Watching QF 422 Melbourne Sydney on flight radar, abort landing and go around.
Never seen this before how common is it?
Did the flight crew say anything?
Watching QF 422 Melbourne Sydney on flight radar, abort landing and go around.
Never seen this before how common is it?
In the end it was a 10.5 hour flight BNE-BNE.
I'm told VLI is difficult because they have to approach at 90 degrees to the runway due to mountains, then turn and land immediately.
How many points/SC did you get for that trip ?
So, you never actually made it to VLI ?
Is there a difference between an abort and go around?
Had 2 go-arounds on a SYD-PQQ flight on VA a couple of years ago, after which we returned to SYD. Weather was absolutely terrible (and PQQ is a non-towered airport which I assume makes things a bit trickier for the pilots), so it wasn't all that surprising. Of course, there had to passengers who started swearing and complaining very loudly to the FAs...
The fact that it doesn't have a tower doesn't make all that much difference. If they installed a tower at PQQ and still had the same approaches then it's not going to make any difference. All a tower can do is tell you what they see and perhaps pass on some met data. If anything... It would simply provide more information to justify not even trying an approach and diverting.
AFF Supporters can remove this and all advertisements
It's a go around, not an abort.
They are common enough. My records show about .5% for the real world, though the simulator is about 50%. Basically they aren't any different to whatever you experienced during take off, though listening to some reports it sounds like you lead into them with a loop or two. Of roughly 20 go arounds in the past 20 years, none have been in the A380, a couple in the 747, and most in the 767. 85% occurred in Oz. 80% at Sydney. If you want to play with percentages a bit more...over that period, roughly 20% (each) of my approaches were in the 380 and 747, with the remainder in the 767. Sydney would be at the bottom of roughly 20% of landings.
In pilot, not media, language.... An abort is something that happens on take off, and, depending upon the speed, can be a very big deal. A go around is a discontinued approach, and even down to the flare, is a non event. A rejected landing, is a go around that is started AFTER touchdown (but before reverse thrust is selected). Very rare.
The fact that it doesn't have a tower doesn't make all that much difference. If they installed a tower at PQQ and still had the same approaches then it's not going to make any difference. All a tower can do is tell you what they see and perhaps pass on some met data. If anything... It would simply provide more information to justify not even trying an approach and diverting.