ugg's outlet michigan - Country Music Talk Forum. ...
Please login or register free to be able to post.
View forum:
ugg's outlet michigan
Started by
jin,
2015/11/07 01:50AM
Latest post: 2015/11/07 01:50AM, Views: 111, Posts: 1
Latest post: 2015/11/07 01:50AM, Views: 111, Posts: 1
jin
Safety concerns as Jetstar cadet bungles landing
Australia's aviation safety watchdog has now turned its attention to Jetstar, after another botched landing attempt involving mistakes by another of its cadet co pilots.
The latest bungled landing occurred at Cairns airport on a flight from Sydney on November 3, when a cadet pilot selected the wrong flap settings, the airline confirmed.
When the captain, who was flying the Airbus A320, realised his cadet co pilot had selected the wrong flap setting, he called for the landing to be aborted.
But the cadet compounded his mistake by choosing a wrong flap setting for a second time, upsetting the aerodynamics of the airliner for eight seconds.
Fortunately for all on board, the plane was at 1900 feet and the captain had time to recover the situation.
''There is [url=http://www.classictallbootsoutlet.top/women-ugg-boots-c-1/ugg-classic-tall-... [url=http://www.classictallbootsoutlet.top/women-ugg-boots-c-1/ugg-classic-short... 5825 Classic Short Chestnut Classic Tall Boots 5815 Black[/url] now ongoing monitoring by CASA of the Jetstar cadet scheme to ensure it continues to meet the required standards,'' the agency said.
''If circumstances change, CASA will take appropriate steps to ensure relevant safety standards continue to be met.''
Jetstar's chief pilot, Captain Mark Rindfleish, said the crew ''followed standard practice and discontinued an approach into Cairns after detecting incorrect flap settings''.
''Anyone at the controls of a Jetstar aircraft has the qualifications and skills to be there,'' he said.
But the incident has sparked more calls for an urgent investigation into the airline's fast tracked pilot training scheme.
Independent senator Nick Xenophon, who initiated this year's Senate inquiry into pilot training and airline safety, called on CASA to launch an urgent investigation into the Melbourne and Cairns incidents.
''Two separate incidents just a few months apart would indicate that this needs to be investigated thoroughly,'' he said.
''I've been approached by a number of Jetstar captains that have expressed concerns about the level of training of some of the cadets.
''I'll be moving in the Senate, when Parliament resumes, for the inquiry to reconvene about these more recent incidents, to call CASA, the ATSB [Australian Transport Safety Bureau] and the Qantas group in relation to this.''
The president of the Australian and International [url=http://www.classictallbootsoutlet.top/women-ugg-boots-c-1/ugg-classic-tall-... 5815 Grey Outlet Pilots Association, Barry Jackson, said, ''when events occur on a regular basis then there's an issue. They grounded Tiger for these sort of things, it seems to me to be continuing events that point to pilot training and inexperience.
''CASA's the one that needs to look seriously at these events.''
Mr Jackson said experienced first officers were bailing out of [Jetstar's parent] Qantas to be snapped up by the likes of Emirates and Qatar airlines in the Middle East, at a rate of one resignation every two days, leading to the recruitment of inexperienced pilots.
Australia's aviation safety watchdog has now turned its attention to Jetstar, after another botched landing attempt involving mistakes by another of its cadet co pilots.
The latest bungled landing occurred at Cairns airport on a flight from Sydney on November 3, when a cadet pilot selected the wrong flap settings, the airline confirmed.
When the captain, who was flying the Airbus A320, realised his cadet co pilot had selected the wrong flap setting, he called for the landing to be aborted.
But the cadet compounded his mistake by choosing a wrong flap setting for a second time, upsetting the aerodynamics of the airliner for eight seconds.
Fortunately for all on board, the plane was at 1900 feet and the captain had time to recover the situation.
''There is [url=http://www.classictallbootsoutlet.top/women-ugg-boots-c-1/ugg-classic-tall-... [url=http://www.classictallbootsoutlet.top/women-ugg-boots-c-1/ugg-classic-short... 5825 Classic Short Chestnut Classic Tall Boots 5815 Black[/url] now ongoing monitoring by CASA of the Jetstar cadet scheme to ensure it continues to meet the required standards,'' the agency said.
''If circumstances change, CASA will take appropriate steps to ensure relevant safety standards continue to be met.''
Jetstar's chief pilot, Captain Mark Rindfleish, said the crew ''followed standard practice and discontinued an approach into Cairns after detecting incorrect flap settings''.
''Anyone at the controls of a Jetstar aircraft has the qualifications and skills to be there,'' he said.
But the incident has sparked more calls for an urgent investigation into the airline's fast tracked pilot training scheme.
Independent senator Nick Xenophon, who initiated this year's Senate inquiry into pilot training and airline safety, called on CASA to launch an urgent investigation into the Melbourne and Cairns incidents.
''Two separate incidents just a few months apart would indicate that this needs to be investigated thoroughly,'' he said.
''I've been approached by a number of Jetstar captains that have expressed concerns about the level of training of some of the cadets.
''I'll be moving in the Senate, when Parliament resumes, for the inquiry to reconvene about these more recent incidents, to call CASA, the ATSB [Australian Transport Safety Bureau] and the Qantas group in relation to this.''
The president of the Australian and International [url=http://www.classictallbootsoutlet.top/women-ugg-boots-c-1/ugg-classic-tall-... 5815 Grey Outlet Pilots Association, Barry Jackson, said, ''when events occur on a regular basis then there's an issue. They grounded Tiger for these sort of things, it seems to me to be continuing events that point to pilot training and inexperience.
''CASA's the one that needs to look seriously at these events.''
Mr Jackson said experienced first officers were bailing out of [Jetstar's parent] Qantas to be snapped up by the likes of Emirates and Qatar airlines in the Middle East, at a rate of one resignation every two days, leading to the recruitment of inexperienced pilots.
Please login or register free to be able to post.
- Links allowed: yes
- Allow HTML: no
- Allow BB code yes
- Allow youTube.com: yes
- Allow code: yes
- Links visible: no
- Quick reply: yes
- Post preview: yes