justice wrote:
I think the aircraft almost definately ran out of fuel, resulting in a power loss in the final seconds before touch down. I say this because the majority of the undercrriage was ripped off and the aircraft dragged along the ground, yet no fire or even a sign of fuel leaking.
How it lost the fuel remains to be seen (if indeed it did run out).
Well done to the pilot, the failiure occured on final approach and how he reacted quick enough to
a) Raise the aircrafts nose and get it over the A30 and then
b) get it down safely, is outstanding.
If he hadn't this could have been fatal.
Glad no one was hurt.
It's a possibility. I know there have been 'close calls' with fuel calculations (Done by pilots while they plan the route. They are very much qualified for it though). I still highly doubt it, they always take enough fuel for multiple go arounds and possible other delays. And they would have told the air traffic control if they were running low.
There are tanks in other parts of the plane as well besides the hull. The wings carry a major amount of it too. And the plane landed on relatively soft soil compared to the runway for example so it could prevent fires. Only in the movies there is always an explosion
Edit: Disgussed it a bit with my dad and this really seems REALLY weird. They had a 8-10h flight behind them and in the last minute they lost both engines. Now, the likelyhood of both engines failing at the same time is so small* that the reason has to be somewhere else. Possibly faulty fuel gauges or something. The pilots would not have taken off with too little fuel and they would definately had done something if they noticed they were running out, they would have landed in Amsterdam or another airport in their route.
*The plane is considered safe because of the minimal change of both engines failing. The plane can fly just fine with one engine, twin engine passenger jets actually have twice the power they would need for this reason.
Last edited by Gawwad (2008-01-17 13:44:12)