this same aircraft also had an emergancy landing at LHR in June beacuse of a failure of it's nose gear steering.
link here
link here
Chris H
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clarkeysntfc wrote:To underline what an excellent job the flight deck crew did here I believe they landed it with:
- out of service #2 engine
- resulting in no reverse thrust on left side as the outboard engines on the A380 don't have reversers
- a hole in the wing which has clearly vented an (as yet) unknown fluid, likely to be hydraulic
- #1 engine is believed to have been stuck at cruise thrust due to lost communication with the flight management computer caused by shrapnel from #2 engine failure. (Evidence for this is firefighters having to 'drown' the engine after landing.)
- loss of hydraulics means not all spoilers deployed on landing, again increasing roll-out length.
- wet runway.
- near to max landing weight.
mitchja wrote:It's not Qantas' week as another QF A/C, a 744 has also gone tech today, returning to SIN with engine problems.
Link
Lizz wrote:I think I've just watched too much air crash investigation ii)
Bill S wrote:mitchja wrote:It's not Qantas' week as another QF A/C, a 744 has also gone tech today, returning to SIN with engine problems.
Link
I wonder if it's fitted with the RB211-524G/HT engines - they have the same core as the RB211 Trent 900 on the A380.
QF will be treating any engine problem with a great deal of caution at the moment so the slightest concern - back you go!
eejp1007 wrote:So many parts and so many steps in manufacture and it takes two drills being slightly misaligned to nearly bring down an aircraft.
Great find, thank you!
Scrooge wrote:I guess if there is a design or manufacturing issue it could happen.
eejp1007 wrote:Bloody hell!
All 3 engines go on an old Tupolev..
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-11918769
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