Archive for the ‘Crash’ Category

“I have had all I can stand”

Sunday, February 21st, 2010

FEBRUARY 18–The man suspected of intentionally crashing an airplane into a Texas office building today appears to have posted a lengthy online diatribe attacking the Internal Revenue Service and declaring that, “I know I’m hardly the first one to decide I have had all I can stand.” The six-page manifesto, which link you’ll find below, is dated “2/18/10″ and is signed “Joe Stack (1956-2010).” Andrew Joseph Stack, 53, has been identified as the man who flew a small plane into an Austin building housing IRS offices. The statement was uploaded to the front page of a web site that was registered in 2003 by a Joe Stack, who listed an address in San Marcos, Texas, which is about 35 miles south of Austin. The online posting is titled “Well Mr. Big Brother IRS man… take my pound of flesh and sleep well.”

Read more – http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/years/2010/0218102stack1.html#theLink

Yemeni Plane Crash

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

“One in 5 million flights crash. But if there is a crash this week, it doesn’t change the risk of flying tomorrow or the day after,” says Bunn, a former Air Force and commercial pilot. “It may only change your thoughts.”

The airplane had been due in the Comoros capital Moroni at around 0230 (2230GMT) on Monday.

Of the 150 people on board three were babies and 11 were crew.

This is the second disaster involving a plane crash this month and French people have been victims of both accidents.

MORONI, Comoros (AP) — A Yemeni aviation official says a young boy who was plucked alive from the Indian Ocean after a passenger jet crashed was found floating 10 miles (15 kilometers) out to sea.

Mohammed Abdul Qader, the Yemeni civil aviation deputy chief, says the boy is 5 years old and has been hospitalized in the Comoros. He had no further details.

A Yemenia Airbus jet with 153 people on board crashed into the Indian Ocean on Tuesday as it tried to land during strong winds on the island nation of Comoros. There was no word on other survivors.

At least three bodies were recovered, authorities said.

Italy Train Crash

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

At least 13 people were killed when a freight train derailed and set off an explosion and fire in a small Italian town, officials said today.

More than 50 people were injured, many seriously, in the crash in the Tuscan seaside town of Viareggio shortly before midnight.

The rear of the train crashed into homes beside the railway station and a car filled with liquefied natural gas exploded, causing at least two buildings to collapse and setting fire to a vast area.

[youtube="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=REGENNkkvps"]

Some 300 firefighters were digging through the rubble of collapsed or burned homes looking for casualties, amid fears that there could be more victims.

"We saw a ball of fire rising up to the sky," said witness Gianfranco Bini, who lives in a building overlooking the station. "We heard three big rumbles, like bombs. It looked like war had broken out."

Some of the victims, including a child, were killed in their homes by the building collapses or the fire, said Raffaele Gargiulo, a police spokesman in the nearby city of Lucca, which is in charge of the smaller town of Viareggio.

DC Metro Trains Collision

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

AP reports that at least two people were killed Monday in a rush-hour collision between two Metro transit trains in northeast Washington. The collision happened about 5 p.m. Eastern time on the Metro system’s red line near the Washington-Maryland border. A number of other passengers were severely injured, said District of Columbia fire spokesman Alan Etter, in what he describes as a “mass casualty event.” He said crews were cutting apart the trains to get people out.

The collision happened about 5 p.m. EDT — the height of the city’s rush hour — on the Metro system’s red line near the Washington-Maryland border.

Officials said it was too early to determine what caused the crash.

Metro general manager John Catoe said at least 60 people had been taken off the trains.

“I don’t know the reason for this accident,” he said. “I would still say the system is safe, but we’ve had an incident.”

My Quastion Is

Sunday, June 7th, 2009

No doubt that all of you have heard about the Air France airplane crash. They report that bodies are being recovered in the Atlantic.

I have a question to all of you. What is your opinion on flying, did it change after all or are you unaffected? What is your overall view on flying in general even before this, do you enjoy or hate it?

Thanks

Air France Crash

Monday, June 1st, 2009

Airbus A330 flight from Brazil to Paris with 228 people on board, disappeared today from both military and civilian radar screens over Atlantic. world’s agencies report. Seams it has almost certainly crashed with no survivors, according to airline and government officials.

The Reuters news agency reported Air France as saying the pilot sent a message at 3.14am BST reporting an electrical short-circuit after the plane had flown through a stormy area with strong turbulence.

Brazilian air force planes are searching the Atlantic for flight AF447, an Airbus A330-200 that left Rio de Janeiro at 7pm local time (11pm BST) yesterday. It had been expected in Paris at 11.15am today .

Jean-Louis Borloo, the second most senior figure in the French cabinet, said: “By now it would be beyond its kerosene [aviation fuel] reserves so unfortunately we must now envisage the most tragic scenario.”

A former pilot told France Info radio he believed it was the first Airbus A330 crash. The model is known as having a good safety record.

The plane was carrying 216 passengers and 12 crew. The Italian press agency Ansa reported that five Italians were on board.

According to the French media, Paris airport authorities were told by their Brazilian counterparts that the aircraft had vanished from radar screens.

France Info radio quoted an airport authority source as saying it was possible but extremely unlikely that the radar drop-out was caused by a transmitter failure.

Chris Yates, an aviation expert, told the BBC: “There is not radar coverage across the Atlantic because it is too far from radar stations.

“But the fact [the plane] has not appeared on radar when it neared land gives me cause for concern.

“Normally, aircraft crossing the oceans are in constant contact with traffic control, updating them with details of their route information or location.

“If there is an emergency on board, they declare that. So it is somewhat surprising that there doesn’t appear to have been a warning.”

He said that “if we are talking about an aircraft coming down over the ocean … then survivability is quite limited”.

David Gleave, another aviation expert, told the BBC: “We are running out of time for the plane to reappear, given the amount of fuel it had on it.

“Had it been a communication problem, it would have appeared now on Spanish or French radar or Brazilian, had it turned around.

“The first thing is to find out where it is. It may have been reporting its position by satellite. It is very unusual that there is no location information.”

The A330-200 model has not had any fatal accidents involving passengers. In June 1994 an A330 owned by Airbus on a test flight simulating an engine failure on take-off crashed shortly after leaving Toulouse, killing all seven on board.

In October last year a Qantas A330 flying from Singapore to Perth reportedly experienced a sudden change in altitude. The crew issued a mayday call before diverting the aircraft. About 36 passengers and crew members were injured, more than a dozen seriously.

What happend?
At 3.10am, the messages show the pilot was presented with a series of major failures over a four-minute period before catastrophe struck, according to automatic data signals cited by the Sao Paulo newspaper, le Jornal da Tarde.

At this time, the automatic pilot was disconnected – either by the pilot or by the plane’s inbuilt security system, which flips to manual after detecting a serious error.

It is unclear whether the pilot wanted to manually change course to avoid a dangerous cloud zone – an extremely difficult manoeuvre at such high altitude.

At the same moment, another message indicates that the “fly-by-wire” electronic flight system which controls the wing and tail flaps shifted to “alternative law” – an emergency backup system engaged after multiple electricity failures. This system enables the plane to continue functioning on minimum energy but reduces flight stability. An alarm would have sounded to alert the cabin crew to this.

Two minutes later, another message indicates that two essential computers providing vital information on altitude, speed and flight direction ceased functioning correctly.

Two new messages at 3.13am report electricity breakdowns in the principal and auxiliary flight computers.

At 3.14am, a final message reads “cabin in vertical speed”, suggesting a sudden loss of cabin pressure, either the cause or the consequence of the plane breaking up in mid-air.

Air France crash survivor dies in car accident
An Italian woman who did not board the Air France flight that crashed in the Atlantic, killing all its 228 passengers, has died in a car accident.

Johanna Ganthaler, a pensioner from the northern Italian province of Bolzano-Bozen, and her husband Kurt missed the June 1 Air France flight 447 from Rio de Janeiro to Paris after arriving late at the airport.

Johanna and Kurt Ganthaler were vacationing in Brazil, when they missed the ill-fated Air France flight and were forced to catch a different flight later that day.

Just days later after returning to Europe, Johanna lost her life when their car went off the road near the Austrian city of Kufstein.