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Events from Jun 19th 1999 to Feb 25th 2019 www.avherald.com Incidents and News in Aviation List by: Filter: Incident: Austral E190 at Buenos Aires on Nov 15th 2013, overran runway on landing

By Simon Hradecky, created Friday, Nov 15th 2013 14:13Z, last updated Thursday, Nov 28th 2013 16:57Z An Austral Embraer ERJ-190 on behalf of Aerolineas Argentinas, registration LV-CKZ performing flight AU-2255/AR-2255 from Rio de Janeiro,RJ (Brazil) to Buenos Aires,BA (Argentina) with 96 passengers and 5 crew, landed on Ezeiza Airport's runway 11 at 05:45L (08:45Z) but overran the end of the runway and came to a stop just after the nose of the aircraft had gone through the localizer antenna about 220 meters/730 feet past the runway end. No injuries occurred, the localizer antenna received substantial damage, the aircraft received minor damage.



The airport reported at the time of the incident a cold front passed over the aerodrome.



The airline reported the aircraft went off the runway due to a sudden change in wind direction and speed. No injuries occurred, the passengers disembarked and were taken to the terminal.



On Nov 28th 2013 Argentina's JIAAC rated the occurrence an accident reporting a loss of control of the aircraft and impact with obstacles, however stated the aircraft received minor damage and there were no injuries (which does not warrant an accident rating according to ICAO classification). An investigation into the occurrence has been opened.



Metars:

SAEZ 151000Z 17016KT 140V200 9999 FEW012 OVC060 16/13 Q1005

SAEZ 150932Z 21019G30KT 9999 FEW010 OVC045 17/16 Q1004

SAEZ 150916Z 20017KT 6000 -RA FEW010 BKN035 OVC060 17/16 Q1004

SAEZ 150900Z 19014KT 160V240 3000 RA FEW010 SCT020 OVC050 16/16 Q1004

SAEZ 150846Z 25020G34KT 3000 RA SCT004 BKN010 OVC060 19/18 Q1005

SAEZ 150800Z 11002KT 9000 -RA SCT010 BKN070 19/18 Q1002

SAEZ 150745Z 08005KT 060V120 7000 -RA BKN015 OVC070 18/18 Q1002 RETS

SAEZ 150700Z 20006KT 4000 -TSRA BKN005 FEW045CB OVC060 18/18 Q1003

SAEZ 150600Z 17005KT 160V220 4000 -TSRA BKN007 FEW045CB OVC060 20/19 Q1003

SAEZ 150542Z 34005KT 290V360 3000 TSRA BKN008 BKN013 FEW040CB 20/19 Q1004

SAEZ 150515Z 24010KT 190V250 9000 -TSRA BKN011 FEW045CB BKN060 20/18 Q1004

SAEZ 150500Z 20008KT 9999 VCTS BKN044 FEW045CB OVC100 20/18 Q1002

SAEZ 150425Z 23010KT 200V270 9999 VCTS FEW009 SCT018 FEW040CB BKN060 20/18 Q1002 RETSRA

SAEZ 150400Z 24016G35KT 210V270 8000 TSRA FEW018 FEW040CB BKN070 25/19 Q1002



LV-CKZ stuck in the localizer antenna (Photo: Juan Martín Cornejo):







By Simon Hradecky, created Wednesday, Dec 2nd 2015 19:14Z, last updated Wednesday, Dec 2nd 2015 19:14Z



During the landing phase the aircraft overran the end of the runway and impacted the ILS antenna due to a significant change in the weather conditions in a very short period of time during the most critical phase of the landing. The crew remained unaware of the weather change due to ATC not updating the weather information.



The following factors contributed to the runway excursion:



- a tail wind component of 27 knots above the limits set by the aircraft manufacturer (15 knots on dry runway), rain, reduced visibility and a runway contaminated with water



- ATC did not update the crew on the significant and sudden change of weather, the crew thus remained unaware of the weather conditions



- Ezeiza Airport's Tower did not have an alerting system available to warn of sudden wind changes and changing runway conditions



- the approach destabilized in the transition from disconnecting autopilot to continuing visually



- monitoring and callouts by the pilot monitoring were not in compliance with standard operating procedures



- the crew did not consider a missed approach in a situation of non-stabilized approach during a visual approach with autopilot disconnected



- a long landing combined with the tail wind and the wet runway meant, that it was not possible to stop the aircraft within the runway distance remaining



- the aircraft was not correctly configured for a landing on a contaminated runway, the actual configuration did not match the standard operating procedures for the runway condition present at touch down



The JIAAC reported the first officer (53, ATPL, 5,200 hours total, 606 hours on type) was pilot flying, the captain (39, ATPL, 7,150 hours total, 1,690 hours on type) was pilot monitoring.



The aircraft had deviated around weather in the area near Montevideo, which was also planned as an alternate. The weather information for Ezeiza read visibility 9km, calm winds and rain, upon receiving this weather information the crew decided to continue to Ezeiza. The aircraft joined the instrument approach #2, VOR DME ILS DME approach to runway 11. Establish on final approach, about 4nm from touch down, the crew received landing clearance, wind was reported by tower at 4 knots from 240 degrees.



In the two following minutes, until touch down, the weather changed significantly however, according to special weather report one minutes after the runway excursion the winds had increased to 20 knots gusting 34 knots from 250 degrees, the rain increased in intensity and consequent reduction of visibility. Tower however did not transmit the changing weather conditions to the crew.



The aircraft touched down on runway but was unable to stop before the end of the runway, overran the end of the runway and impacted the localizer antenna about 250 meters past the end of the runway. The aircraft was evacuated through the rear doors at both sides, there were no injuries.



The aircraft sustained substantial damage to the radome and lower part of the fuselage, three pitot tubes and two temperature sensors mainly through impact with the localizer antenna, the nose gear received damage to the doors. The localizer antenna received substantial damage, too.



The JIAAC analysed that there was no technical malfunction prior to the accident.



METARs as well as ATC weather information indicated near calm winds, light rain, visibility of 9000 meters with a cloud ceiling at 7000 feet. Based on that information the crew acted according to their training in planning their approach and landing, there was no hint suggesting that special measures would become necessary.



4nm before touchdown the crew received landing clearance with wind information of 4 knots from 240 degrees. However, in the following two minutes until touchdown the weather changed to an "extreme magnitude" with winds at 20 knots gusting 34 knots from 250 degrees, resulting in a 27 knots tailwind component. Even if the runway had been dry this would have exceeded the tail wind limit of 15 knots. In addition the visibility reduced significantly. There is no evidence that the crew recognized the worsened weather conditions in their night visual approach.



The JIAAC continued analysis stating that the standard operating procedures of the airline required a maximum performance landing configuration for landing on contaminated runways recommending full flaps. The crew however had correctly configured the aircraft to flaps 5 according to the weather information they had received earlier, which now no longer was correct due to the changed weather conditions.



The flight crew's use of automation was according to standard operating procedures based on the reported weather conditions. The approach was stable until the autopilot was disconnected, during the visual transition the flight path was corrected to above the glide path. With the pilot flying focussing on acquiring visual references the deviation above glide path is consistent with increasing tailwind, the parameters of flight control increasingly deteriorated. The JIAAC wrote: "The variations in the parameters of flight control suggest a degree of difficulty in controlling the aircraft consistent with the unexpected operating conditions."



During the transition to visual flight there is further evidence of deteriorating monitoring of the flight progress. The JIAAC wrote: "This is not outrageous considering the sudden increase in workload for the crew, without time to adjust, to manage substantially different conditions than planned. The sudden increase in workload is to be considered a contributing factor to the deterioration of the flight path."



The JIAAC further analysed that the handling of the aircraft by the first officer in manual flight, with autothrottle connected, resulted in frequent pitch changes of up to 5 degrees causing a large response by the autothrust system, substantial speed variations and further aggravated pitch change requirements, overall leading to destabilization of the approach.



The JIAAC analysed that both flight data and cockpit voice recorder made clear that the approach was not stabilized. However, neither pilot called for a missed approach. A realistic assessment of the decision to continue the approach rather than go around can not be made in the abstract and requires the wider consideration of global operating environment including weather in the missed approach path, status of aircraft (fuel) and fundementally the crew's assessment, based on their own experience, of the safety of the approach.



The aircraft crossed the runway threshold at a height of 150 feet AGL and a speed of 147 KIAS resulting in a landing distance needed in excess of the landing distance available resulting in the aircraft coming to a stop 256 meters past the runway threshold.



Visualisation of the approach on crossing the runway threshold (Graphics: JIAAC):



Argentina's JIAAC released their final report in Spanish concluding the probable causes of the accident were:The JIAAC reported the first officer (53, ATPL, 5,200 hours total, 606 hours on type) was pilot flying, the captain (39, ATPL, 7,150 hours total, 1,690 hours on type) was pilot monitoring.The aircraft had deviated around weather in the area near Montevideo, which was also planned as an alternate. The weather information for Ezeiza read visibility 9km, calm winds and rain, upon receiving this weather information the crew decided to continue to Ezeiza. The aircraft joined the instrument approach #2, VOR DME ILS DME approach to runway 11. Establish on final approach, about 4nm from touch down, the crew received landing clearance, wind was reported by tower at 4 knots from 240 degrees.In the two following minutes, until touch down, the weather changed significantly however, according to special weather report one minutes after the runway excursion the winds had increased to 20 knots gusting 34 knots from 250 degrees, the rain increased in intensity and consequent reduction of visibility. Tower however did not transmit the changing weather conditions to the crew.The aircraft touched down on runway but was unable to stop before the end of the runway, overran the end of the runway and impacted the localizer antenna about 250 meters past the end of the runway. The aircraft was evacuated through the rear doors at both sides, there were no injuries.The aircraft sustained substantial damage to the radome and lower part of the fuselage, three pitot tubes and two temperature sensors mainly through impact with the localizer antenna, the nose gear received damage to the doors. The localizer antenna received substantial damage, too.The JIAAC analysed that there was no technical malfunction prior to the accident.METARs as well as ATC weather information indicated near calm winds, light rain, visibility of 9000 meters with a cloud ceiling at 7000 feet. Based on that information the crew acted according to their training in planning their approach and landing, there was no hint suggesting that special measures would become necessary.4nm before touchdown the crew received landing clearance with wind information of 4 knots from 240 degrees. However, in the following two minutes until touchdown the weather changed to an "extreme magnitude" with winds at 20 knots gusting 34 knots from 250 degrees, resulting in a 27 knots tailwind component. Even if the runway had been dry this would have exceeded the tail wind limit of 15 knots. In addition the visibility reduced significantly. There is no evidence that the crew recognized the worsened weather conditions in their night visual approach.The JIAAC continued analysis stating that the standard operating procedures of the airline required a maximum performance landing configuration for landing on contaminated runways recommending full flaps. The crew however had correctly configured the aircraft to flaps 5 according to the weather information they had received earlier, which now no longer was correct due to the changed weather conditions.The flight crew's use of automation was according to standard operating procedures based on the reported weather conditions. The approach was stable until the autopilot was disconnected, during the visual transition the flight path was corrected to above the glide path. With the pilot flying focussing on acquiring visual references the deviation above glide path is consistent with increasing tailwind, the parameters of flight control increasingly deteriorated. The JIAAC wrote: "The variations in the parameters of flight control suggest a degree of difficulty in controlling the aircraft consistent with the unexpected operating conditions."During the transition to visual flight there is further evidence of deteriorating monitoring of the flight progress. The JIAAC wrote: "This is not outrageous considering the sudden increase in workload for the crew, without time to adjust, to manage substantially different conditions than planned. The sudden increase in workload is to be considered a contributing factor to the deterioration of the flight path."The JIAAC further analysed that the handling of the aircraft by the first officer in manual flight, with autothrottle connected, resulted in frequent pitch changes of up to 5 degrees causing a large response by the autothrust system, substantial speed variations and further aggravated pitch change requirements, overall leading to destabilization of the approach.The JIAAC analysed that both flight data and cockpit voice recorder made clear that the approach was not stabilized. However, neither pilot called for a missed approach. A realistic assessment of the decision to continue the approach rather than go around can not be made in the abstract and requires the wider consideration of global operating environment including weather in the missed approach path, status of aircraft (fuel) and fundementally the crew's assessment, based on their own experience, of the safety of the approach.The aircraft crossed the runway threshold at a height of 150 feet AGL and a speed of 147 KIAS resulting in a landing distance needed in excess of the landing distance available resulting in the aircraft coming to a stop 256 meters past the runway threshold.Visualisation of the approach on crossing the runway threshold (Graphics: JIAAC):

By ike on Thursday, Dec 3rd 2015 22:18Z





By WhiskeyCobra on Thursday, Dec 3rd 2015 21:08Z





By Av8tor on Thursday, Dec 3rd 2015 07:22Z





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By WhiskeyCobra on Wednesday, Nov 27th 2013 20:01Z





By WhiskeyCobra on Wednesday, Nov 27th 2013 19:59Z





By Todd on Monday, Nov 25th 2013 13:17Z





By (anonymous) on Friday, Nov 22nd 2013 12:42Z





By (anonymous) on Wednesday, Nov 20th 2013 16:40Z





By WhiskeyCobra on Tuesday, Nov 19th 2013 15:59Z





By Todd on Tuesday, Nov 19th 2013 15:33Z





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