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Just recently a couple jets running off the runway, a tail strike on a 737 followed by a tail strike on a 757 and now this http://www.aircrashobserver.com/e107/news.php
Slid off the runway in Canada, over runs the runway in Jackson Hole.If you are referring to the emergency landing in Jamaica, I have to ask how is that an indictment of the pilot? He was getting a warning light regarding an engine. Seems to me that the prudent, wise, and safe thing to do would be to put the plane down on the ground at the earliest opportunity. Which he did. How is a mechanical issue with the plane the pilot's fault?
AA:
N668AA B757-223 Jackson Hole 12/29/2010 exited end of runway
N901AN B737-823 Montreal 11/30/2010 exited side of runway
N977AN B737-823 Kingston 12/22/2009 exited end of runway
N574AA DC-9-82 Denver 3/21/2006 tailstrike
N911TW DC-9-82 Denver 5/28/2005 exited right side of 35R
N234AA DC-9-82 Denver 11/21/2004 Hit approach lights
CO:
N18611 B737-500 Denver 12/20/2008 Snowstorm, off the runway
N17105 B757-224 Newark 10/28/2006 Landed on taxiway
UA:
N448UA A320 Phoenix 10/20/2008 Tailstrike
N442UA A320 Jackson 02/25/2008 Departed runway on landing
N431UA A320 Chicago 10/09/2007 Exited 22R and hit runway lighting
DL/NW:
N185DN B767 Atlanta 10/19/2009 Landed on taxiway
N311US A320 Denver 05/04/2009 Tailstrike on landing
N622DL B757 San Juan 09/05/2006 Tailstrike on landing
WN:
N471WN B737 Midway 12/08/2005 Off 31C in the snow (fatal)
N350SW B737 Seattle 01/30/2005 Landed Taxiway T vs. runway
N368SW B737 Seattle 02/24/2004 Landed Taxiway T vs. runway
AS:
N949AS MD83 Fairbanks 05/18/2006 Wingtip strike
No incidents found for FL, US, B6, HA, G4 or NK.
FWIW, Southwest didn't get their cowboy reputation from one incident. They got it from a couple of close calls...
A guy I know who sits on an ALPA safety committee commented on AA's bad luck with landing incidents right after the JAC event. He says AA appears to have more close-calls than any other carrier.
The data below comes from the NTSB's database, and oddly doesn't include the CLT incident.
Since they don't go into cause, I'm not reading anything more into it than just being on the wrong side of a statistical analysis without any other data to confirm there's a problem... The decision to go back to 2004 wasn't mine -- it was to show that WN wasn't perfect, but seems to have realized that the Cowboy reputation probably had some validity......
Code:AA: N668AA B757-223 Jackson Hole 12/29/2010 exited end of runway N901AN B737-823 Montreal 11/30/2010 exited side of runway N977AN B737-823 Kingston 12/22/2009 exited end of runway N574AA DC-9-82 Denver 3/21/2006 tailstrike N911TW DC-9-82 Denver 5/28/2005 exited right side of 35R N234AA DC-9-82 Denver 11/21/2004 Hit approach lights CO: N18611 B737-500 Denver 12/20/2008 Snowstorm, off the runway N17105 B757-224 Newark 10/28/2006 Landed on taxiway UA: N448UA A320 Phoenix 10/20/2008 Tailstrike N442UA A320 Jackson 02/25/2008 Departed runway on landing N431UA A320 Chicago 10/09/2007 Exited 22R and hit runway lighting DL/NW: N185DN B767 Atlanta 10/19/2009 Landed on taxiway N311US A320 Denver 05/04/2009 Tailstrike on landing N622DL B757 San Juan 09/05/2006 Tailstrike on landing WN: N471WN B737 Midway 12/08/2005 Off 31C in the snow (fatal) N350SW B737 Seattle 01/30/2005 Landed Taxiway T vs. runway N368SW B737 Seattle 02/24/2004 Landed Taxiway T vs. runway AS: N949AS MD83 Fairbanks 05/18/2006 Wingtip strike No incidents found for FL, US, B6, HA, G4 or NK.
Given WNs numerous short haul routes/cycles and point to point service, I'd say they have a pretty good record...
Just recently a couple jets running off the runway, a tail strike on a 737 followed by a tail strike on a 757 and now this http://www.aircrashobserver.com/e107/news.php
On paper, but they were notorious for playing "fast and furious" with regard to taxiing and unstabilized approaches...
A pilot and mechanic cut corners, the results could be more catastrophic.
So we can't count on pilots or mechanics to do the right thing if they have a financial stake in their airline? I thought both groups were professionals who cared about safety first (their own and their passengers). So I guess that profit sharing is a bad idea as well?
For several years in the late 1990s, AA distributed between $250 million and $350 million a year in employee profit sharing - guess that was a bad idea as it gave an incentive to the pilots and mechanics to cut corners and behave unsafely in hopes of increasing their profit sharing?
Sounds to me like the government should take over fixing and flying commercial airplanes - just like the TSA took over passenger screening. Can't have such safety-sensitive employees working in the private sector, you know.
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You are speaking to the wrong person about profit sharing and/or stock options. I don't want either one of them.
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