Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Plane That Landed On Calgary Street Had Enough Fuel To Reach Airport

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Aug, 2018 10:57 AM
    CALGARY — A report says a small passenger plane that made an emergency landing on a Calgary street last April had more than enough fuel to make it to the airport.
     
     
    The Transportation Safety Board says the two-person crew of the Super T Aviation Piper Navajo Chieftain failed to complete a fuel flow check when the engines began to surge.
     
     
    The plane, which was en route from Medicine Hat with four passengers on board, ended up landing on a street about five kilometres south of Calgary International Airport shortly before 6 a.m. on April 25.
     
     
    The plane clipped a light standard but no one was hurt.
     
     
    Investigators say since the emergency landing Super T Aviation has made changes to its flight checklist procedures and submitted them to Transport Canada.
     
     
    The changes include making it easier to monitor the fuel tanks, changing when the crew is to look at a checklist that deals with fuel, putting more details into onboard quick reference handbooks and making them easier to read. 
     
     
    "When fuel management SOPs (standard operating procedures) are not in place, fuel starvation can occur even if there is sufficient fuel remaining on board the aircraft to complete the planned flight," said the report released Thursday.
     
     
    "If flight crews do not complete checklist procedures in their entirety, opportunities to rectify emergency situations can be lost."
     
     
    The report notes that once the crew decided the plane couldn't make it to the airport, they did a good job of making the emergency landing.    

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Radio Host Outspoken About Surrey Gang Violence Says Bullets Fired At Her Car

    Radio Host Outspoken About Surrey Gang Violence Says Bullets Fired At Her Car
    On Saturday night she was driving home from a family dinner when she heard a loud gunshot, she said. It felt like someone had hurled a rock at her vehicle, but when she heard a second shot, she realized it wasn't a rock.

    Radio Host Outspoken About Surrey Gang Violence Says Bullets Fired At Her Car

    Canada Asks Japan To Clarify Adoption Stand, Grants Visas To Stranded Families

    Canada Asks Japan To Clarify Adoption Stand, Grants Visas To Stranded Families
    VANCOUVER — The Canadian government says it is processing visas for families who were near the end of the adoption process in Japan after five of them were stranded for weeks in a bureaucratic impasse.

    Canada Asks Japan To Clarify Adoption Stand, Grants Visas To Stranded Families

    Winged Dragon Sculpture Vanishes From Its Perch In Nanaimo, B.C.

    Winged Dragon Sculpture Vanishes From Its Perch In Nanaimo, B.C.
    Heather Wall says she thinks Rock Dragon 2.0 disappeared from a park in Nanaimo, B.C., sometime late Friday.

    Winged Dragon Sculpture Vanishes From Its Perch In Nanaimo, B.C.

    B.C. Tightens Payday Lending Practices, Protecting Most Vulnerable

    B.C. Tightens Payday Lending Practices, Protecting Most Vulnerable
     New limits on fees for cashing cheques and high-cost loans will take effect on Sept. 1 in British Columbia.

    B.C. Tightens Payday Lending Practices, Protecting Most Vulnerable

    Jogger Cedella Roman Who Crossed U.S. Border Accidentally A Warning To Canadians: Expert

    Jogger Cedella Roman Who Crossed U.S. Border Accidentally A Warning To Canadians: Expert
    A French teenager who accidentally crossed the border from Canada to the United States and reportedly wound up detained for two weeks should serve as a warning to Canadians, says an immigration lawyer.

    Jogger Cedella Roman Who Crossed U.S. Border Accidentally A Warning To Canadians: Expert

    Toxic Shock Syndrome Killed B.C. Teen And Tampon Use Can't Be Ruled Out: Coroner

    Toxic Shock Syndrome Killed B.C. Teen And Tampon Use Can't Be Ruled Out: Coroner
    A coroner has concluded a 16-year-old British Columbia girl died of toxic shock syndrome while on a school trip last year.

    Toxic Shock Syndrome Killed B.C. Teen And Tampon Use Can't Be Ruled Out: Coroner