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Transportation

African Airline Reports Drone Collision With Passenger Jet (airlive.net) 78

McGruber writes: Airlive is reporting that a drone collided with a Boeing 737-700 as it was on approach to Tete, Mozambique airport on Thursday. The 737 landed safely, but the right-hand side of the nose dome and fuselage were badly damaged.
The plane was carrying 80 passengers and a crew of 6, according to the Aviation Herald, which has more pictures of the damaged nose dome. "The crew heard a loud bang," they report, adding that "no abnormal indications followed. The crew, suspecting a bird strike, continued the approach for a safe landing." But USA Today notes that "While pilots have reported hundreds of sightings of drones near planes, previous suspected collisions have been debunked."
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African Airline Reports Drone Collision With Passenger Jet

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  • by burtosis ( 1124179 ) on Saturday January 07, 2017 @03:36PM (#53624755)
    They may have been debunked but this one looks to be debris.
    • Ground impact (Score:5, Insightful)

      by thesupraman ( 179040 ) on Saturday January 07, 2017 @08:43PM (#53626023)

      Actually, the damage pattern looks almost exactly consistent with a ground impact.
      It is reasonably clear from the images that the impact came from the front right, not straight on, and any
      drone moving fast enough to create that impact vector at approach speed would have punched straight through,
      not made the distributed damage we see - this was quite clearly a low speed impact.

      The pilots 'reporting a loud bang' on approach makes it sound like a good dose of arse-covering, something
      endemic in Africa when costly damage happens.

      You will note there is no evidence given of drone remains, etc. Something that would most certainly have been
      chased down immediately if this was actually a drone strike.
      A bird strike (which would do less damage that a drone of the size they are claiming) looks like this:
      http://www.birdstrike.it/birdstrike/file/images/file/2012.06.05_birdstrike.png

      Very VERY different.

      • Re:Ground impact (Score:5, Informative)

        by BlueStrat ( 756137 ) on Saturday January 07, 2017 @10:44PM (#53626547)

        Actually, the damage pattern looks almost exactly consistent with a ground impact.
        It is reasonably clear from the images that the impact came from the front right, not straight on, and any
        drone moving fast enough to create that impact vector at approach speed would have punched straight through,
        not made the distributed damage we see - this was quite clearly a low speed impact.

        The pilots 'reporting a loud bang' on approach makes it sound like a good dose of arse-covering, something
        endemic in Africa when costly damage happens.

        You will note there is no evidence given of drone remains, etc. Something that would most certainly have been
        chased down immediately if this was actually a drone strike.
        A bird strike (which would do less damage that a drone of the size they are claiming) looks like this:
        http://www.birdstrike.it/birds... [birdstrike.it]

        Very VERY different.

        Retired senior avionics tech here that's seen plenty of damaged radomes over the decades on a wide variety of aircraft at various FBOs, resulting from a wide variety of causes. You're pretty much spot-on. This was almost certainly a very low speed impact IMHO.

        Perhaps it was a ground service vehicle (cargo or passenger conveyor/stair vehicle, service/maintenance stairs, etc). I've seen damage quite similar occur in crowded maintenance hangars resulting from moving aircraft around carelessly, recklessly-driven ground service/maintenance vehicles, and from accidents on crowded & busy taxiways under poor visibility conditions.

        I'd put $50 on this "story" being just that; a story to cover asses with.

        Maybe they were attempting to reenact the "stair-truck and passenger-jet chase scene" from the Jim Cary movie "Liar Liar" and had an [Jim Cary] "oopsie!" {/Jim Cary].

        Whatever it was, chances are extremely tiny it was from a drone impact in flight.

        Strat

    • One of these days a drone is going to slam through an engine nacelle with the force a a frozen chicken fired from a cannon.
    • Another episode in the long war to keep Africans working as loaders and truck drivers taking modern and sophisticated machines and products right into (the door of) your home...
      • :D Sorry, but I keep confirming speech recognition software functions better than African as store cashiers. If a SRS app would force me to repeat my order so many times, the company would be sued and its programmers put to have their bones whiten under desert Sun. This still sounds like a news making attack to have leverage against drone deliveries, only they could not implement it in the USA.
  • It must have been a big-ass drone to do that kind of damage.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by burtosis ( 1124179 )
      It lacks the scratches to the exterior paint and a large hole that aluminum, carbon fiber, battery packs and other hard man made and heaven materials would leave. I suppose it could actually be a bird but it just looks like a low speed collision with something like a stairway.
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        it just looks like a low speed collision with something like a stairway.

        I just want to make sure I'm understanding your comment correctly.

        Are you saying that you suspect that the African crew of this plane landed it, and then collided with a movable passenger loading/unloading staircase while on the ground? And then they came up with this drone/bird/whatever strike story to deflect blame away from themselves?

        Or are you trying to say something else?

        • by JustNiz ( 692889 )

          >> Are you saying that you suspect that the African crew of this plane landed it, and then collided with a movable passenger loading/unloading staircase while on the ground? And then they came up with this drone/bird/whatever strike story to deflect blame away from themselves?

          I would buy that far quicker than the drone story,

        • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Saturday January 07, 2017 @04:54PM (#53625079)

          Are you saying that you suspect that the African crew of this plane landed it, and then collided with a movable passenger loading/unloading staircase while on the ground? And then they came up with this drone/bird/whatever strike story to deflect blame away from themselves?

          That is plausible. It is also plausible that some bean counter made up the story because the insurance covers in-air collisions differently. Or some PR person made it up for publicity. Or maybe the ground crew tweeted the picture, and the rumor spread from there. TFA contains almost zero information, and does not say that the drone story came from the pilots. The Facebook post by the airline doesn't even mention the drone, although I may have misunderstood since I can read Spanish way better than Portuguese.

        • This particular theory has been espoused in a couple of aviation related sites. It is certainly possible that the crew ran into something on the ground without anyone else fessing up. But - it's going to be pretty obvious in the flight data recorder. Either you here a big thump or not....

          If it was a UAV, then it hit the side of the radome with a lot of force. Some other posters are suggesting a fairly acute angle - more impact than you would expect in a glancing blow. So, either that theory is wrong or

          • But - it's going to be pretty obvious in the flight data recorder. Either you here a big thump or not....

            I'd have thought the Cockpit Voice Recorder (CVR) more likely than the Flight Data Recorder (FDR). You might pick it up on a vibration sensor from the FDR, or if any sensor wiring was cut. But I'd think CVR a better place to look.

            What's that sound? A CVR being accidentally turned on while the hanger crew are playing the radio?

            • Newer flight data recorders include integrated digital cockpit voice recording capabilities. The idea is that treating voice as just another data stream enables better overall shared protection of the complete data set, while saving money, complexity, and weight in the process.
              • Can't hear you - someone turned the radio louder, and now all the other data systems of the plane are being operated. How long did you say these things last before they overwrite the previous data? I said HOW LONG ... Oh, never mind.
      • My first thought was someone in Africa can afford a drone?

        • The Illuminati is just everywhere these days.

          (Think industrial drone from a mining company.)

        • You'd be surprised. "Africa" isn't some homogenous continent of droughts, poverty and suffering. Some countries have a decent middle class, albeit small by our standards. And the upper class can afford private jets, so they can well afford to give a pretty nice drone to their kids.
        • My first thought was someone in Africa can afford a drone?

          Is this because you think Africa only has starving children, people living in grass huts and wildlife wandering around on dirt roads? I initially wanted to provide a few enlightening facts and figures, but have decided it is not worth the effort. If this is your view of Africa, one post is not enough to change your very misguided perceptions.

          • by st0nes ( 1120305 )
            Agreed. Just look at his name: Archie Bunker, the very caricature of ignorance and stupidity. This guy's the real thing. Hoo boy....
        • by hey! ( 33014 )

          Africa is a rich continent. The fact that most people living on that continent are poor doesn't change that. It just means a lot of the countries are run for the benefit of a tiny elite at the top. It doesn't matter in those countries that the resources of the country a squandered as long as a few people do well.

    • I dunno. Depends on how fast the plane was going.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Approach speed is around 130knots for a 737-700. Given that damage shown in the photos, I don't buy that this was a drone collision at all. I suspect that the drone collision aspect of this story will be debunked like all the others so far.

      • by JustNiz ( 692889 )

        Since he was landing, we kinda know.
        Vref of a 737-700 is 150 knots so 178 mph.
         

    • by Black Parrot ( 19622 ) on Saturday January 07, 2017 @05:24PM (#53625199)

      It must have been a big-ass drone to do that kind of damage.

      Probably it's the UFO spotted earlier in Chile.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    The crew claims it was a drone strike but there's no evidence given to support that claim. It looks more like the aircraft was struck from the side at low speed, possibly even on the ground. From an impact in the air and resultant debris you'd expect that the pitot tubes or static port would show signs of damage.

    There have been multiple news stories of "drone strikes" that later turned out to be bird strikes. One turned out to be a plastic bag. Until they have some debris or other evidence that a drone was

  • by queazocotal ( 915608 ) on Saturday January 07, 2017 @04:09PM (#53624929)

    http://avherald.com/h?article=... [avherald.com] - also in africa.
    http://avherald.com/img/comair... [avherald.com] - this damage was done by a red billed kite impact.
    Broadly similar amount of buckling, though in a different place.
    There are a lot of large birds in Africa, and aircraft frequently hit them.

    • It's not just the large birds that one has to worry about. All of the European Barn Swallows have migrated down here, and 3 million of them [barnswallow.co.za] choose to roost at Mount Moreland -- which is around 2.5 km from and directly in line [google.co.za] with RWY 06 at Durban's airport.

      The airport authorities are well aware of the potential danger and have installed a specialized radar system [mountmorel...ancy.co.za] solely to keep an eye on the birds during the late evening swarm. If the swarm poses a danger to aircraft, ATC will pick it up and can then

      • Sure. Small birds are a very different problem though - they may cause engine issues when ingested, but are not heavy enough even if a lot of them hit to do minor structural damage.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Are you sure the pilot didn't bump into something while taxiing and covered his ass by claiming "Russian hackers", no wait, "drone".

  • The public statement released in Portuguese by the airline does not say anything about a drone. Get back to me when someone comes up with a squashed drone that has a paint match with the aircraft.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I don't know for certain what collided with that aircraft, but I know there are drones capable of inflicting serious damage during a mid-air collision. Most drones are small enough to present difficulty for airplane pilots to see them in time to take evasive action. For that reason, the responsibility falls to drone pilots to see and avoid other aircraft in the area. I'm not in favor of software restrictions that limit what a drone can do, especially because there are instances in an emergency where it migh

    • Thanks, mom.

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      We do need to have classes of drones. For example, there is no reason at all to make a 9 year old receive formal training before operating a toy in the back yard. Simple camera carrying drones don't need much more, though it might be possible to justify minimal training for commercial use. That, by the way, would cover the currently known near misses with people on the ground (sporting events and professional coverage). The most likely dangers to aircraft would be police and military drones. Those should v

  • Average user bought drone are relatively light, and even calculating a rather heavy model, that still a magnitude too low to do such damage. On the other hand a rather heavy birds would do such damage, and it does not always leave blood and feather.
  • Why again there is no photo of a damaged drone? Is it so hard to make a photo with a smartphone or a camera?

    I think it became a piece of a free advertising for airlines to claim a collision with a drone. The world wide attention is guaranteed.

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