Issue Number 269 |
January
2002
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P.O. Box 189, Moffett Field, CA 94035-0189 |
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It's Nice to De-Ice But Be Careful!
Icing -- its presence and possibility -- is a staple of winter operations that pilots must reckon with in their pre-flight inspections. According to ASRS reporters, the attempt to remove ice from an aircraft before flight may have consequences just as hazardous as an unexpected encounter with icing while airborne. We illustrate with a First Officer's report that describes how routine ice-removal procedures went awry.
This reporter told ASRS analysts during a callback conversation that the aircraft had spent the night on the ground during a severe ice storm and as a result was de-iced prior to departure. The reporter believed the problem was caused by de-icing fluid in the pitot and static tubes of the #1 system.
The Broom That Didn't Sweep Clean
The flight crew of a regional passenger jet experienced an equally harrowing aftermath of ice removal. From the Captain's report to ASRS:
The reporter added that because of a warming trend, slush was sliding off the aircraft's wings and fuselage prior to pushback. Ground crew elected not to de-ice the airplane, but just to sweep the fuselage with brooms. Maintenance inspected the elevators after the incident and found that slush from the top of the fuselage had lodged in the stabilizer elevator gap, causing recurring elevator jams.
ASRS Updates Web Site Reporting Forms
Important Note: The free (non-commercial) version of the Adobe Acrobat Reader does not allow users to "save" information entered into the forms. Once the forms are filled out using the freeware version of the Acrobat Reader, they must be printed to preserve the information entered. Reporters can print a duplicate copy of the report for their own records at this time, also. Completed forms should be mailed to ASRS at the address given on the form.
Is There a "Next Time" in Your Future?
ASRS reporters often use the phrases "next time" and "in the future" to introduce the safety lessons they have learned from incidents. In fact, the ASRS database contains more than 6,000 narratives that use these exact words. As we ring in the aviation New Year, a sampling of resolutions from the ASRS reporting community provides food for thought.
"Next time I will ask about any hold short sign" (Air Carrier Captain)
"Next time we will review the Terminal Area Chart before takeoff" (GA Pilot)
"In the future, I will keep this aircraft on the ground" (Air Carrier Maintenance Technician)
"In the future, I suggest putting up a sign" (Flight Attendant)
"Next time we will level off" (Air Carrier First Officer)
"Next time use Whoops! " (Air Traffic Controller)
ASRS Recently Issued Alerts On... |
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MD80 auto spoiler deployment incidents |
ATC handling of an air carrier on a STAR routing |
Incident involving CL65 trailing edge inflight failure |
Unusual wake turbulence incident involving a EMB-145 |
Security incidents since Sept. 11th national emergency |
November 2001 Report Intake | |
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Air Carrier/Air Taxi Pilots |
1,721
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General Aviation Pilots |
850
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Controllers |
30
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Cabin/Mechanics/Military/Other |
103
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TOTAL |
2,704
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