8

    No communication whatsoever, it's a real nightmare in the sky!
    They are very lucky, by not colliding during the flight but also when approaching Bristol Airport and when landing...

  • @b.t.356
    @b.t.356 Год назад +9

    To say that was nerve wracking is an understatement

  • @JedEkert
    @JedEkert 11 месяцев назад +5

    These videos are so interesting, with everything that's involved with flying and then the process and the steps taken to solving the puzzle when something goes wrong. These videos are addictive.

  • @johndoyle4723
    @johndoyle4723 Год назад +3

    Well done the Easyjet Pilots, that was a very busy and stressful flight for them.I wonder if the passengers knew.
    TFC, thanks another excellent reproduction of the events and well explained.

  • @PilotWanderlust
    @PilotWanderlust Год назад +4

    Your reconstructions are amazing! Great video!

  • @davidmangold1838
    @davidmangold1838 Год назад +16

    The radar controller has a button to push, that show’s primary target (airplane), but he didn’t push it. Also, there are lost-comm procedures, basically fly your flight plan to destination (unless you have a horrible situation), cleared route and altitudes assigned until you need to descend. From the tower, you look for their light gun signaling “steady green light, cleared to land”. We have procedures for every situation. This plane had multiple electrical problems. It was dispatched properly and legally, and no one was aware of the hidden gremlins, that day. It’s good it was daytime and good weather.

    • @wirdy1
      @wirdy1 Год назад +1

      French ATC did nothing wrong, they noted the loss of secondary radar return & took action to deconflict the AA aircraft. Read the report.

  • @ilovetotri23
    @ilovetotri23 Год назад +6

    Great post! Everyone like to talk about how Airbus is perfect, and super easy to fly. I think the pilots in the cock pit of 6074 might have a different position. I have great reverence for the professionals that keep us alive and flying around the world everyday!

  • @margeebechyne8642
    @margeebechyne8642 Год назад +2

    Absolutely amazing! I have to think the daylight conditions is what saved these two planes and all their passengers. Great piloting but in the dark, awareness to dodge the other plane would have been lost. Strange to me that so many electrical failures on a new plane. Thank you for another great presentation.

    • @deepthinker999
      @deepthinker999 Год назад +1

      Airbus wanted the computer to fly the plane. There was a famous air show crash which demonstrated that logic to be faulty.

  • @aminechouad7796
    @aminechouad7796 Год назад +8

    huge salute to the pilots !!

  • @RDrumcajsek
    @RDrumcajsek Год назад +6

    I find it quite amazing, how is it possible, that 2 small (compared to the whole volume of the skies) planes going around 900kmh each can collide with each other...

    • @mattd6085
      @mattd6085 10 месяцев назад +1

      I'm paraphrasing an old Air Traffic Controller from the UK who said:
      "Before ATC, planes flew by visual waypoints and very rarely would they collide in such a big sky, so we invented very narrow and rigid air corridors and forced all the planes down them, necessitating a controller to avoid collisions. And in that way, Air Traffic Controllers invented their own job"

  • @Dentiera
    @Dentiera Год назад +4

    Years of technology, engineering, training.
    The manual: “Turn it off and on again”

    • @deepthinker999
      @deepthinker999 Год назад +1

      Standard 1st step to recover a computer. It works about 50% of the time.

    • @se-kmg355
      @se-kmg355 Год назад

      What do you expect?
      If you se a pilot running back and forth with hammer and wrench, pulling cables, then you should get nervous.

    • @Dentiera
      @Dentiera Год назад

      Not the pilot no, but maybe I would expect the engineer at the airport to do so. Anyway, it was meant to be a humorous comment. People tend to be too serious I see.

  • @theavgeek8283
    @theavgeek8283 Год назад +1

    Damn. Another mid air collision video. I request you to make one of Charkhi Dadri mid air collision as well, the mid air collision with most casualties. Such intriguing story combined with your quality of videos will be certainly what I await

  • @AlexSteenOlsen
    @AlexSteenOlsen Год назад +2

    Amazing display once again. Thanks for the content

  • @tjking1909
    @tjking1909 Год назад

    For the first time, I watched your video on a big-screen 4k tv. Wow, what a difference; great job.

  • @luciobecker2637
    @luciobecker2637 Год назад +1

    God bless these great pilots. Greetings from Rome Italy

  • @ffortissimo
    @ffortissimo Год назад +7

    I'm curious about the communicatio between the planes in the air and later atc at the landing side. Were the pilots lucky to fit in or did atc notice the problem and clear the air?
    Why didn't UK Airforce send planes in the sky to intercept them? Why didn't the atc at origin be alarmed by the missing plane (crashed?)

    • @se-kmg355
      @se-kmg355 Год назад

      Every airport have "lost com" procedures stated on the charts.

  • @varnk
    @varnk Год назад +7

    I'm not trained in aviation, but it seems like there are a lot of unanswered questions in regard to this incident. Why did the APU fail? Did the Gen 1 circuit somehow interfere with the other power circuits? Also, how did the pilots not have additional incursions if they had no communication with ATC for the landing approach? How would they even know if ATC got the Mayday call? Did ATC get the Mayday call?

    • @tomstravels520
      @tomstravels520 Год назад +6

      APU didn't fail, AC BUS 1 failed. Under normal circumstances AC 1 powers the AC ESS Bus which subsequently powers the DC ESS Bus. Normally if this happens the crew can select AC Bus 2 to power the AC ESS Bus instead. But for some unknown reason this didn't happen. Transponder was set to number 2 a bit later in flight allowing it to be seen by ATC and other planes TCAS

    • @jogzyg2036
      @jogzyg2036 9 месяцев назад +1

      ATC was aware of the inbound flight and that all comms had been lost. Procedure for the situation is to assume that the aircraft is in an emergency and will attempt to land as normal. So they effectively did have clearance to land, and all air traffic inbound to the airport was suspended until the plane was safely on the ground. The controller even sent a weather report on the off chance that the plane could hear him.
      Though I do find the idea somewhat amusing that a controller was looking at the tower at an easyjet that just showed up out of nowhere on the runway and left him slightly confused, thankfully this wasn't what happened.

  • @bumspanka0927
    @bumspanka0927 Год назад +6

    Thank God, they landed safely

  • @gblan
    @gblan Год назад +10

    Kinda hard to believe they don't have a battery powered emergency radio system.

    • @khrenaud
      @khrenaud 11 месяцев назад +1

      That is the wrong solution. There are already two radios and several redundant power sources. The problem was that a single point of failure existed preventing the redundant systems to work properly.
      Since then Airbus have rectified the way power is handled in case of failures so this kind of error should not happen again.

  • @Eseseso494
    @Eseseso494 Год назад +2

    Great video as usual, FC, and glad to see everyone survived!
    Could you do a video on the Zagreb collision?

    • @K1OIK
      @K1OIK Год назад

      FC?

    • @Eseseso494
      @Eseseso494 Год назад +1

      @@K1OIK Flight Channel

    • @K1OIK
      @K1OIK Год назад

      @@Eseseso494 Too busy to type ight hannel?

    • @deepthinker999
      @deepthinker999 Год назад

      @@K1OIK Burt could you lighten up? Everyone is not like you.

    • @K1OIK
      @K1OIK Год назад

      @@deepthinker999 True I don't use acronyms to show how smart I am.

  • @togaaviation
    @togaaviation Год назад +1

    As always great video!

  • @LostsTVandRadio
    @LostsTVandRadio Год назад +3

    In case of emergencies Airbus need to include a pad of paper and a marker pen in the cockpit so that, when the military escort jets approach, the pilot can stick a note in the windscreen saying 'don't worry - we're not hostile'.

  • @AndisweatherCenter
    @AndisweatherCenter Год назад +2

    I remember this. This happened in 2004 when the EasyJet airbus A319 had a full system failure. Mentour Pilot did a video of it the other week.

    • @tomstravels520
      @tomstravels520 Год назад +2

      No this was in 2006. And I think you mean Green Dot Aviation. Mentour Pilot hasn’t covered this one

  • @donfisher8035
    @donfisher8035 Год назад +2

    The AA captain saw or sensed something? If so, didn't know to climb or descend?
    ..But both crews are heros. Never would have imagined this. A great job with subtitles to tie the narration.

    • @deepthinker999
      @deepthinker999 Год назад +1

      So cruising is not without its perils. Not a time to let down your guard.

  • @RedNightDragon1
    @RedNightDragon1 Год назад +7

    The cockpit needs to have a satellite phone for instances like this.

    • @stijnvandamme76
      @stijnvandamme76 Год назад +1

      What good would adding a sattelite phone do if they do not fix the electrical power source
      Adding a sat phone to the 2 working radios.. now they have 2 radios and a sat phone without power. Nett result 0
      I would argue they first need seperate electrical feeds to the 2 radios , and a backup battery on those radios.
      The Sat Radio would be redundant at that point

  • @ilovebeee1
    @ilovebeee1 Год назад +7

    How did they know where the airport/runway was at if all systems were down? And couldn’t them landing without ATC being aware cause a potential crash if another plane was landing/taking off from the same runway?

    • @tomstravels520
      @tomstravels520 Год назад +4

      Not all systems were down, FO's instruments were still operating. ATC could see the after 10 minutes and once they would have seen them descend towards Bristol they would stop traffic

    • @christerry1773
      @christerry1773 Год назад

      the first officers instruments were fine. His were powered by the second generator which was functioning fine.

  • @ThiviruthepilotAviation
    @ThiviruthepilotAviation Год назад +2

    Very so close! luckily no one's injured or dead onboard once again and how lucky pilots they are!

  • @davidosborn8782
    @davidosborn8782 10 месяцев назад

    Just when I thought Flight Channel couldn't get any better, EVERYONE LIVES! I started my day off with a great feeling! I love it! Awesome channel.

  • @bobdylan7120
    @bobdylan7120 7 месяцев назад

    I was a Chief Engineer/Designer on military aircraft projects and we always automatically routed essential avionic systems (Pilot's radio, IFF, TCAS, etc,) to the batteries in the event of total generator failure.
    The total allowable flight time in this configuration was carefully calculated and the pilots made aware in their handling and emergency procedures documentation.
    I'm amazed the civil manufacturers don't do the same.

  • @gerardoconnor4278
    @gerardoconnor4278 Год назад +1

    Hats off to a splendid crew.

  • @china_is_asshole
    @china_is_asshole Год назад +1

    Beautiful work by the flight crew.

  • @terryhughes7349
    @terryhughes7349 Год назад +19

    Quite frightening that the pilots were worried about getting shot down trying to land somewhere else. Also, there should be a battery backup for communication in a situation like this.

    • @markmandelbaum3182
      @markmandelbaum3182 Год назад +4

      YOu would think.. Apollo 13 lost All their oxygen, along with loss of water, electrical power, and use of the propulsion system. Yet they were still able to jimmy rig communications and re-establish power from Space with a computer less powerful than your cell phone!

    • @oliviervanespen5047
      @oliviervanespen5047 Год назад +6

      Intercepted is not getting you shot down, there are protocols for non communicating aircraft, shooting it down is probably the last. If they were intercepted it would have likely helped them, as a guiding/comms buddy.

    • @istra70
      @istra70 Год назад +1

      @@markmandelbaum3182 That's if you believe ....

    • @deepthinker999
      @deepthinker999 Год назад +6

      @@oliviervanespen5047 As long as you are not flying over the USSR.

    • @oliviervanespen5047
      @oliviervanespen5047 Год назад +2

      @@deepthinker999 That was a tragic incident, but the interceptor did try many times to get their attention.

  • @schnatzikowsky4262
    @schnatzikowsky4262 Год назад +3

    Goodness, at least gravity still worked on that aircraft.

  • @russellfitzpatrick503
    @russellfitzpatrick503 Год назад +1

    This is very similar to another video I saw on a 'flight' channel (I can't remember which one) in which a passenger aircraft lost power due to a malfunction in one of the generators. On that occasion though the crew were able to contact ATC at their destination (they continued the flight, as this one did) and landed successfully. I can't recall the APU being involved in that incident

  • @jff757
    @jff757 Год назад +5

    Might be a dumb theory, but any chance this issue with the APU cutting power and thus cutting off signal to the ATC can be similar to what happened to the disappearance of MH370?

  • @kamyagupta4030
    @kamyagupta4030 10 месяцев назад

    Kudos to the pilots❤
    Great video as always!!

  • @wesmcgee1648
    @wesmcgee1648 Год назад +2

    Intense. Great analysis.

  • @MrCameronsterling
    @MrCameronsterling Год назад +1

    OMG. sick to my stomach right now, I shouldn't have eaten and watched this 19 seconds was very close but kudos to the easyjet pilots for their calmness and assessment of the aircraft to continue the flight and land safely

  • @VxdonPlayz
    @VxdonPlayz Год назад +1

    Kudos to the easy jet pilots for being able to land safely

  • @jessicasnaplesfl7474
    @jessicasnaplesfl7474 Год назад +3

    The left generator had backup systems for s reason. The second pilot never should have taken off again without determining the reason for the #1 generator ceasing operation. Note that the same restart procedure that failed to restart generator #1 also failed to restart the disabled electrical systems after they stopped working on the next flight. The same restart components that failed to restart generator #1 could service both the generator and the failed electrical systems. Checking for the cause of generator #1's failure might have uncovered the cause of the next power failure if all systems were somehow connected.

    • @watershed44
      @watershed44 Год назад

      @jessicasnaplesfl7474
      Agreed, I just knew at the beginning of the failure that something else was amiss, and there is NO way I would have taken off with that plane. Write me up, fire me, but I'll live to fly another day on a properly functioning aircraft.

  • @skyfrog42
    @skyfrog42 Год назад +2

    I lost my new Garmin NAV/COMM unit while flying to my home airport. I had two radios, but both were connected to the COMM unit, so I had no communications.
    Luckily, I had a handheld radio that worked great 10 miles out. I know of military pilots who also carry a handheld. They come in handy on rare occasions.
    Now I carry two handheld NAV/COMM radios, so I have redundancy for the redundancy for the redundancy. BTW, Garmin replaced the unit for free and worked great ever since.

  • @sourabhka
    @sourabhka 9 месяцев назад

    This flight crew was superb which makes this video special. Hats off to the pilot!

  • @isabellind1292
    @isabellind1292 Год назад

    Thank you The Flight Channel.⭐✈Props to the flight crew!👍👍💓😊

  • @ShadowGamingReal1
    @ShadowGamingReal1 Год назад +4

    Kudos to those pilots

  • @tomstravels520
    @tomstravels520 Год назад +1

    It was this plus a couple of other incidents that led airbus to install an automatic alternate AC essential bus feed switchover.

  • @randytingen
    @randytingen Год назад +1

    Another Masterpiece

  • @patriciamariemitchel
    @patriciamariemitchel Год назад +1

    This is one of those times when you're oh so glad ATC kept a cool head. 👀👍

  • @Aircraft1606.
    @Aircraft1606. 11 месяцев назад +1

    0:01 Intro
    0:20 Departure
    0:58 London - Alicante Leg
    3:07 Alicante - Bristol Leg
    8:40 Near Collision
    11:10 Approach And Landing
    12:15 Investigation

  • @RaisedLetter
    @RaisedLetter Год назад +3

    Not the most comfortable feeling considering only seconds made a difference in this situation. If that Airbus departed 20 seconds late it could have been a much greater incident. I could say the mystery of why the powers couldn't be restored would have been greatly troubling but it's plenty troubling now.

  • @bubbleglass
    @bubbleglass Год назад +1

    Those were some skilled pilots right there.

  • @ianaustin5541
    @ianaustin5541 11 месяцев назад +1

    Shouldn't the flight crew receive an award? Cause they absolutely deserve one! I've heard on this channel that there have been other cases where pilots did receive one.

  • @ImperialDiecast
    @ImperialDiecast Год назад +1

    * opens door to cabin *
    yo does anyone have a satellite phone? cause we flying blind.

  • @threejaguar
    @threejaguar Год назад +2

    APUs have a service ceiling, since they cannot run faster to compress more air into the burners. They must turn at a constant speed to maintain AC current frequency.
    If you must maintain APU operation during flight, you must also stay below the APU ceiling. I am amazed that it continued to run at flight level 32 for so long without flaming out.

    • @deepthinker999
      @deepthinker999 Год назад

      Do you know what the APU ceiling is? Obviously I don't.

    • @se-kmg355
      @se-kmg355 Год назад +2

      @@deepthinker999 For the A320 in normal two engines operating, there is no limit. It can start and run up to the aircraft maximum ceiling of FL390.
      With one generator in operative, the MEL states as one point "Aircraft remains at or below FL330," That is why FL320 was chosen for the flight.

    • @deepthinker999
      @deepthinker999 Год назад

      @@se-kmg355 Thank You !

  • @adamw.8579
    @adamw.8579 11 месяцев назад +1

    This should be clearly written in the SOP - in the event of radio and transponder failure, you must stick to the flight plan. This solution gives clarity to everyone in the environment (other pilots and ATC). The crew did a good job deciding to stick to the planned flight path until the happy ending.

  • @par195
    @par195 Год назад

    Nice job of safely getting on the ground.

  • @michaelowen7920
    @michaelowen7920 8 месяцев назад

    Good old Easy Jet great airline and crew👍👍👍

  • @andrew_koala2974
    @andrew_koala2974 9 месяцев назад

    CORRECTED TEXT
    ; An AIRBUS A319 takes off from Spain for a flight to the U.K.
    ; While on cruise with the autopilot and auto thrust systems engaged -
    ; a failure of the electrical system occurs - which causes numerous
    ; systems to become degraded or inoperative.
    ; Meanwhile - the plane nearly collides with an
    ; AMERICAN AIRLINES BOEING 777
    ; This is the story of EasyJet Flight 6074

  • @TamilIndian88
    @TamilIndian88 9 месяцев назад

    Glad everyone is safe ❤😊

  • @zombinosh
    @zombinosh 10 месяцев назад +1

    We really don't give flight crew enough credit. They hold our lives in their hands every day and have to remain calm when things go wrong.

  • @maitreyabhattacharya
    @maitreyabhattacharya Год назад +3

    Fantastic

  • @hksp
    @hksp Год назад +3

    still better than the deadly blocked airspeed/pitot tube problem

  • @Ben-hg3bz
    @Ben-hg3bz Год назад

    I like the fact that now the texts on your videos are not in capital letters, it's better like this.

  • @jimmyplenderleith9471
    @jimmyplenderleith9471 Год назад

    How many hours of flight do commercial planes have to fly before they are allowed to carry passengers? Is there a number or is it random based on how testing goes?

    • @se-kmg355
      @se-kmg355 Год назад

      When you leave flight school, you will have 250 hours in the logbook.(200 hours if you are in cadet programs.) Then you will do a few more for your type rating, and then you are good to go.

  • @Nanayoubusiness
    @Nanayoubusiness 8 месяцев назад

    Tbh it was so emotional seeing the alicante airport perfectly like irl as im from there

  • @ken_in_atx9619
    @ken_in_atx9619 Год назад +2

    Easy Jet Crew: “We have one wing and an engine still left, let’s continue”

  • @SYDAirlineEnthusiast
    @SYDAirlineEnthusiast Год назад

    This has happened a few times for me in fsx. Default atc will ask if you have the traffic in sight if it is within four miles away from you.

  • @Raptor747
    @Raptor747 Год назад +3

    When did this occur? Did the investigation really not figure out anything about why the entire electrical system failed and all attempts at restoring power or communication (even with mobile phones near an airport at low altitude) failed?

    • @markmandelbaum3182
      @markmandelbaum3182 Год назад +2

      The twilight zone Monster.. official cause and the pilot didn't pay his T-Mobile Bill so the "Can you hear me now?" Answer was a big NO

    • @robadzso
      @robadzso Год назад

      ​@@markmandelbaum3182 😂😂😂🎉

  • @JansViews
    @JansViews 10 месяцев назад

    Woah! What a scary scenario on so many levels 😮

  • @Blovi-qd4lh
    @Blovi-qd4lh Год назад +2

    Maybe another look at the MEL…amazing that having one generator inop isn’t a grounding discrepancy.

    • @se-kmg355
      @se-kmg355 Год назад

      But you have two operational.

  • @johnhtexas
    @johnhtexas 9 месяцев назад

    For ATC guys reading this, I am curious about something. I have not been in a tower since the early 80's, and I am quite certain a couple of things have changed over the past 40 years. Time for a new tour of ATC. I'm a bit overdue.
    Here's the question. When an aircraft on an IFR flight plan suddenly drops off radar, is there any residual information on the screen that tells you of its existence? I'm wondering if radar could be programmed to automatically display the projected flight path and last assigned altitude of an aircraft that disappeared from the screen to help you clear other AC from the path.

  • @Swissvistas-fz9ey
    @Swissvistas-fz9ey Месяц назад

    Great video. It really begs the question whether maybe there should be a hand-held battery-operated radio on board of all commercial aircraft to contact ATC in case such an extreme scenario occurs: just imagine something like this in very busy airspace. I once had a total radio failure while flying back V.F.R cross-country in a PA-28, and had to land the thing at a small airfield outside of class C airspace to wait for someone to bring me a hand-held radio to be able to get back to my airport of departure.

  • @scottyjohnson3120
    @scottyjohnson3120 Год назад +1

    Great airmanship.

  • @riverwildcat1
    @riverwildcat1 Год назад +2

    The Airbus A319 had a dangerously defective electronics system. It’s nearly miraculous that a tragedy didn’t occur. The plane shouldn’t have been certified as airworthy. I would bet there were signs previously that something wasn’t right, but they were ignored.

    • @BrianMorrison
      @BrianMorrison Год назад

      I expect that some re-evaluation of the electrical system under fault conditions was carried out, it is entirely possible that things could have been restored to function had the displays and switches operated as expected, if you have buttons that don't clearly show their positions and/or display their status then it will be difficult for the crew to diagnose and rectify a problem. It certainly looks like the radio panel needs reliable power including emergency power from the battery bus if more than 1 of its supplies fail.

  • @Putler1943
    @Putler1943 Год назад

    What flight simulators do you use. I want to get one like this

  • @____________________________hi
    @____________________________hi Год назад +4

    I love your videos but the titles are getting more and more click bait-y 😢

  • @vitorisaia
    @vitorisaia Год назад +1

    Can you please explain why the A319's RAT wasn't deployed to maybe make energy available for the transponder/tcas?

    • @tomstravels520
      @tomstravels520 Год назад

      RAT only powers the AC ESS BUS. The aircraft should have been able to power the AC ESS via the AC BUS 2 when pilots pressed the alternate feed button. Because it didn’t work they likely assumed that AC ESS was broken, therefore RAT would not have helped