贴:飞行员日志——地震近进东京
(2011-03-21 00:44:48)
标签:
杂谈 |
Subject: Fwd: Delta pilot on approach to Tokyo during earthquake
I'm currently still in one piece, writing from my room in the
Narita crew hotel.
It's 8am. This is my inaugural trans-pacific trip as a brand new,
recently
checked out, international 767 Captain and it has been interesting,
to say the
least, so far. I've crossed the Atlantic three times so far so the
ocean
crossing procedures were familiar.
By the way, stunning scenery flying over the Aleutian Islands.
Everything was
going fine until 100 miles out from Tokyo and in the descent for
arrival. The
first indication of any trouble was that Japan air traffic control
started
putting everyone into holding patterns. At first we thought it was
usual
congestion on arrival. Then we got a company data link message
advising about
the earthquake, followed by another stating Narita airport was
temporarily
closed for inspection and expected to open shortly (the company is
always so
positive).
From our perspective things were obviously looking a little
different. The
Japanese controller's anxiety level seemed quite high and he said
expect
"indefinite" holding time. No one would commit to a time frame on
that so I got
my copilot and relief pilot busy looking at divert stations and our
fuel
situation, which, after an ocean crossing is typically low.
It wasn't long, maybe ten minutes, before the first pilots started
requesting
diversions to other airports. Air Canada, American, United, etc.
all reporting
minimal fuel situations. I still had enough fuel for 1.5 to 2.0
hours of
holding. Needless to say, the diverts started complicating the
situation.
Japan air traffic control then announced Narita was closed
indefinitely due to
damage. Planes immediately started requesting arrivals into
Haneada, near Tokyo,
a half dozen JAL and western planes got clearance in that direction
but then ATC
announced Haenada had just closed. Uh oh! Now instead of just
holding, we all
had to start looking at more distant alternatives like Osaka, or
Nagoya.
One bad thing about a large airliner is that you can't just be-pop
into any
little airport. We generally need lots of runway. With more planes
piling in
from both east and west, all needing a place to land and several
now fuel
critical ATC was getting over-whelmed. In the scramble, and without
waiting for
my fuel to get critical, I got my flight a clearance to head for
Nagoya, fuel
situation still okay. So far so good. A few minutes into heading
that way, I was
"ordered" by ATC to reverse course. Nagoya was saturated with
traffic and unable
to handle more planes (read- airport full). Ditto for Osaka.
With that statement, my situation went instantly from fuel okay, to
fuel minimal
considering we might have to divert a much farther distance.
Multiply my
situation by a dozen other aircraft all in the same boat, all
making demands
requests and threats to ATC for clearances somewhere. Air Canada
and then
someone else went to "emergency" fuel situation. Planes started to
heading for
air force bases. The nearest to Tokyo was Yokoda AFB. I threw my
hat in the ring
for that initially. The answer - Yokoda closed! no more
space.
By now it was a three ring circus in the cockpit, my copilot on the
radios, me
flying and making decisions and the relief copilot buried in the
air charts
trying to figure out where to go that was within range while data
link messages
were flying back and forth between us and company dispatch in
Atlanta. I picked
Misawa AFB at the north end of Honshu island. We could get there
with minimal
fuel remaining. ATC was happy to get rid of us so we cleared out of
the
maelstrom of the Tokyo region. We heard ATC try to send planes
toward Sendai, a
small regional airport on the coast which was later the one I think
that got
flooded by a tsunami.
Atlanta dispatch then sent us a message asking if we could continue
to Chitose
airport on the Island of Hokkaido, north of Honshu. Other Delta
planes were
heading that way. More scrambling in the cockpit - check weather,
check charts,
check fuel, okay. We could still make it and not be going into a
fuel critical
situation ... if we had no other fuel delays. As we approached
Misawa we got
clearance to continue to Chitose. Critical decision thought
process. Let's see -
trying to help company - plane overflies perfectly good divert
airport for one
farther away...wonder how that will look in the safety report, if
anything goes
wrong.
Suddenly ATC comes up and gives us a vector to a fix well short of
Chitose and
tells us to standby for holding instructions. Nightmare realized.
Situation
rapidly deteriorating. After initially holding near Tokyo, starting
a divert to
Nagoya, reversing course back to Tokyo then to re-diverting north
toward Misawa,
all that happy fuel reserve that I had was vaporizing fast. My
subsequent
conversation, paraphrased of course...., went something like
this:
"Sapparo Control - Delta XX requesting immediate clearance direct
to Chitose,
minimum fuel, unable hold."
"Negative Ghost-Rider, the Pattern is full"
<<< top gun quote
<<<
"Sapparo Control - make that - Delta XX declaring emergency, low
fuel,
proceeding direct Chitose"
"Roger Delta XX, understood, you are cleared direct to Chitose,
contact Chitose
approach....etc...."
Enough was enough, I had decided to preempt actually running
critically low on
fuel while in another indefinite holding pattern, especially after
bypassing
Misawa, and played my last ace...declaring an emergency. The
problem with that
is now I have a bit of company paperwork to do but what the
heck.
As it was - landed Chitose, safe, with at least 30 minutes of fuel
remaining
before reaching a "true" fuel emergency situation. That's always a
good feeling,
being safe. They taxied us off to some remote parking area where we
shut down
and watched a half dozen or more other airplanes come streaming in.
In the end,
Delta had two 747s, my 767 and another 767 and a 777 all on the
ramp at Chitose.
We saw two American airlines planes, a United and two Air Canada as
well. Not to
mention several extra Al Nippon and Japan Air Lines planes.
Post-script - 9 hours later, Japan air lines finally got around to
getting a
boarding ladder to the plane where we were able to get off and
clear customs. -
that however, is another interesting story.
By the way - while writing this - I have felt four additional
tremors that shook
the hotel slightly - all in 45 minutes.
Cheers,
J.D.