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This Oughta Be Good

Travel > Good Reason Not to Go There
 

Good Reason Not to Go There

The following story is one of the reasons we are not going to visit India, the other is we found out that Bangalore has a population equal to all the citizens of the USA and Mexico living in an area the size of Los Angeles.


"An Indian co-pilot sent an international passenger jet into a terrifying nosedive when he adjusted his seat and accidentally pushed the control column forward, an official report reveals.

The clumsy officer then panicked and was unable to let the captain, who had gone on a toilet break, back into the cockpit as the plane plunged 2000 metres.

The captain only saved the Boeing 737 aircraft after using an emergency code to get through the cockpit door and take the controls back from the co-pilot, the report by India's Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) said.

The 25-year-old co-pilot told the inquiry he had "got in a panic situation, couldn't control the aircraft or ... open the cockpit door and answer the cabin call."

When the captain, 39, got back into the cockpit, he shouted, "What are you doing?" as cabin crew ordered the 113 terrified passengers to fasten their seatbelts.

The report said there was "complete commotion" in the cabin and that passengers were "very much scared and were shouting loudly" as the plane dived steeply and boxes and liquor bottles fell into the aisle.
The Air India Express flight was flying at 37,000 feet from Dubai to Pune airport, in western India, on May 26 when the near-disaster occurred. No one was injured.

According to the report, the nosedive was "due to the co-pilot adjusting his seat forward and inadvertently pressing the control column forward."
The plane fell 610m before the captain got back into the cockpit - and another 1520mt as he struggled with the panicking co-pilot.
"There was application of opposite force by pilot and co-pilot on control column," the report said.

It added that the co-pilot "probably had no clue to tackle this kind of emergency."

"Appropriate action shall be taken against the involved crew," it concluded.
After the incident, the captain tried to calm passengers by telling them that the aircraft had hit an air pocket.

Four days earlier, another Air India Express flight had crashed at Mangalore airport, killing 158 people. A leaked report blamed a sleepy pilot."


Lest we forget the beauty of flight, here's a great little movie:

"GE Aviation designs engines, flight paths, and advanced aircraft systems. And we wanted to share the intricate choreography of flying in all its glory. So we captured all the take-offs and landings that happen over the course of one day and combined them into one short film. Watch, and see the hidden beauty of flight revealed:

The GE Show

posted on Dec 1, 2010 9:53 AM ()

Comments:

Scratch Air India off the list.
comment by marta on Dec 4, 2010 3:08 PM ()
Good grief! Remember me never to get on an Air India flight!!
comment by redimpala on Dec 2, 2010 12:45 PM ()
Some of those former soviet bloc countries are also on my Do Not Fly list.
reply by troutbend on Dec 3, 2010 5:53 PM ()
As with so many things, TMI (too much information) is something I can do without. Ignorance is bliss.
comment by solitaire on Dec 2, 2010 6:45 AM ()
It's this aviation blog I subscribe to, all kinds of fascinating tales that otherwise I'd never hear of.
reply by troutbend on Dec 3, 2010 5:54 PM ()
You watch the Amazing Race!I was floored to hear that bit of trivia on Sunday.

I absolutely *love* reading about India and reading books written by Indian authors. But I don't think I could stomach a trip there, either. Unless, maybe, I had a whole lot of money but that's not looking like much of an option...
comment by juliansmom on Dec 2, 2010 6:32 AM ()
If I was going to that part of the world, I think I'd rather see the Silk Road and dodge bullets than the crowded cities. If someone handed me a big wad of cash and told me I had to go to that continent, I'd argue hard for Nepal. I know it's not India, but they have similar food and I think they both look at the same mountains from different sides.
reply by troutbend on Dec 3, 2010 6:04 PM ()
Remember Sri Diva on blogster. She was an architect with a young family.
I really enjoyed her blogs and she often sent pictures of six or seven
people on one motor cycle. I don't think I could stand to see the poverty
that exists there. My heart would break.
comment by elderjane on Dec 2, 2010 5:49 AM ()
It makes us appreciate what we've got, no matter how insignificant it sometimes seems.
reply by troutbend on Dec 3, 2010 6:06 PM ()
Yeah, it's scary, but nothing says you have to fly to India on an Indian airline. There are other airlines flying to India. As for the crush of people, foreign travelers can avoid the worst part of any area by sticking to the upscale places. Having said that, I will probably never get to India, even though Ed's former partner, a brilliant business analyst, has often said he'd love to have us go there with him and his family. His wife is a big wheel at the UN.
comment by tealstar on Dec 1, 2010 12:49 PM ()
There are so many less humid, less hot, less populated places in the world that I'd rather go, it would be quite some time before I got around to India. Like you say, maybe it's okay if you're at the high end of the economic spectrum or a VIP, of which I am neither.
reply by troutbend on Dec 3, 2010 6:00 PM ()
There is a program on Sunday evening at 9 on the History Channel about the roads in India. The Ice Road Truckers from an earlier series on History are driving the Himalayas. You have to wonder how the population is as large as it is over the when you see how the buses run.
comment by jjoohhnn on Dec 1, 2010 10:21 AM ()
I saw a couple of those shows before I left Colorado. Fascinating, especially that one where the guy never got as far as the mountains because he hit so many cars on the way through town.
reply by troutbend on Dec 3, 2010 5:58 PM ()

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