The B-52 pilot was different story. He was doing things with the plane that it was never ever meant to do, and every one complained about it, but because he was old school Koren/Nam pilot, all the Generals that flew beside him though he was a darn good pilot and wish the younger pilots would get with the program. And thankfully his younger Co pilot made a command decision to fly with the least amount crew possible, to minimize the amount of people that would have to suffer because he knew that he would kill a crew one day and would rather have had it happen to him then any one else(which it did, sorry to say).
This was nothing like that, if you go to www.youtube.com and look up low levels or low flying you will see a tone of nice videos, that were by far lower, and way more dangereist (Italian KC-135)and yet no boddy made as big deal about those then they are about some one flying a 777 75-100ft off the run way on it's way to its new home. We sit/work/watch the airport and have heard the radio traffic, you need to get permission from the Tower to make a pass, and you have to tell your intentions and if you don't it becomes airspace intrusion, and the cops are called ASAP, and if you refuse to land at the nearest runway as directed, they send planes up after you, because are longer adhering to rules and regs and could be a danger.
In the last part I mention the rules and what would happen if broken, it's not like he just decided to come back around and do it and no one said any thing, he had to have permission from the tower to come back and make a pass is what I was getting at. And on approach you have to say your intentions, and they will approve or disapprove. And with what every one saying that the Boss was their and wanted it done, he then had to ask for permission from the tower to come back around, because no tower is just going to let you fly around aimlessly doing what you want, so he must have had permission to do what he did, and some people over reacted for no reason. It's not like it was a regular flight full to the brim with non-employees, on a normal flight and the pilot just decided to do it at LAX. Then I can see him leaving the plane in police escort as soon as he got to the gate and never flying agine.......We sit/work/watch the airport and have heard the radio traffic, you need to get permission from the Tower to make a pass, and you have to tell your intentions and if you don't it becomes airspace intrusion, and the cops are called ASAP, and if you refuse to land at the nearest runway as directed, they send planes up after you, because are longer adhering to rules and regs and could be a danger......
In the last part I mention the rules and what would happen if broken, it's not like he just decided to come back around and do it and no one said any thing, he had to have permission from the tower to come back and make a pass is what I was getting at. And on approach you have to say your intentions, and they will approve or disapprove. And with what every one saying that the Boss was their and wanted it done, he then had to ask for permission from the tower to come back around, because no tower is just going to let you fly around aimlessly doing what you want, so he must have had permission to do what he did, and some people over reacted for no reason. It's not like it was a regular flight full to the brim with non-employees, on a normal flight and the pilot just decided to do it at LAX. Then I can see him leaving the plane in police escort as soon as he got to the gate and never flying agine.......We sit/work/watch the airport and have heard the radio traffic, you need to get permission from the Tower to make a pass, and you have to tell your intentions and if you don't it becomes airspace intrusion, and the cops are called ASAP, and if you refuse to land at the nearest runway as directed, they send planes up after you, because are longer adhering to rules and regs and could be a danger......
The bottom line is if he asked and they said "NO", and he did it any way, then he should be fired.
But if he asked, and they said yes, then there is no harm done.
The next step the will happen is Airports doing what the D.O.D. did and buy up all the land around Area 51, only around all the places you can takes pictures of the planes real good, and make it so you can't really see much of any thing. This will solve people taking pics of things and posting them on the net and turning something harmless into a public out cry.
Didn't they say the Boss, or some body import was their and wanted it done? If so, then their is the permission on that side, and from what I hear every day at work, you have to have a reason to do a low fly by. The ATC knows that a 777 is no jet at an air show, and gave them permission to do it after the Boss asked for it to be done.
If their is an important part being left out in the story, this may need to be brought to light. I know if my Boss showed up and said he wanted a low pass for what every reason they were clear it with the ATC and then do it.
And i'm not trying to be rude or piss any one off, but if Bosses ask for something and it is withen reason, they usually get it.
Air Traffic will often let you do whatever you ask them to let you do - they don't necessarily know whether you can do it legally, they'll just assume...
Air Traffic will often let you do whatever you ask them to let you do - they don't necessarily know whether you can do it legally, they'll just assume...
Bull! I saw this movie called Top Gun where the pilot asked to do a fly-by on two separate occasions and on both occasions he was told "negative Ghostrider, the pattern is full". So ATC will not let you do a fly-by. Hollywood wouldn't lie to us, would they?
I don't know what part of the article I was reading but I missed the part you were talking about and went back and reread it,..... I see what you mean know. I did not realize the Chairmen said yes but they did not ask the company.If you are the boss of a "normal" firm then yes you are probably right, but this was not a normal firm. An airline has laid down procedures for a reason and it is not acceptable for the boss to demand/ask/request such things. The pilot may feel that regardless he cannot say no due to pressure and through this put the aircraft in danger. In this case, it was not the boss (CEO), but the chairman. If all things are fair, and so often they are not, he should also be facing the music over this. However, company rules are company rules, authorisation is authorisation. He did not have it and as is such in life, the guy at the bottom is the one who carries the can.
Matt
Erm... The B-52 crash was caused by the B-52s tendancy to roll on its back combined with its lack of Ailerons (Only Spoilerons), combined with the captain 'pushing it'. If you have a look on youtube, you can see the same plane, at airshows, doing exactly the same thing. What does this have to do with the 777? Nothing.
The 777 has no weird handling tendancies, nor does it have a tendancy to nose dive when flying straight and level, however low that may be. Most CX pilots are sad this happened.
He was only fired after it surfaced on youtube.
I do agree that it was a rather stupid act; but unsafe.... hardly.
Erm... The B-52 crash was caused by the B-52s tendancy to roll on its back combined with its lack of Ailerons (Only Spoilerons), combined with the captain 'pushing it'. If you have a look on youtube, you can see the same plane, at airshows, doing exactly the same thing. What does this have to do with the 777? Nothing.
The 777 has no weird handling tendancies, nor does it have a tendancy to nose dive when flying straight and level, however low that may be. Most CX pilots are sad this happened.
He was only fired after it surfaced on youtube.
I do agree that it was a rather stupid act; but unsafe.... hardly.
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