Editor: Patrick Smith
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The inside story of Northwest 188

Plus, Congress gets it right, for once: Tough new hiring rules for airlines and pilots

Did U.S. airport security get it right this time?

It's heartening that our luggage-screening protocols are effective enough to detect what could have been dangerous

Ask the Pilot
AP
A man is led off a plane at Schipol Airport in Amsterdam on Monday after suspicious items turned up in his luggage.

In Amsterdam, two men headed from the United States to Yemen were detained after security staff discovered suspicious items in one of the men's checked luggage.

The story began when security screeners at the airport in Birmingham, Ala., discovered watches, cellphones and a bottle of Pepto-Bismol strangely taped together in a suitcase belonging to 48-year-old Ahmed Mohamed Nasser al Soofi, a U.S. permanent resident. After determining the items posed no threat, al Soofi was allowed to catch his flight from Birmingham to Chicago's O'Hare International Airport, from which he planned to connect onward to Washington-Dulles, and then overseas.

When al Soofi missed his connection at O'Hare, he was rebooked on a United Airlines flight to Amsterdam. His bag, meanwhile, was sent unaccompanied to Dulles, where it was loaded aboard the United plane to Dubai that al Soofi originally intended to catch.

There are rules banning unaccompanied suitcases on planes going overseas, however (a stricture going back to the Lockerbie catastrophe in 1988), and the Dubai-bound jet was forced to return to the gate. When al Soofi's suitcase was offloaded and rescreened, authorities became worried and alerted Dutch officials, who arrested al Soofi upon his arrival in Amsterdam.

Also arrested was Hazem Abdullah Thabi al-Murisi, a Yemeni citizen whose only crime appears to be that he shared Yemini citizenship with al Soofi, and happened to be seated near him. Reportedly the men had never met or spoken before, though both spent several years living near one another in Detroit, among the large Arab-American population there.

Do I believe that al Soofi and al-Murisi were terrorist operatives on a test run, sniffing out weaknesses in airport security? No, I don't. The evidence doesn't point that way.

Ignoring for a moment whether they were unfairly profiled (I don't necessarily feel that way, either, though al-Murisi's detention is a little hard to reconcile), I find the incident strangely comforting. As I've been writing for years, the No. 1 threat to commercial aircraft is, just as it has always been, bombs and explosives. And although we will never be completely protected -- a resourceful enough saboteur will always figure out a way to smuggle deadly components onto an aircraft -- it is heartening to see that our luggage screening protocols actually work, and are effective enough to detect what could have been something dangerous.

Also heartening is the way in which screeners in Birmingham seem to have handled their odd discovery. They checked things out and did not overreact.

Do the Dutch know something we don't, or are they the ones overreacting?

Abdul-Hakim Al-Sadah, Yemen's consul general in Detroit, says that mobile phones and watches are commonly packed together by traveling Arab-Americans (and other cultures too, I should add) as gifts for relatives and friends.

As for al Soofi's Pepto-Bismol, in the end it made sense. Turns out he probably needs it.

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Is takeoff the riskiest part of flying?

And what's with the History Channel's "extreme" airports? These and more questions from the reader mail bag

Is takeoff the riskiest part of flying?
iStockphoto

What are your thoughts on the History Channel's recent program "Most Extreme Airports"? The show featured St. Bart's, Lukla airport in Nepal, and some other notorious spots. And is it true, as the show suggested, that some airports require a special "signoff" in order for pilots to fly there.

These "extreme airport" lists pop up from time to time on TV, in magazines and on the Web. And they always drive me crazy. For starters, these lists often contain airports that aren't even served by scheduled airlines. But more important, there is no such thing as an unsafe commercial airport. If an airport were unsafe, no commercial carrier, big or small, would be flying there. Some are challenging, yes, usually due to terrain, unusually short runways or both. The workload is higher, and they require greater concentration. But so what? Just as in any profession, some tasks are harder than others. In the context of aviation these tasks all are well within the capabilities of pilots and the aircraft they are trained to fly. Off the top of my head: Bogotá, Quito, Tegucigalpa. Heck, even the "Expressway Visual" pattern into LaGuardia can be tricky. Airlines often require crews to undergo supplemental training in order to operate into certain airports -- usually those in mountainous regions. 

I flew several segments aboard Southwest on a recent trip. At each landing the brakes were applied very abruptly, pitching us forward uncomfortably. The airports were San Francisco, Chicago-Midway and LaGuardia, none of which I would think would have runways too small for a 737.

Not too small, but small enough that harder-than-normal braking at these airports is fairly common. Especially at LGA and DCA. Landing distances aren't arbitrary or subjective. Adequate room to stop is guaranteed; pilots don't simply eyeball a runway and figure, "That looks about long enough." (There is no set length that particular aircraft type requires. It depends on weight, wind, surface conditions, etc.) Nevertheless, shorter runways leave less margin for error, and so a little extra on the brakes is sometimes a good idea.

Most of the time, though, hard braking is the result of pilots aiming for a particular turnoff. At LGA, when landing on Runway 31, pilots often attempt to clear the runway prior to the intersection with Runway 04/22. Once past that point, having to recross the active runway can add several minutes during the taxi-in. And air traffic control, for its part, appreciates a quick runway exit, especially when traffic is close behind.

Thus, long runway or short runway, braking can occasionally be abrupt. It's a bit jarring if you're not expecting it, but it is not a sign that you were about to go barreling off the end or colliding with another plane.

On many commercial aircraft the initial braking is taken care of automatically. The plane I fly has four "autobrake" options for landing, numbered 1, 2, 3, 4 and something called "max auto." Selections 1 or 2 give you a nice, gentle deceleration. Max auto feels like you've hit a brick wall, and is saved for those occasions when runways are both very short and very slick. I rarely select anything more than a 3. At some point during the landing roll, whichever pilot is flying (captain or first officer) will disengage the automatic brakes and take over manually. 

The other night, after we landed, instead of taxiing to the gate under its own power, our plane shut down its engines and was towed to the gate from a spot just shy of the terminal. I had never experienced this before. My husband speculated that the plane was probably low on fuel after our long transatlantic flight.

No, no, no. You'll occasionally encounter one of these "tow-in only" gates, designated as such because parking at one requires one or more tight turns that are difficult for a larger plane to negotiate under its own power, and/or because of the proximity of other aircraft, ground equipment or personnel. Even at low thrust, jet engines are powerful enough to wreak havoc at close range. 

I am a particularly nervous flier during takeoff. An old boyfriend, who was training to become a pilot, upon my badgering conceded that in spite of the overwhelmingly safe nature of flying, takeoff is perhaps the riskiest moment. When I asked how long I needed to be nervous during takeoff, he suggested one minute. I immediately tripled this number, and have established a ritual during takeoff whereby I count to 60 three times after the plane lifts off, after which I can begin to breathe normally again.

Statistically most accidents do occur shortly after takeoff or shortly before landing (with no real definition of what "shortly" means), but your boyfriend was right. He was more or less paraphrasing something I say in my book: "Here the airplane is making the transition from ground to flight, and its grip on the latter is much more tentative than when coming down. More fingernails are probably chewed during landings, but in deference to the laws of inertia, gravity and momentum, this anxiety is misplaced. If you insist on being nervous, liftoff is your moment."

Three minutes, though? It's more like the first 10 seconds that are most critical.

Actually, I'd back that up to take in the latter portion of the takeoff roll as well. Similar to landings, as discussed above, stopping distance is guaranteed should a takeoff be aborted up to so-called V-1 speed (just prior to liftoff). But that's a bet I wouldn't want to take on some runways in slick conditions at maximum weight. There's a point where you're safer in the air than on the ground.

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Do you have questions for Salon's aviation expert? Contact Patrick Smith through his website and look for answers in a future column.

Struggling Mexicana airline halting all operations

Mexico's largest fleet of aircraft is forced to shut down in "a process that should lead to restructuring"

Debt-ridden carrier Mexicana airline is halting all operations as of midnight Friday as it seeks to restructure costs, Mexico's transportation secretary said.

The country's biggest airline was forced to shut down because it does not have enough money to keep flying, Juan Francisco Molinar Horcasitas told reporters.

But Mexicana da Aviacion "is in a process that should lead to restructuring," he said.

The airline filed for bankruptcy protection in Mexico and the United States on Aug. 2, and later stopped selling tickets and suspended some flights.

In court filings, Mexicana said it was badly hit by the swine flu outbreak last year that scared away travelers for months and by the global economic slowdown. The airline added that high jet fuel prices and labor costs contributed to its financial troubles.

Before the bankruptcy filing, the company unsuccessfully sought union agreement on pay cuts of 41 percent for pilots and 39 percent for flight attendants, along with a 40 percent reduction in employees, saying both were needed to keep the company afloat. Labor leaders rejected the proposal, saying their members already agreed to cuts in 2006.

Executives said this month that the company needed an infusion of at least $100 million to keep flying, and on Aug. 21 a group of Mexican investors called Tenedora K announced it had bought a 95 percent stake in the holding company that controls Mexicana and the domestic airlines Mexicana Click and Mexicana Link.

Mexicana flies to more than 65 national and international destinations, including the United States, Canada, Central America, South America and Europe. It transported 11.1 million passengers in 2009, according to the company's website.

15 injured on Jet Blue plane in hard landing in California

Airbus blows two tires as it touches down in Sacramento. Passengers evacuated onto the tarmac

A JetBlue airplane blew its tires Thursday while landing in Sacramento, causing minor injuries to 15 passengers and sending dozens of others down emergency slides to evacuate the aircraft, airport officials said.

A person waiting inside the terminal said he heard an announcement on an intercom that the wheels had caught fire during the landing.

Rob Vanatta, 32, was waiting for the flight when it was announced that it was delayed.

"Then they came back on the intercom, sounding surprised or in shock, and said I'm not sure how to tell you this, but the wheels caught fire upon landing and the emergency slides had been deployed," Vanatta said.

The Airbus A320 landed just before 1 p.m. after a flight from Long Beach and blew two tires when it touched down, airport spokeswoman Gina Swankie said.

The plane appeared to experience trouble with its brakes, the airline said in a statement.

The 86 passengers were removed from the plane by inflatable slides then taken to the terminal by buses, Swankie said.

Vanatta said he ran to the window to see what happened and saw passengers standing on the runway near the plane, surrounded by fire trucks.

"My friend and I were able to rebook to a flight out of Oakland, so we're driving there now," he said by phone.

43 killed in China when jet misses runway, crashes

Henan Airlines flight goes down in heavy fog. State media reports 53 more people are injured

A Chinese passenger jet broke apart as it approached a fog-shrouded runway in the country's northeast and burst into flames as it hit the ground Tuesday, killing 43 people and injuring 53 others, state media said.

The Henan Airlines plane with 91 passengers and five crew crashed in a grassy area near the Lindu airport on the outskirts of Yichun, a city of about 1 million people in Heilongjiang province, the official Xinhua News Agency said.

Xinhua quoted Hua Jingwei, an Yichun publicity official, as saying that some passengers were thrown from the cabin before the broken plane hit the ground.

The Brazilian-made Embraer E-190 jet had taken off from Heilongjiang's capital of Harbin shortly before 9 p.m. (1300 GMT) and crashed a little more than an hour later, Xinhua said.

China Central Television showed firefighters dousing the burning plane with hoses and later digging through the wreckage of the jet.

Xinhua said 43 bodies were recovered within hours of the disaster and 53 people were hospitalized, most with broken bones. Wang Xuemei, vice mayor of Yichun, told CCTV that three survivors were in critical condition but gave no details.

CCTV earlier said that 91 people were on board, and gave a lower death and injured toll, but the report appears to not have included the five crew on the plane.

Henan Airlines is based in the central Chinese province of the same name and flies smaller regional jets, mainly on routes in north and northeast China. Previously known as Kunpeng Airlines, the carrier was relaunched as Henan Airlines earlier this year.

Henan Airlines and many other regional Chinese airlines flying shorter routes have struggled in the past few years, losing passengers to high-speed railroad lines that China has aggressively expanded.

An American company, Phoenix-based Mesa Air Group Inc., was an original investor in Henan's predecessor company, Kunpeng, but divested its stake last year. Mesa operates regional services in the U.S. for Delta Air Lines, United Airlines and other carriers and is undergoing bankruptcy reorganization.

Full-tilt expansion of Chinese air traffic in the 1990s led to a series of crashes that gave China the reputation of being unsafe. The poor record prompted the government to improve safety drastically, from airlines to new air traffic management systems at airports.

The last major passenger jet crash in China was in November 2004, when an China Eastern airplane plunged into a lake in northern China shortly, killing all 53 on board and two on the ground.

An MD-11 cargo plane operated by Zimbabwe-based Avient Aviation crashed during takeoff from Shanghai's main airport last November. Three American crew members died while four others on board were injured.

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Associated Press researcher Yu Bing contributed to this story.

Why can't they all be like Pan Am?

The airline's blue-and-white globe was a Jet Age classic. Today, too many carriers jump on the ugly bandwagon

Salon

It's time again to talk about airline logos and livery design, just for a minute. Because I like to and because it's fun.

And because there is a new company called Pan Am Brands, which is selling travel merchandise (luggage, passport wallets), using the old Pan Am trademark. See here.

I have mixed feelings about this venture. On the whole it's pleasing to have the Pan Am name being kept alive, one way or the other. One of the downsides, though, is how this ruins things for those of us who happen to own real vintage Pan Am bags and products. Suddenly we're confused with the kind of people who'll spend $170 for a designer gym bag.

And I hope they don't get carried away and start marketing perverted versions of the livery in the way sports teams do nowadays -- i.e., pink Red Sox caps.

Oops, too late. You can buy a "Pan Am" bag in olive green. Juan Trippe is spinning in his grave.

That blue-and-white Pan Am globe was such a Jet Age classic, was it not? So simple, elegant, timeless. It has been said that a truly successful logo is one that a young child can render by hand with reasonable accuracy. Pan Am's globe certainly fit that criterion, and had the airline not gone bust, one suspects it would have stuck with it, more or less unchanged.

And it dawns on me too that Pan Am's is perhaps the only airline identity ever to lend itself to a commercial product outside of aviation. That's saying something about both the legacy of Pan Am, and the sunken state of modern air travel. Southwest Airlines designer luggage? I don't think so.

Kudos, meanwhile, to those dwindling few carriers that have held onto their longtime trademarks, albeit with minor tweaks. The best and most enduring is probably the "AA" of American Airlines. Aeroflot as well deserves a round of applause, having retained its elegant hammer and sickle long after the breakup of the Soviet Union (just don't get me started on Aeroflot's tail; see GMST below). Lufthansa's stylized crane is another.

We continue mourning, however, over the obliteration of the historic Tsurumaru crane at Japan Airlines.

As discussed in this space before, the current fixation in airline livery design is something I call the GMST, or Generic Meaningless Swoosh Thing. (Actually, this was a term concocted by Ask the Pilot reader Amanda Collier several years ago.) Take a look around the tarmac. There are enough streaks, swishes, arcs, twists, swirls and curls out there to make anybody dizzy. The idea, we think, is to suggest a company that is "in motion," or "moving forward." In the process, sadly, they have become indistinguishable from one other.

Other industries, too, have jumped on this ugly bandwagon. UPS, for example. The original United Parcel Service emblem was a bow-tied box and heraldic-style badge. This was the work of Paul Rand, a legendary design guru who also did Westinghouse and IBM. It was a wonderful, heart and soul manifestation of the company's core mission: delivering packages. Its replacement is a singularly bland, almost militaristic "modernization." The box and string have been deposed, swapped out for a meaningless gold slash mark (GMST). It's the worst thing we've seen in the shipping business since the U.S. Postal Service came up with that monsterized eagle head.

Of course, UPS is an airline, at least in part. You can't say that for Holiday Inn. Check out the hotel chain's newest identity makeover. The old look was a touch too vintage Americana, but the latest rendering is staggeringly uninspired. It's a fat letter H with, yawn, a Swoosh Thing for the crossbar. That's it. It could be any company in the world, selling anything: insurance, computer products, food ... 

For more on airlines and identity, see these two essays of mine, here and here, compiled from earlier columns here on Salon. 

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Do you have questions for Salon's aviation expert? Contact Patrick Smith through his website and look for answers in a future column.

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