TCAS Stops Mid-Air Collision
Between LATAM Airbus A319 & Copa Boeing 737
The incident took place
following the closure of Guayaquil's only runway due to a bird strike.
Earlier this month, two
aircraft, an Airbus A319 of LATAM Airlines and a Boeing 737 of Copa Airlines,
avoided a midair collision while approaching Guayaquil International Airport
(GYE) in Ecuador. This incident took place following a bird strike that forced
the regional air traffic controllers to redirect the incoming traffic but,
while doing so, had a miscommunication with these two planes, that had to use
their traffic collision avoidance system (or TCAS).
What happened?
On August 13, 2022, a bird
strike incident occurred at around 22:10 UTC. The aircraft involved in this
first incident was most likely Avianca’s AV1633 flight between Galápagos (GPS)
and Guayaquil (GYE). We say most likely because the Ecuadorian civil aviation
authorities did not confirm which flight suffered the bird strike, but they did
say that it was an incoming service, and Avianca’s commercial flight was the
last one to land at GYE before the LATAM and Copa Airlines near midair
collision took place.
So, Avianca’s flight suffered
from a bird strike, forcing the airport authorities to close Guayaquil's only
runway and redirect the incoming traffic. There were three incoming flights:
two Copa Airlines services from Panama City (one was flight CM378, not involved
in the incident, and the other was CM468, involved in the incident), and a
LATAM Airlines service from Quito. Ecuador’s civil aviation authorities
explained what happened next,
“During these flight operations
(the diversions of the incoming traffic), there was a reduction in the
regulatory separation minimums between these two aircraft, a situation that was
managed by the flight crews according to the operational procedures applied in
these cases.”
LATAM A319
A LATAM A319 and a Copa
Airlines 737 almost had a midair collision in Guayaquil, Ecuador.
Employing TCAS
Using data by
FlightRadar24.com, at the moment these two aircraft were the closest, they were
at a calibrated altitude of 3,275 feet (Copa) and 3,000 feet (LATAM). Then,
each plane can be seen flying away from one another, using their traffic
collision avoidance system (or TCAS).
TCAS is a system designed to
reduce the incidence of midair collisions between aircraft. This system has two
types of alerts - TA (Traffic Advisory) and RA (Resolution Advisory). The first
is intended to assist the pilot in seeing the conflicting aircraft, preparing
it for a potential escalation (using the RA).
The RA alert is only generated
if there’s a risk of collision; it tells the pilot the vertical speed at which
the aircraft should be flown to avoid the threat. According to Skybrary, “once
an RA has been issued, the vertical sense (direction) of the RA is coordinated
with other ACAS II equipped aircraft via a mode S link, so that two aircraft
choose complementary maneuvers. RAs aim for collision avoidance by establishing
a safe vertical separation (300 - 700 feet).”
The aftermath
On Sunday, Ecuador’s General
Directorate of Civil Aviation released a statement saying that it has launched
an investigation regarding the “air traffic control event that occurred during
the approach and landing of aircraft on the afternoon of August 13, 2022, at
the José Joaquín de Olmedo International Airport in the city of Guayaquil.”
The authorities added that they
have already taken initial corrective action measures by separating the air
traffic controllers away from their daily posts while the investigations are
underway.
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.