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#1
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AirTran flight from MCO diverts to RDU after smelling smoke
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#2
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The Sky is Falling!
Hey chicken little, as everybody already knows these things do happen:
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__________________
Not an AirTran Employee, Just a Very Satisfied Customer and Shareholder |
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#3
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Ooops!
Not even the first time this year a Continental 777 flying Tokyo-Houston had an emergency landing. Interestingly enough, it was an engine spewing oil. Wonder if it was the same engine on the same aircraft that caused both emergency landings. Well now, that would represent a pattern wouldn't it? Uh oh, Continental
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Not an AirTran Employee, Just a Very Satisfied Customer and Shareholder |
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#4
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Orlando/Philadelphia
Speaking of diverted flights out of Orlando. Coincidentally, Continental's emergency landing was in Philadelphia
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__________________
Not an AirTran Employee, Just a Very Satisfied Customer and Shareholder |
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#5
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Warning!
Boy, now I would just flat out avoid Continental Airline's Houston/Tokyo route altogether after reading this one. What started out as a jab at dbaker on my part does appear to have turned into a pattern of very dangerous engine problems on that particular Continental route. Three times in a single year, mind you! It's O.K. though dbaker, these things do happen. But I'd avoid Continental's Houston/Tokyo route at all costs if I were you
This from a frequent flier's review of Continental Airlines on the epinions.com message board. This particular frequent flier is from dbaker's hometown of Austin TX nonetheless. Apparently that makes you an expert Quote:
__________________
Not an AirTran Employee, Just a Very Satisfied Customer and Shareholder |
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#6
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Don't Mention It!
Glad I could be of help, dbaker. Any time you need to put the whole story out there, you just let me know
__________________
Not an AirTran Employee, Just a Very Satisfied Customer and Shareholder |
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#7
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Man...this CAL passenger cracks me up.
"How can plane take off and not be able to land due to weight?" Very simple. If anyone cares, all airplanes are designed to take off at a lot higher weight then they can land at. Landing is simply more demanding on a landing gear assembly than a takeoff. AirTran 717 takeoff weight is 120,000 and landing is 104,000. In wide body jets that spread is a lot wider because of all that fuel they burn in cruise. So in order to make an emergency landing shortly after take off a fuel dump is installed on those airplanes. It dumps fuel into the atmosphere in a form of a fine mist. It evaporates very quickly prior to reaching ground. Now 717 is certified to land at 110,000, however AirTran didn't pay for that option since landings over 104,000 are never required. Airplane can still land over weight in an emergency situation, in which maintenance personnel will simply inspect the landing gear. |
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#8
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Just to set the record straight. This plane in RDU ther was never smoke or burning. Here is what happened. A galley trashcan was repaired with PRC. This is the stuff used to seal fuel tanks, the prc hadn't set up all the way and was emiiting vapors this is what the crew smelled, and for saftey landed in rdu..
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Loyal AirTran Employee |
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#9
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Its passengers like the one on the CAL flight that think they know what their talking about that spread bad info. If the wings were collecting vapor then the trail would come out the bottom of the wings not the top, but since the Capt said that they were dumping fuel then that explains it coming "out" the wing tip. TRS717 explained the landing weight info perfectly, and B717mech already explained the 717 galley smell.
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I Take Pride and Safety in my job!!! Go AirTran |
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#10
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I have many times taken CO6/7, NRT-IAH/IAH-NRT and it is my preferred route to Asia. I was on CO7 IAH-NRT the day that the aircraft serving the route diverted in January (earlier that morning) on the way back from NRT. Since that is the function of ETOPS, it wasn't a large issue although my flight to NRT was late due to the late arrival at IAH of the replacement aircraft, so I missed my connection at NRT as a result.
If you check even more carefully, this is not the 2nd time this year that CO6/7 diverted but the 3rd. The same aircraft returned to IAH after losing oil pressure in an engine although I'm not sure if it's the same one that was repaired in Midway. It definitely is interesting and brings question to ETOPS, but the discussion is more relevant for another forum and using it as a distraction from the AirTran issue is apparent. As far as the passenger who didn't know about MGTOW/MGLW/etc I think it's pathetic and ridiculous to mock him. I'm sure there's plenty of things that he knows about that you don't and we can hope that he'd be more respectful in sharing things without "cracking up." |
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