Posted on 02/25/2008 9:40:09 AM PST by buccaneer81
February 25, 2008 Jumbo jet pilot sacked for fly-by at 28 feet
A British pilot has been dismissed for buzzing a control tower in a Top Gun-style stunt during the maiden flight of a Boeing jumbo jet.
Captain Ian Wilkinson astonished passengers by taking the 230-tonne Cathay Pacific jet to within 28ft (8.5m) of the ground shortly after take-off from Boeings US manufacturing plant.
The 322mph fly-by was cheered by onlookers, and the pilot, who is said to be one of the most senior aviators with the airline, later toasted the flight with champagne.
Footage of the stunt on January 30 was leaked on to the internet, however, and Mr Wilkinson was suspended. Cathay Pacific executives took a dim view of his actions, which were carried out without authorisation, and he was dismissed after a disciplinary meeting last week.
Ray Middleton, his British co-pilot, who had been unaware that the fly-by was performed without official permission, was suspended from training duties for six months.
Chris Pratt, the chairman of Cathay Pacific, is said to have been among the VIP passengers who were on board the £100 million plane, a 777-300ER that had taken off from the plant in Everett, Washington, en route for Hong Kong, where the airline is based.
Mr Wilkinson, who is in his mid-fifties and has lived in Hong Kong for more than 15 years, earned more than £250,000 a year.
Cathay Pacific is conducting an internal investigation and will submit a report to aviation authorities.
A spokesman said: The pilot in command of the flight was dismissed as he had neither sought nor obtained the necessary company approval to undertake such a fly-by.
The airline had a well-established approval process for such manoeuvres and had conducted them in the past at air shows but only with proper approval in place.
A Cathay Pacific pilot has claimed that Mr Wilkinsons job was put in jeopardy only after footage of the incident appeared on the internet.
He said: Wilkinson was very much one of the elite in Cathay Pacific and would have been very chummy with the airline executives he was flying that day. If no one else had found out about it the incident would probably have gone no further, but once it began circulating on the internet and Hong Kongs Civil Aviation Authority got hold of it, that was the end of him.
Mr Wilkinson is thought to be considering an appeal against his dismissal.
The swoop has become a hot topic on internet forums for pilots, with some praising the stunt but others criticising it as dangerous. Cathay Pacific has issued a notice to all crew reminding them of the companys policy.
No, the B-52 story is told at reply 28. The truth is even stranger than your guess.
It really is an awesome story, as well as a brilliant piece of investigation and analysis of the command failures that preceded and enabled the disaster.
Great Tex Johnson barrel roll video and story at 59! Thanks!
Holy cow is right. Poor crew!
I hope they teach that lesson in failure of leadership at the service academies etc. It does not apply only to pilots, of course.
He’s gonna need the number for Truckmasters. Does anyone still have that?
I’ll bet it was fun!
As a passenger, as long as I knew he was going to do it, it would be great!
Yeah, but those last few seconds were a bitch though.
First... Way cool!
Second... I had no clue pilots earned $400,000 a year.
The person who should be fired is whoever came up with the painting design. It’s the most hideous plane I’ve ever seen.
See post #83 for a link to a Utube of the entire incident.
They teach it at Air Command & Staff College....
No, it was one of the other three on board, a check pilot who was retiring. And yes, sadly his family was there and watching as a damn fool killed him.
LOL! There are numerous examples of gaudy livery. Southwest is pretty ugly, as are SkyBus and the late, great Braniff.
?? No, but there was a similar case involving a USAF C-130 many years ago -- a mechanic took it up for a spin, and was shot down. A very bizarre episode.
WOW .. that Hong Kong approach is insane!!
The same principles are true in any organization, albeit, most failures do not end up with loss of life in such a dramatic way.
That analysis is a classic business school case study. If it isn't, it should be used in every MBA program to teach people when to say no, even if it isn't 'politically correct' at the moment. Even (or especially) the Alpha dog needs to be told where the limits are.
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