The Bloke On Who Wants To Be A...
Film, Media & TV1 min ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Please understand, Impostor, I had no intention of qustioning your veracity. It was just that the action appeared to have been so completely out of bounds that I felt there had to be more to it. Apparently, the event happened last Sunday. There is a web site that many pilots subscribe to for every rumor that ever existed concerning flying. There is an extensive thread on that site. There's a lot of jargon, but perhaps it will help you understand the nature of events such as this.
That's a long address and, if for some reason you can't access that just use the first part, www.pprune.com and scroll down the right hand coumn for the thread.
Good luck!
A couple of things, Idiotic... firstly PAN is an internatinally recognized radio call indicating an urgent onboard condition, but short of the call Mayday. Secondly, in the U.S. at least, a a radio scanner for aviation frequencies is not illegal. Transmitting on one of these frequencies is illegal, but lots of people make a hobby of listening to such communications.
I can only say that, having flown for 3 different airlines, two of which conducted oceanic crossings, that the training and operations manuals as well as the company culture required landing at the first appropriate airport in this type of situation. As you can see from the website, flight in a 4 engine aircraft with one inoperative is not unusual and I can see where some extended flight would be permissable and safe. However, recognizing that I wasn't the pilot in command, I wouldn't have made the same decisions. Flight Level (FL) 280 (28,000 feet above Mean Sea Level) is a fuel guzzling altitude for jet engines and to park ones rear end in a seat strapped to a plane load of human cargo would not have been a choice that I would have allowed Dispatch or Maintenance Control to make for me. But BA does have an admirable safety record.... so far...