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Supposedly we're going to be having those sort of high temperatures here later on in the week. It will be interesting to see how the flight operates in the lighter warmer air.
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Type Rated B767 said:Maybe this is having an effect? I believe on the saturday previous flight, there were a final pax figure of 197, compared with the recent <100's.
LS16 said:Type Rated B767 said:Maybe this is having an effect? I believe on the saturday previous flight, there were a final pax figure of 197, compared with the recent <100's.
197....impressive going for a 184 seat aircraft.
Some of the old school PIA pilots report a "souls on board" figure to tower when they call up 10 mins prior to push for their ATC clearance. This number includes all of the flight and cabin crew and the occasional engineers they ferry back and forth. Generally they operate with a basic crew confing of 17. So, if someone heard 197 souls on board, you'd be looking at 180 fare paying passengers
Aviador said:Learnt today that PIA intend to bring the Boeing 777 into Leeds in October.
Type Rated B767 said:I am surprised with the state of those A310's we have not had any major problems yet. Fuel leaks are now a regular occurance when they pull onto stand.
WYIA said:Fuel leaks do happen alot, its more common with some aircraft than others.
Observe a heavy Fokker100 getting up on a hot day and look out for a thin "vortex" under the wings which is infact a stream of fuel coming out of the overflow valves as the tanks ballance out on departure.
Malfunctions in tank pumps or errors by the fuel service and cockpit crew can often lead to large overflow when the aircraft is on the ground. Airtours/Mytravel 757 aircraft had several fuel leaks when they operated from LBA I recall.
The overflow valves are there for just that purpose, they allow excess fuel due to over-fuels or pump malfunctions to escape the aircraft quickly. This is why ground staff should direct passengers arround the aircraft wing, lol not due to danger of flaps or hitting your head lol. Just incase the overflow valves kick in.
These fuel leaks are i assume purely down to the pumps or human error and not that there is a massive hole in the fuel tanks of the aircraft i am sure lol.
I am not playing down the fact that a fuel leak is a dangerous situation however there are some points to note;
It evaporates very quickly and often needs little intervention from the airport fire service except to keep the area free of an ignition source and keep people away. If there is a great quantity of fuel then the fire service usually spray foam or use a type of "Dangerous goods sponge" which absorb spills of fuel and oil.
In terms of ignition souce, it does need quite a high heat concentration to iginite. Ground staff are often running about the airport telling (shouting) at passengers to turn off their mobile phones as it is an ignition source lol (health and safety britain gone mad)
It would take a stupid fool and a box of matches to get a pool of aviation fuel burning not a phone, radio or the sun etc etc.
If the fuel was indeed all over the ramp at stand 8, then we are talking about a hell of alot of fuel so something has gone very badly wrong. That stand can fit a 767-300 so thats a rather large area, or perhaps someone got a tad carried away with that.. was it just a "large pool" perhaps within the stand area.
It would be interesting to know just how much and also was it on both sides of the a/c - ie- had the fuel come out of both wings?
Most incidents no matter how small or big , from bird strikes right up to tail strikes - end up in reports made to the CAA & i am sure after a recent bout of issues with the A310 fleet; PIA will be watched closely.
LBA need to remain in a good partnership with PIA regardless of these issues, if it gets to the point when Europe bans the A310 fleet then LBA an PIA need to get the airport ready for 777 operation ASAP. This service could well become almost daily within the next 2 years and this is revenue the airport can not pass up on.
Lets hope PIA get this sorted now and get the A310 fleet through some serious checks and overhauls. Its not easy in the current climate and the A310 spares will continue to get more expensive and less available.
One final note, fuel pumps go tech on a/c daily and it can be a brand new 737 less than a week old or a 19 year old A310. I can not speak for PIA and its fleet condition and service methods but it could just be some very bad luck at the same airport in a short period of time.
Bigman said:Hang on, are we getting mixed up here. Mondays flight came in at 18:20 but had gone well before 21:00 as I watched it depart. And ironically it was AP-BEU, which is the usual suspect when it comes to fuel problems. We must be talking about the Saturday flight.
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