Correction to item 9 below: Capt. Moody flew a B747. He lost all four, but got two going again. That saved the day. (Ed.)
"We're Going Down!" 9 Most Terrifying Things Pilots Have Ever Said to
Passengers
These travelers, fortunately, lived to tell shocking
tales.
On the list of freaky things you don't want to hear
your airplane pilot say mid-flight, a PA announcement asking passengers to pray
for a safe landing ranks somewhere near the top.
However, an AirAsia
pilot from Perth to Kuala Lumpur recently said just that, terrifying passengers
when he told them he was praying for a safe landing and asking them to pray,
too. (The flight turned back and landed without further incident, so maybe those
prayers actually worked.)
The ill-advised AirAsia announcement piqued
our curiosity: Where exactly does that transgression rank on the list of
scariest things a pilot could say?
We spoke to a pilot for a major
carrier on condition of anonymity, who confirmed that scary things happen in the
cockpit all the time: "Airline flying is like having an enjoyable meal at your
favorite restaurant. Sometimes it is best not to ask what goes on in the
kitchen."
The pilot continued, "I've flown commercial aircraft for over
30 years. In those years, I have had an aircraft descend onto my altitude and
miss us by 300 feet at 34,000 feet. I had a small twin prop try to land on me,
and only missed us by 27 feet. And I once was taxiing with a very fast moving
aircraft on the wrong taxiway, which almost rammed me and missed us by three
feet."
All very reassuring.
And that's exactly why passengers
typically don't fully know what goes down: "You don't hear these stories,
because of the professionalism and quick reaction of the pilots," he continues,
"but believe me, they happen everyday."
Here are some of the most
terrifying of all time.
1. "A 50/50 chance..."
Last month, an
EasyJet pilot reportedly told passengers on a flight from Malaga to Bristol that
there was a "50/50" chance both its engines would work, and then asked for a
"show of hands" regarding whether they should take off. (EasyJet denies the
story.)
2. "We don't want to die."
In 2016, a Ryanair flight
attendant joked with Belfast-bound passengers over the PA system: "We have ice
on the wings and we don't want to die," in response to why the plane was taking
off eight hours late from Glasgow. RyanAir later released a terse statement: 'We
will be speaking to the crew member involved and apologise for the regrettable
comment she made in the heat of the moment."
3. "We're going
down."
Passengers onboard a 2013 Southwest flight from Tampa to
Raleigh-Durham had an unpleasant shock when their pilot suddenly said, "We're in
trouble, we're going down," before the plane took a nosedive. Ultimately, the
flight landed safely, and a passenger later provided CNN with an email from a
Southwest representative claiming that the pilot had activated the PA system by
accident.
4. "We're about to hit the mountain."
Jordan Reid, of
Ramshackle Glam, says, "I was on a flight to St. Bart's where the pilot said,
'It's going to look like we're about to hit that mountain, but don't worry,
we're not.' To get to St Bart's you fly through the teeniest, tiniest crack in a
mountain that you literally cannot see unless you are sitting in the pilot seat,
and you drop so quickly that all these alarms and red lights go off, but
apparently that's...normal." (The landing is, indeed, notoriously
scary.)
5. What they didn't say
Comedian Steve Hofstetter
says, "My scariest flight involved what they didn't say. On a four-hour flight
out of Houston, we started to descend to land after 20 minutes. No announcement
as to why. Just a bunch of strangers making eye contact, trying not to panic,
assuming that if something was really wrong, they'd say something, right?
Finally, 15 minutes later, the pilot announced we were landing back in Houston
due to emergency maintenance. That was a very long 15 minutes."
6. "We
may shortly need to make an emergency landing on water."
Thanks to a
pre-recorded message on a 2012 British Airways flight from Miami to London,
passengers heard a female voice announcing over the intercom at 3 a.m., "This is
an emergency announcement. We may shortly need to make an emergency landing on
water." Though another announcement telling people to ignore the warning was
played, the 330 passengers aboard reportedly went into a panic. Incredibly, the
same announcement had been accidentally played the year before, on a BA flight
from London to Hong Kong.
7. "A quick, watery grave"
Passengers
heading to Barbados from London on Monarch Airlines were horrified when their
pilot said that technical issues with the reverse thrusters could have led to "a
quick, watery grave," referencing a 1999 Thai flight that flipped in mid-air and
killed all 213 people on board. A passenger on the Monarch flight, Mike Bloxam,
later took to Facebook, writing, "Safety is of course the most paramount
consideration. But to mention planes flipping over and watery graves as you wait
to take off is totally unacceptable."
8. "Brace for
impact."
Chesley "Sully" Sullenberger rose to national fame when he
safely landed the "Miracle on the Hudson" flight following a bird-strike and
dual-engine failure. While it had a famously happy ending, the incident was
terrifying to passengers onboard, who heard Sully say "This is the captain.
Brace for impact." Flight attendants then began chanting, "Keep your head down,
brace for impact."
9. "All four engines have stopped."
The mother
of all airplane announcements came in 1982, during a flight from Kuala Lumpur
now known as the Jakarta incident. After his plane ran into volcanic dust,
triggering engine failure, Captain Eric Moody issued a now-legendary
announcement in the grand tradition of British understatement: "Ladies and
gentlemen, this is your captain speaking. We have a small problem. All four
engines have stopped. We are doing our damnedest to get them going again. I
trust you are not in too much distress." Though flames engulfed the engines, the
oxygen masks dropped, the plane went into a 6,000-foot nosedive, the cockpit
windshield shattered, and the landing equipment failed, incredibly, Captain
Moody successfully (and manually) glided the plane to the ground. Everybody
aboard survived.
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