tomlee1986
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Hope the passenger has a full recoveryView attachment 483909
Self explanatory. Must be a medical diversion.
Hope the passenger has a full recoveryView attachment 483909
Self explanatory. Must be a medical diversion.
Wouldn’t Darwin be quicker and equally able to handle an A380? (unless people have to deplane and there is only one Xray machine for intl departures…)View attachment 483909
Self explanatory. Must be a medical diversion.
And don’t forget QF operated through Darwin with the A380 during the pandemic and restrictions in SIN.Although Darwin is a lot closer and it's sure to be able to take an A380 as it was designated to be an emergency diversion runway for the space shuttle. Would have a plenty capable runway then.
It has little to nothing to do with the runway. When you need a medical diversion, there's discussion with Medlink about the actual medical situation. They will then recommend the place they'd like the person taken. As long as that's acceptable from an aviation perspective (i.e. weather), then that's where you go. I've actually overflown Darwin with one very ill person, because the recommendation was to go to Adelaide. We spoke to the RFDS as we were over the top, and they commented that it was the correct call, as they would have had to put him into one of their aircraft and head to one of the southern cities.
Have two staff on island at the moment, one of whom has to connect back through to BNE. If I was on island I’d be hoping for a 24 or 48 hour delay at airline expense!QF179 to NLK (Norfolk Island) turned around and returned to SYD this morning. Apparently an issue with the aircraft. Now scheduled to depart (again) at 1330.
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The airspeed and altitude make sense for normal operations in the diversion, so I can't glean any ideas from FR24.As at 1722 hours on Friday 5 December 2025, the diverted QF63 (A388 VH-OQL) appears to be still on the ground in Melbourne.
Well, you never really know who comes up with these times....Historically it isn't a great portent when an A380 diverts and was then expected to depart MEL at 1600 hours., 90 minutes ago.
The crew that flew it out of Sydney would already have been out of hours for a flight to JNB when they landed.The flight deck crew must be close to running out of hours were they to take the aircraft on to JNB and push back at this moment.
Quickest way to get a crew would be from people living in Melbourne. But, as I don't think the 380 crew base exists any more, there wouldn't be any standby support, and it would be a case of ringing around and seeing if anyone felt like answering the phone. Still the most likely way to find a crew.Perhaps a new crew has to be flown down from Sydney (assuming the plane is OK and ready to go?)
They're like spare tyres. They're only spare until you actually need it, then they're flat.Perhaps Saturday 6 December will be the first test of QFi having a 'spare' A380 in SYD given VH-OQC is apparently back in service.
