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markis10,As an ex aviation professional I beg to differ (both PIC and ex ATC), the choice of content borders on sensationalism and the lack of knowledge is rather obvious, case in point is the incident mentioned, those aircraft should never have been given the same altitiude when they are on conflicting lateral paths, odds and evens (Quadrantal rule) do not apply above FL290 owing to the requirement to have 2000 ft separation. In fact the rules applicable here are the Semicircular/Hemispheric rules, that is,
Eastbound - Magnetic Track 000 to 179° - odd flight levels (FL 290, 330, 370, etc.)
Westbound - Magnetic Track 180 to 359° - odd flight levels (FL 310, 350, 390, etc.)
As there is no mention of RVSM, its inappropriate to say an even flight level should have been assigned. Aircraft on conflicting tracks assigned the same flight level is a very serious matter, especially when its under a non radar environment, the fact the CX crew picked up on the issue is a big credit to them!
I'm not disagreeing with your post above regarding the detail but disagreeing with regard to 'said article.' I do not believe the article 'borders on sensationalism' and whilst having some inaccuracies, that I also slipped up on, with regard to vertical separation was actually written in a way the average person could understand rather than being full of the aviation jargon that only a select few of us actually understand fully.