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United Airlines' last Boeing 747 completes its final flight after 47 years of service [tr]
UK Daily Mail ^ | November 8, 2017 | Chris Pleasance

Posted on 11/08/2017 7:22:22 AM PST by C19fan

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To: JP1201

“Any engine shutdown during flight operations, AKA block to block are required reportable incidents to the NTSB”

NTSB 830, paragraph B says “Subpart B—Initial Notification of Aircraft Accidents, Incidents, and Overdue Aircraft

§830.5 Immediate notification.

The operator of any civil aircraft, or any public aircraft not operated by the Armed Forces or an intelligence agency of the United States, or any foreign aircraft shall immediately, and by the most expeditious means available, notify the nearest National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) office,1 when:

1NTSB headquarters is located at 490 L’Enfant Plaza SW., Washington, DC 20594. Contact information for the NTSB’s regional offices is available at http://www.ntsb.gov. To report an accident or incident, you may call the NTSB Response Operations Center, at 844-373-9922 or 202-314-6290.

(a) An aircraft accident or any of the following listed serious incidents occur:

(1) Flight control system malfunction or failure;

(2) Inability of any required flight crewmember to perform normal flight duties as a result of injury or illness;

(3) Failure of any internal turbine engine component that results in the escape of debris other than out the exhaust path;

(4) In-flight fire;

(5) Aircraft collision in flight;

(6) Damage to property, other than the aircraft, estimated to exceed $25,000 for repair (including materials and labor) or fair market value in the event of total loss, whichever is less.

(7) For large multiengine aircraft (more than 12,500 pounds maximum certificated takeoff weight):

(i) In-flight failure of electrical systems which requires the sustained use of an emergency bus powered by a back-up source such as a battery, auxiliary power unit, or air-driven generator to retain flight control or essential instruments;

(ii) In-flight failure of hydraulic systems that results in sustained reliance on the sole remaining hydraulic or mechanical system for movement of flight control surfaces;

(iii) Sustained loss of the power or thrust produced by two or more engines; and

(iv) An evacuation of an aircraft in which an emergency egress system is utilized.

(8) Release of all or a portion of a propeller blade from an aircraft, excluding release caused solely by ground contact;

(9) A complete loss of information, excluding flickering, from more than 50 percent of an aircraft’s cockpit displays known as:

(i) Electronic Flight Instrument System (EFIS) displays;

(ii) Engine Indication and Crew Alerting System (EICAS) displays;

(iii) Electronic Centralized Aircraft Monitor (ECAM) displays; or

(iv) Other displays of this type, which generally include a primary flight display (PFD), primary navigation display (PND), and other integrated displays;

(10) Airborne Collision and Avoidance System (ACAS) resolution advisories issued when an aircraft is being operated on an instrument flight rules flight plan and compliance with the advisory is necessary to avert a substantial risk of collision between two or more aircraft.

(11) Damage to helicopter tail or main rotor blades, including ground damage, that requires major repair or replacement of the blade(s);

(12) Any event in which an operator, when operating an airplane as an air carrier at a public-use airport on land:

(i) Lands or departs on a taxiway, incorrect runway, or other area not designed as a runway; or

(ii) Experiences a runway incursion that requires the operator or the crew of another aircraft or vehicle to take immediate corrective action to avoid a collision.


61 posted on 11/08/2017 10:46:26 AM PST by CFIIIMEIATP737
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To: C19fan

I’m 72, and I’ve done a lot of flying, both domestically, and internationally...but I have never flown on a 747. What are the odds? ;)


62 posted on 11/08/2017 10:56:05 AM PST by FrankR (On the knees is not a good place to be...a man on the knees is only half a man.....)
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To: CFIIIMEIATP737

(iii) Sustained loss of the power or thrust produced by two or more engines


So if you lose one engine the NTSB does not consider it an immediately reportable event?


63 posted on 11/08/2017 11:06:38 AM PST by Gideon7
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To: Gideon7

So if you lose one engine the NTSB does not consider it an immediately reportable event?

Correct, unless the engine disintegrates and parts go flying out the back.


64 posted on 11/08/2017 12:27:45 PM PST by CFIIIMEIATP737
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