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wldplt 09-02-2010 03:27 AM

Jetliner Brake System Probed(wet rwy landing)
 
An American Airlines plane that careened off a slick Jamaican runway last year has prompted crash investigators to reassess how well some jetliner braking systems perform on various runway surfaces in rainy conditions, people familiar with the details say.

American Flight 331 was en route from Miami to Kingston in stormy weather when it landed nearly halfway down the runway on Dec. 22. The pilots used maximum braking power but the Boeing 737 still slid off the end of the strip, ending up with a collapsed landing gear and the fuselage cracked in two places.

The crash, according to these people, has led the National Transportation Safety Board investigators to challenge longstanding airline practices and technical assumptions regarding braking capabilities on wet runways. By those criteria, the advanced Boeing 737-800 should have been able to stop safely on the strip.

Safety board investigators are inclined toward drafting recommendations to reassess, and in some cases tighten, current safety margins for landing on wet runways, according to people familiar with the continuing investigation. Any final action will require approval by the board's members, and the preliminary conclusions could change

Jetliner Brake Systems Probed - WSJ.com

rickair7777 09-02-2010 06:38 AM

IIRC they still landed long with an out-of-limits tailwind?

wldplt 09-02-2010 06:58 AM


Originally Posted by rickair7777 (Post 864758)
IIRC they still landed long with an out-of-limits tailwind?

That they did but according to investigators they still should have stopped in the remaining runway based on the expected performance of the brakes.

joepilot 09-04-2010 04:37 AM


Originally Posted by wldplt (Post 864772)
That they did but according to investigators they still should have stopped in the remaining runway based on the expected performance of the brakes.

I agree that the investigation, as reported by the newspaper, said brake performance. I believe that what was really meant was that the tires did not have enough friction on the wet runway to stop the aircraft, and that the assumptions about runway/tire friction were wrong.

Joe


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