on board generator

  • | | | | |

    Tokyo: Continental Micronesia Emergency Landing


    Click to view full size photo at Airliners.net
    Contact photographer J.Suzuki

    What: Continental Airlines Boeing 737-700 on behalf of Continental Micronesia, registration N27734 performing flight CS-916/CO-916 from Fukuoka (Japan) to Guam (Guam)
    Where: near Tokyo
    When: Jun 29 2010
    Who: 40 passengers and 5 crew
    Why: While en route, oil fumes developed in the cabin. The pilot returned to Tokyo where he made a safe landing at 1:41 pm.

    The fumes were determined to be from the right engine generator.

  • | | | | | |

    Firefighters Crash in Rio Street


    Snapshot taken from the video below

    What: Corpo de Bombeiros do Rio de Janeiro/Fire Department Air Tractor AT-802 en route to (and from) Resende Airport
    Where: Rio de Janeiro
    When: Apr 27, 2010
    Who: Two firemen, Major Jasper Sanderson and 27 year old trainee Luís Guilherme Neto
    Why: Two minutes after taking off from the airport on a training flight on the new plane, the pilot lost control of the plane and it crashed on to a city street, leaving no survivors. Sixty families had to be evacuated from the neighborhood because of the danger of explosion. The plane had the capacity to carry 3100 liters of water.

  • | | |

    Generator Failure Takes Down Delta Plane

    What: Delta Boeing 767-300 en route from Atlanta to Paris, France.
    Where: GSP Airport
    When: September 10, 2009
    Who: h 213 passengers and 11 crew
    Why: Nearly an hour into the flight, the plane had problems with the on board generator. The plane landed at GSP airport without event, and passengers debarked at 2:30 am. No injuries were reported; fire and emergency crews were on standby.

    George’s Point of View

    This is a generator. Why is this something the pilot lucked into in mid-flight? This is what maintenance crews are for. When do they get serviced, only after they stop working?