Incidente Southwest a Chicago


CTALIRQ

Utente Registrato
7 Novembre 2005
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Firenze, Toscana.
Southwest aveva avuto sino ad oggi un incredibile record di sicurezza, senza nessun grave incidente.
Singolare il fatto che l'episodio più grave capitatole fosse una fotocopia di quello odierno (sebbene con cause differenti): nel 2000 a Burbank, Ca un 735 aveva overshoottato la pista, sfondato le reti di protezione, attraversato una strada e si era fermato a ridosso di un benzinaio.
Le foto del 737 "parcheggiato" davanti alle pompe di benzina sono abbastanza famose.
 

B787-FLR

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Firenze, Toscana.
www.aviazionecivile.it
Flight International Online news 09:00GMT: Southwest Airlines has identified the Boeing 737-700 that veered off the Chicago Midway runway on landing yesterday and into a nearby road, killing a young boy.

The airline says in a statement that the 737 is registered as N471 and it was delivered new by Boeing in July 2004. According to AvSoft’s ACAS database its full registration is N471WN and it carries a manufacturer’s serial number of 32471.

“The aircraft was released from the airline’s Phoenix maintenance facility on December 7, 2005,” says Southwest. “There were no indications that the aircraft was experiencing any type of maintenance problems.”

The aircraft, a 737-700, was operating as flight 1248 from Baltimore/Washington. It was due to have landed at Chicago Midway at 18:30 but circled the airport before landing at around 19:15, says Southwest. Snow was falling at the time.

On landing the aircraft “veered off the runway…onto Central and 55th Ave”, says Southwest. Reports say this intersection is just past the northwest corner of the airport.

Several reports say the aircraft landed on runway 31C. This is the longest runway at the airport, at around 6,520ft (1,988m).

The aircraft struck a vehicle, killing a six-year-old boy. The reports say several other people who were occupants of vehicles that were struck by the aircraft or pinned underneath it were seriously injured. There are no reports of serious injuries among those on board the aircraft.

Television pictures from the scene show damage to the nose of the aircraft.

Southwest says the captain who operated flight 1248 has been flying with it for 10 years while the first officer has been flying with it for more than two years

Southwest says in a statement that the passenger list indicated the aircraft was carrying 98 passengers and five crewmembers, although it stresses that this is subject to confirmation.

http://www.flightinternational.com/...ies+737-700+from+Chicago+overrun+tragedy.html
 

RWY07

Utente Registrato
Dal sito della CNN...

Boy killed after plane skids off runway
Jet passenger: 'Cars and stuff riding past us'

Friday, December 9, 2005; Posted: 4:42 a.m. EST (09:42 GMT)

Eleven other people, including three jet passengers with minor injuries, were taken to hospitals after Thursday's incident, said Chicago Fire Commissioner Cortez Trotter.

Flight 1248, which was arriving from Baltimore, Maryland, slid through a fence separating the runway from the intersection, said Wendy Abrams, a spokeswoman for Chicago's Department of Aviation. ( Watch footage from the scene -- 1:33)

Ninety-eight passengers and five crew members were aboard the plane.

The 6-year-old boy who died was in the car with his two younger brothers, including an infant, and his parents, said Deborah Song, spokeswoman for Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oaklawn.

Their vehicle was crushed under the nose and fuselage of the plane, said Fire Department spokesman Larry Langford. (Watch him describe victims and scene -- 2:22)

The mother, in her 30s, was in good condition; the father, in his 40s, was in serious condition; the 4-year-old middle son was in fair condition; and the infant was in serious condition, Song said.

Four people in the second car, which was under a wing of the Boeing 737-700 jet, were in serious but stable condition.

In addition, three passengers from the plane were in good condition, said Trotter, quoting paramedics.

Passenger: 'It was really bumpy'
It had been snowing all day in Chicago and visibility was poor at the time of the landing.

The National Weather Service had issued a heavy snow warning in the city and surrounding area.

There were approximately 8 inches of snow on the ground by early evening, and winds were blowing at between 13 mph and 18 mph.

Chicago's acting commissioner of aviation, Pat Harney, said airport runways had been salted and cleared throughout the day, but said he didn't know when the runway where the jet landed was last serviced.

Stanley Den, who was on the plane, said he noticed the plane wasn't slowing down during the landing.

"I couldn't really tell if we were on the runway or the grass. It was really bumpy," Den said. "We were kind of going for a while until the impact when we hit, maybe I guess, a barrier fence, went through that and into the middle of the street with cars and stuff riding past us."

FAA official: Nose gear collapsed
Southwest Airlines CEO Gary Kelly said there were no indications of maintenance problems with the plane, and that it underwent a routine check Wednesday in Phoenix.

"All indications are that the aircraft was cleared to land properly," Kelly said. He said that despite the heavy snow and light winds, there was "plenty of visibility."

"We've been operating at Chicago-Midway for 20 years. It's a great airport, and we've never had any problem whatsoever," he said.

The pilot of the jet has been with Southwest 10 years, Kelly said, and the co-pilot about three years. To his knowledge, the plane had been properly cleared to land on the 6,500-foot runway, he said.

Southwest Flight 1248 left Baltimore around 5 p.m. ET and tried to land shortly after 7 p.m. (8 p.m. ET).

There was no definitive cause given for the accident, but Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman Laura Brown said the plane's nose gear collapsed at some point after it landed.

Resident: Two loud booms
Amanda Doherty lives near the airport and said she went to the scene shortly after the crash and saw a car pinned under the airplane with its headlights still on. ( Watch witness account -- :27)

A bartender at a pub down the street from the accident said he heard two loud booms when the plane crashed into the intersection.

"We thought it was an automobile accident and we looked out the window and we saw the tail section of a Southwest airliner laying across the street, on Central Avenue," said Tom Fitzgerald, adding that he saw passengers exiting the rear of the plane. "People were running and ambulances were coming down the street."

Video from the scene showed at least 10 ambulances at the scene and dozens of fire trucks and other emergency vehicles converging on the intersection. The plane's fuselage was bent and its nose was on the ground.

Midway, which lies in a dense residential and commercial district of the city, west of downtown, was closed almost immediately and was not set to reopen until early Friday morning, the FAA said.

The National Transportation Safety Board was investigating the crash. Commissioner Trotter said the plane would remain in the intersection until the NTSB finished its investigation.





e la mappa di dove è accaduto l'incidente...



Ciao,
Marco

PS Un pensiero va al povero bambino che si è venuto a trovare nel posto sbagliato al momento sbagliato... :(
 

N606BN

Utente Registrato
25 Novembre 2005
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Somma Lombardo, Lombardia.
L'aeroporto di Midway e' un quadrato di un miglio di lato con due piste
incrociate, quindi non molto lunghe.
A settembre ho attreversato proprio quell'incrocio e se ben ricordo in quel punto la recinzione e' costituita da un muro di cemento.Strano che l'aereo si sia danneggiato cosi' poco come sembra nella foto.
 

B787-FLR

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6 Novembre 2005
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Firenze, Toscana.
www.aviazionecivile.it
Southwest Burbank probe looks at thrust-reversers
US investigators are examining the thrust-reverser system of the Southwest Airlines Boeing 737-700 that crashed at Chicago Midway on Friday after the captain told them the system did not appear to operate correctly.

At a press conference in Chciago, the NTSB said the captain reported a delay in the reversers deploying after he selected them, although the system did then operate.

After speaking to flight attendants on the aircraft, investigator Robert Benzon said: "They all said it was a smooth landing but they could sense a lack of deceleration."

The 16 month-old aircraft, N471, ran off the end of the 6,520ft (1,988m)-long runway 31C and onto a road killing a six year-old boy in a car after landing in a night-time snowstorm.

Southwest said: "The aircraft was released from the airline’s Phoenix maintenance facility on December 7, 2005. There were no indications that the aircraft was experiencing any type of maintenance problems.”

The 737-700, was operating as flight 1248 from Baltimore/Washington. It was due to have landed at Chicago Midway at 18:30 but circled the airport before landing at around 19:15, says Southwest. Snow was falling at the time.

On landing the aircraft “veered off the runway…onto Central and 55th Ave”, says Southwest. Reports say this intersection is just past the northwest corner of the airport.

Several reports say the aircraft landed on runway 31C. This is the longest runway at the airport, at around 6,520ft (1,988m).

Southwest says the captain who operated flight 1248 has been flying with it for 10 years while the first officer has been flying with it for more than two years

http://www.flightinternational.com/...+Burbank+probe+looks+at+thrust-reversers.html