
Early clearances are yet another of the silly things done by ATC in the USA. It was common going into LAX to be issued with a clearance with a couple of aircraft in front of you for the same runway. Might make it easier, but devalues the entire idea of a clearance.2. Clearance for the ground vehicle movement was given probably 20-30 secs before a number of stop commands were issued, a cancellation of the landing clearance/go around commandshould have been given at that stage.
I agree, I posted that before seeing a better breakdown of the timeline, no go around was possible. I doubt the truck was at the holding point when crossing was requested.Early clearances are yet another of the silly things done by ATC in the USA. It was common going into LAX to be issued with a clearance with a couple of aircraft in front of you for the same runway. Might make it easier, but devalues the entire idea of a clearance.
The timing is interesting....something like 20 seconds before impact the aircraft would have been landing, and once reverse is selected, the go around option effectively expires.
and thus frequencies were not being rebroadcast,
That’s good, as it should be. Unfortunately it’s another back up system that didn’t change the outcome.This has now been shown to be incorrect - as the Truck 1 request to cross the runway, and ATC clearance to do so, were heard on the CVR - and the multiple directions to Truck 1 to stop.
At least one of the NTSB team was stuck at TSA in Texas.FWIW (and maybe not much!), here is an early NTSB press briefing. It actually starts at 44:10 (and early interesting comment that NTSB officers were delayed getting into ?terminal because of TSA delays and 'queues around the building'). Guy gives a pre-impact timeline from about 48:55, aircraft 500' above ground.
What’s not mentioned in that article is the system requires two sides to work, the network installed (millions $) and the ground traffic to have an appropriate transponder costing less than $1K onboard. None of the trucks had this, not one that could have been the lead responder. The industry learns from its mistakes and systems issues, Zagreb and the airspace divided by altitude rather then geography is a case in point. Here we have a massive investment that was never going to work while half the solution was not in place. It’s not a magic bullet, but it might have helped reduce the impact.Not sure if it’s been posted already but there’s footage of the moments leading up to, and of the impact, in this post by OMAAT: Ugh: The Runway Lights That Should've Prevented The LaGuardia Tragedy
I’m not sure OMAAT is a definitive source for analysis. The video was the interesting bit.What’s not mentioned in that article is the system requires two sides to work, the network installed (millions $) and the ground traffic to have an appropriate transponder costing less than $1K onboard. None of the trucks had this, not one that could have been the lead responder. The industry learns from its mistakes and systems issues, Zagreb and the airspace divided by altitude rather then geography is a case in point. Here we have a massive investment that was never going to work while half the solution was not in place. It’s not a magic bullet, but it might have helped reduce the impact.
LGA has had numerous calls for safety improvements, I am starting to understand why.

Cannot argue against that, same here, didn’t have many SAS flights though in YSSYDon't need high tech solutions.
When I did my ATC training, we were taught whenever you give a clearance for something to go on to the runway, you put a strip in your runway bay.
Exactly. Even with clearances that we'd all confirmed hearing, we still had every pilot, look out to make sure the runway was clear. You only need to be wrong once!I would have thought, ultimately, any vehicle crossing an active runway should be looking for oncoming aircraft. Regardless of any clearances. Much like it’s a wise action for folk to look both ways at a level crossing, just in case the barriers have malfunctioned.
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