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Wino

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That's for large jets with major airlines. Not for commuter plane pilots on smaller carriers. This was in the Baltimore Sun:

"My daughter is Captain on a regional jet...She is a graduate of Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University...It took my daughter five years to get promoted to Captain. This doubled her wages. After five years as a First Officer, she was making about $28K."

You are right, that was for a large jet and also after almost 30 years of service.

Here is an article about two Northwest pilots that overshot their destination by 150 miles. Some think they were taking a nap while the auto-pilot was on. The pilots said they were in deep conversation. What do you think?

By STEVE KARNOWSKI, Associated Press Writer

MINNEAPOLIS – Two Northwest Airlines pilots failed to make radio contact with ground controllers for more than an hour and overflew their Minneapolis destination by 150 miles before discovering the mistake and turning around.

The plane landed safely Wednesday evening, apparently without passengers realizing that anything had been amiss. No one was hurt.

The Federal Aviation Administration said the crew told authorities they became distracted during a heated discussion over airline policy and lost track of their location, but federal officials are investigating whether pilot fatigue might also have played a role.

The National Transportation Safety Board does not yet know if the crew fell asleep, spokesman Keith Holloway said, calling that idea "speculative."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091022/ap_on_bi_ge/us_northwest_airport_overflown;_ylt=AgUjTzGTn0zVA6ZPE7hpaQFzfNdF

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MINNEAPOLIS – Two Northwest Airlines pilots failed to make radio contact with ground controllers for more than an hour and overflew their Minneapolis destination by 150 miles before discovering the mistake and turning around.

Geesh. In this modern day and age, you'd think that they would have heard of alarm clocks! Makes me really want to fly Northworst.....not.

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I have never had the experience to fly Northwest. That might be a blessing. I had a friend always used Northwest to fly to Thailand and he never had much good to say about the airline. He continued to fly them because of the convenient schedule and the built up frequent flier miles. I read where the first officer denies they were sleeping or arguing.

"The first officer of the Northwest Airlines jet that missed its destination by 150 miles says he and the captain were not sleeping or arguing in the cockpit but he wouldn't explain their lapse in response and the detour."

http://news.yahoo.co...rport_overflown

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If they weren't sleeping, and they weren't arguing, which apparently is the first story they told the cops, then what the hell were they doing? Fucking?

Something I read said the black box wouldn't be of any use in this case because it only records the last 30 minutes of a flight, so it would not have started until after they turned around and headed back to Minneapolis.

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Now the pilots are saying they were on laptops. Will we ever get the straight story? According to this article by Alan Levin, the pilots will most probably be fired.

By Alan Levin, USA TODAYTwo Northwest Airlines pilots used laptop computers in the cockpit and didn't pay attention to their duties as they flew past their Minneapolis destination last week, according to federal regulators and airline officials. Delta Air Lines, which bought Northwest a year ago and is in the final stages of merging the two carriers, issued a statement saying the pilots' actions were "strictly against the airline's flight deck policies and violations of that policy will result in termination." The airline announcement stopped short of saying that they had been fired. The two pilots were suspended from the airline after Wednesday night's incident.

http://www.usatoday.com/travel/flights/2009-10-26-northwest-pilots_N.htm

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Looks like these pilots are going to lose their pilot's license and their jobs. What idiots. No contact with air traffic control for an hour and twenty minutes. They both know better, the captain with about 20,000 hour flight time and the first officer with 11,000 hours. The story is they were discussing and looking on the laptops to review new scheduling procedures as a result of the NW/Delta merger. There is no excuse for this behavior.

Read more at http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/northwest-pilots-laptop-unacceptable-aviation-experts/Story?id=8923849&page=1

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Looks like these pilots are going to lose their pilot's license and their jobs. What idiots. No contact with air traffic control for an hour and twenty minutes. They both know better, the captain with about 20,000 hour flight time and the first officer with 11,000 hours. The story is they were discussing and looking on the laptops to review new scheduling procedures as a result of the NW/Delta merger. There is no excuse for this behavior.

Read more at http://abcnews.go.co...=8923849&page=1

I don't buy the laptop story for a minute. I think they both dozed off, then came up with the laptop story later because it sounded better than, "We were asleep at the wheel."

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Whether they were sleeping, on their laptops, or in a heated discussion, they screwed up and screwed up big time. I agree, sleeping on the job looks bad but any way you look at it, they were derelict in their duties. The screw up will cost them their pilot's license and their jobs. It is hard to believe that experienced pilots could be so careless.

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In Bangkok, I met a college graduate that was working in a DVD rental store. I did not ask but I don't think he was making much money, even though he was in management.

I know of a law degree holder who is presently cashiering, and not practicing as one would expect. She was hellbent at earning all the degrees she wanted, not knowing that there was a time to face the real world early in the day and started to earn for a living instead. How do we deal with this kind of people who had extraordinarily high hopes for the future by residing a lifetime at school only to live later on a kind of life that is altogether unacceptable to them?

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  • 1 month later...

Here is an email I received from a pilot friend concerning the pilot that overflew the airport. The link at the end is a Wall Street Article.

Now for the rest of the story.....

Hi All,

I had a one hour conversation with Tim Cheney yesterday and would like to shed some light on what happened to cause the over flight of their destination, MSP.

Before I begin with details, I wanted to say right up front that although there are many events that helped to cause this, Tim takes full responsibility and places no blame on anyone but himself. He is very humbled by what has happened and fully understands that as captain, he was responsible for the a/c, crew and passengers. That said, he wanted me to know how it all happened. Secondly, he has the full support of his neighbors in Gig Harbor , WA , as well has his church parishioners. One of his neighbors wrote a letter to the Star & Tribune in Minneapolis saying how great a family the Cheney's were, I agree.

On their flight from San Diego to Minneapolis , after passing Denver , the f/a called the cockpit to let them know Tim's crew meal was ready. Tim was the "flying pilot" on this leg, so he told his F/O that when the f/a brings the meal up, he will step back to use the restroom. When Tim returned, the F/A left the cockpit and he began to eat his crew meal. When a pilot leaves to use the restroom, it is customary for the other pilot to brief him on his return on "any changes", such as altitude, heading, course changes or atc center frequency changes, etc. In this instance, nothing was said....even though the f/o had received a frequency change. The problem that occurred was that the f/o never got a response on the new frequency....it was not the correct frequency....it was a Winnipeg Canada Center Freq.

Now, Denver Center is trying to get a hold of them because they never checked in, because the f/o had dialed in the wrong freq......that is who called them so many times....but, then there was a shift change at Denver Center and no one briefed the new controller that there was a NORDO A/C (non communications) in their airspace....so, in actuality, atc basically "lost" this a/c.....see Wall Street Journal article below.

Tim told me he heard atc chatter on the speaker and so never thought they were out of radio range.....but, of course, they were hearing pilots talk on Winnipeg Center . For non-pilots.....when we don’t hear anything for a long while...we ask atc if they are still there....sometimes they are and sometimes you are out of their area and need to find a new frequency. With this chatter going on, there was no concern that they were not being controlled.

Then Tim told the f/o that the new bidding system was horrible and that his November schedule was not what he hoped for. He mentioned that his son was going into the Army in Dec. and he wanted certain days off so he could see him off.....the f/o said he could help him, he knew more about the new bidding system. Tim got his lap top out and put it on his left leg and showed the f/o how he bid. He told me he had his lap top out for maybe 2 minutes. Then the f/o said that he would show him how to do it on his laptop. He had his laptop out maximum of 5 minutes.

Let's also add the 100 kt tail wind that they had to the discussion, not helping matters.

The f/a's called the cockpit on the interphone (no they did not kick the door, no, no one was sleeping, no, no one was fighting) and asked when they will get there. They looked at their nav screens and were directly over MSP. Because they had their screens set on the max, 320 kt setting, when the f/o called on the frequency, which of course was Winnipeg Center , he saw Eau Claire and Duluth on his screen. They asked where they were and the f/o told them over Eau Claire , which was not even close, but MSP had disappeared from the screen even though they were right over the city.

They were, as you all know, vectored all over the sky to determine if they had control of the a/c and Tim kept telling the f/o to tell them they have control they want to land at MSP, etc. They landed with 11,000 pounds of fuel (no they did not come in on fumes, but had 2 hours in an A320) and not but 15 minutes past schedule, even though they left San Diego 35 minutes late due to an atc flow restriction.

In the jet-way awaiting them were FBI and every other authority you can imagine.

Aftermath and tidbits:

Although these pilots filed an NASAP Report, which was designed to have pilots tell the truth about events, so the FAA could learn from them, they had their licenses revoked by the ATL F.A.A. even before they came out of their meeting with NTSB and NASAP meetings.

ATL FAA is really big on this new regulation which will allow pilots to take a short nap in flight so they will be rested for the approach...they were insistent that they were sleeping.

MSP FAA, Vance (do not know last name) was the person who handed Tim his revocation letter (which was leaked to the entire world by the ATL FAA). Tim said Vance had tears in his eyes and walked away, said nothing. It was later learned that the entire MSP FAA office did not agree at all with revoking their pilot's licenses, but had no jurisdiction over the matter, since ATL FAA had control because of Delta.

The pilots have been to Wash. D.C., ATL and MSP for several meetings. In ATL, they met with the chief pilots and Tim said they could not have been nicer. They are working to resolve this, not to try and fire them. But of course, they will have to get their license back for Delta to consider allowing them to continue flying. The appeal has been files for the FAA to reinstate their licenses or to settle on some form of punishment, etc.

When Tim and his wife were in MSP for a meeting with the NTSB, they happen to be staying at the same hotel as the NTSB was. The next morning in the lobby, the NTSB official came over to Tim and said he did not know why they even called them in for this event. There was no safety issue. Also, MSP Center informed Delta that there never was a problem and no aircraft were near their plane. Even though no radio communications, they had been followed and separated.

Yes, the company tried to contact them on ACARS, but the 320 does not have a chime...it has a 30 second light which then extinguishes.

Tim always has 121.5 tuned, but as we all know as pilots, it can get very noisy at times and we turn it down and sometimes forget to turn it back on. He told me this may have been the case.

So there were so many factors which helped to cause this episode. Anyone would have likely prevented it.....properly checking in on the new frequency would have been the first one.....

A note about laptops.....in NWA's A.O.M (I think it stands for airman's operation manual), it does not say we can't use a laptop, however in Delta's A.O.M., it does, we are transitioning now and we actually have pages from both airlines. When our union showed this to the attorney's, they could not believe the confusion put on our pilot group. But, D.C. F.A.A. put out a new possible ruling which will disallow all laptops......so stupid, don't they know Jet Blue has laptops on every aircraft and soon all airliners will for the electronic Jepp charts.

These are the facts and again, Tim said he feels very bad for the company and the pilots and is hoping for a positive outcome on their appeal. With 24 years at NWA, 21,000 blemish free hours, it would be a mistake to ruin his career over this in my opinion.

Thank you,

Mike

F.A.A. Fails to brief new controller on duty (WSJ Article)

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB125677288976914581.html

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