Kirjoitettu 10 tuntia sitten Korealaisen Asianan A350-900 on lennonseurantasivustojen mukaan laskeutunut varsin alhaiseen 275 jalan korkeuteen, kun matkaa SFO:n kiitotien 28L päähän oli vielä yli 3 mailia. Kone aiheutti lennonjohdossa low altitude alertin minkä jälkeen suoritettiin "viime hetken go around". Heti tulee mieleen Asianan vuoden 2013 onnettomuus ja Asianan ohjaamokulttuuri. Lainaa An Airbus A350-900 operated by South Korean airline Asiana with as many as 311 passengers onboard dropped so low on approach to San Francisco International Airport (SFO) on Sunday that it triggered a ‘low altitude alert’ in the control tower that resulted in the pilots performing a last-minute ‘go around.’ According to various flight tracking sources, the five-year-old aircraft dropped to as low as 275 feet while still three to four miles from the end of the runway at SFO and still flying at a relatively high speed of 174 knots. On Sunday, Asiana Flight 212 was coming towards the end of its 10-hour flight from Seoul and was on final approach to Runway 28L – the exact same runway on which the 2013 crash landing occurred. Seemingly unaware of any issues, the aircraft continued to drop to as low as 275 feet until a low altitude warning sounded in the control tower at San Francisco Airport. Air traffic controllers then alerted the pilots, who abandoned the landing and performed a ‘go around’ maneuver. After circling back around, the pilots managed to land the aircraft without any further incident. The incident will stir memories of the crash landing of Asiana Flight OZ-214 at San Francisco in 2013 when a Boeing 777 approached the runway too low and too slow, colliding with the sea wall and then tumbling down the runway as it burst into flames. https://www.paddleyourownkanoo.com/2025/02/24/asiana-airbus-a350-triggers-low-altitude-alert-at-san-francisco-airport-after-dropping-to-275-feet-with-3-miles-still-to-go/ 1 henkilö tykkää tästä Jaa viesti Link to post Jaa muulla sivustolla