Qatar 777 collision probe
focuses on intersection riddle
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07 DECEMBER, 2015
BY: DAVID KAMINSKI-MORROW
LONDON
Investigators have
revealed that a departing Qatar AirwaysBoeing
777-300ER overran the runway at Miami airport before becoming airborne and
striking approach lights as it climbed away.
The inquiry into the accident
has disclosed that the captain chose to depart from the T1 intersection of
runway 09 despite carrying out the calculations for a full-length runway
departure, and despite a prohibition on intersection take-offs from this
runway.
It indicates that the root of
the event lay partly in the terminology displayed by the take-off calculation
tool within the aircraft’s electronic flightbag.
This tool offered the pilots
only a single take-off option, displayed to the crew as ‘09#T1’. The Qatari
civil aviation authority, which has released a series of preliminary findings,
says the pilots “understood” that this referred to a full-length take-off,
adding that the tool "displayed" the information that intersection
departures for this runway were not permissible.
But Miami’s runway 09
coincidentally has an intersection designated ‘T1’. As the 777 taxied parallel
to the runway, in darkness, the captain “decided” that the aircraft could
depart from this intersection.
The captain “could not recall”
his reasons for the decision, says the inquiry, but says he believed the
information subsequently printed by the calculation tool displayed the label
‘09#T1’ in a “compelling way”.
This printed information did not
mention that intersection departures were not permitted from runway 09.
When the first officer was asked
to tell air traffic control about the intersection departure plan, he checked
his own notes, in which he had referred to the ‘T1’ label used by the tool.
This convinced the first officer that the T1 intersection was acceptable as a
line-up point for take-off and advised controllers accordingly.
The flight crew included a
relief captain and first officer, both present in the cockpit. They queried the
decision to use the T1 intersection but, during the subsequent conversation,
came to believe that they had missed the pilots’ re-calculation of the take-off
performance to account for the shorter departure.
Although the captain – who had
nearly 1,000h on type – had been tracking the 777’s taxi route on a cockpit
display, the short-range view selected disguised the position of T1 relative to
the rest of the runway. None of the four crew members realised that the T1
intersection was some 1,000m from the beginning of runway 09, leaving the 342t
aircraft with only 2,610m available for the departure.
The false perception was further
reinforced by an aircraft which, as a result of a displaced touchdown, landed
close to the 777’s position.
As the aircraft rolled for
take-off the crew started to become concerned as it approached the V1 decision
speed.
“The [captain] assessed the
speed of the aircraft, the rate of acceleration and the runway remaining and
concluded the safest course of action was to continue,” says the inquiry. It
states that the captain recalled initiating rotation with only 300m of runway
remaining.
Flight-data recorder information
shows the ground roll was 2,866m and that the 777 was “still on the ground” as
it left the runway area. The subsequent collision with approach lights for
runway 27 was captured on airport surveillance cameras.
None of the crew was aware of
the impact and the aircraft – operating flight QR778 to Doha on 16 September –
landed at its destination without further incident.
But inspection of the aircraft
showed it had suffered a 46cm tear in its fuselage, which breached the pressure
vessel, behind the rear cargo door. The inquiry says the aircraft sustained
damage across some 18m² of aircraft skin, as well as parts of its main
landing-gear, with 90 individual areas needing assessment.
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