Last week on April 8th several airlines JETBLUE, AMR , Comair took off in Ice pellet conditions which the FAA prohibits. LGA at 1600-1715 edt.
Why do they put passengers in harms way?
:down:
I believe the only way you can go is if the conditions are different than reported by the weather observation and have a cabin check. If the ice pellets are falling you cannot take off. Several carriers have been taking-off when ice pellets are falling. It doesnt matter if you are deiced or did a cabin check.Takeoff in ice pellets is specifically approved by the FAA as long as a pre takeoff contamination check is satisfactorily completed. Know thy sh*t before waggling thy tongue.
BTW, I noticed that you only posted this on the JetBlue board, not also on the American, regional, etc. boards. Got an ax to grind there buddy?
f flight and control surfaces are free of contamination you can go. If not, you can't.
Last week on April 8th several airlines JETBLUE, AMR , Comair took off in Ice pellet conditions which the FAA prohibits. LGA at 1600-1715 edt.
Why do they put passengers in harms way?
:down:
(shuffles madly through emails and is still looking for that reference, finds only the latest QRH revision which sez it's still OK. Jury's still out. Not that I'm planning to actually take off in ice pellets anyway...)
I would hate to eat my words on this. Still, this kind of talk is *still* irresponsible. No change on that position.
The option of taking off if the conditions permit (even if contrary to the reported weather) is still allowed under our program. It is then a matter of the Captain's judgement, so I'd say that posting stuff about putting passengers in harms way without knowing all the facts is not justified.
The option of taking off if the conditions permit (even if contrary to the reported weather) is still allowed under our program. It is then a matter of the Captain's judgement, so I'd say that posting stuff about putting passengers in harms way without knowing all the facts is not justified.
The notice is N 8000.309, dated 10/05/05 (Google it). It clearly states that dispatch is not allowed in ice pellets. HOT's do not exist for ice pellets, and as far as this talk being irresponsible, the Notice from the FAA says it is a direct threat to safety of flight.