This story may be interesting to our frequent flyers.
Occasionally, I enjoy reading through my journals and I did that the other evening sitting here in my home alone because my wife is having a girl’s night out. (I wrote this last evening, but wasn’t sure if it should be posted.) I came across one story that I had forgot about the night we were flying back from LA and heading to New York. We were just under 100 miles from the airport and were preparing for our final approach into Kennedy.
We received a weather advisory from ACARS that the airport was under a severe snowstorm warning. Heavy snow was expected to start falling within the next hour. We were about a 30-40 minutes from touchdown. Whatever was going to happen, we knew the airport would still be open when we got there, but would the runways be open, especially our’s?
I kept in touch with the tower because I wanted to know if 31R would be available. This is Kennedy’s longest runway at 14,500 feet in length. We were flying a B-767, which is a fairly large plane, loaded to full GTOW minus maybe 500 pounds. So, we needed a long runway because we would probably be touching down at around 165-180 mph and with any snow at all on the runway, we wanted some cushion to be able to slowly slow the plane before turning onto the taxiway. Jamming on the brakes was not an option.
I decided that I would land the plane and the F/O, who had been flying the plane, quickly agreed. We had the plane configured for landing and advised the F/A’s to prepare the cabin for arrival. I then advised the passengers that we may be landing on a partially snow covered runway, so we may need to travel a little further down the runway that some of them may not be used to, so please don’t worry, we are doing what we are trained to do to keep everyone safe.
By now, we were in short final. The tower did advise us that there was some light snow on our runway and that we could either switch runways or divert. We decided to continue on with our planned landing. Just as the plane touched down, I felt the nose wheel wanting to go hard right. It kind of shook me for a few seconds. I had to apply a little more pressure on the brakes than what I wanted, so as to keep the plane straight. The plane responded as I hoped. We were able to stop well before the threshold lines on the runway and turn onto a taxiway. All was good.
Once the plane stopped at the gate, I bowed my head and gave thanks to the Lord. It wasn’t a critical or dangerous situation, but it could have been.
Thanks for reading.
Occasionally, I enjoy reading through my journals and I did that the other evening sitting here in my home alone because my wife is having a girl’s night out. (I wrote this last evening, but wasn’t sure if it should be posted.) I came across one story that I had forgot about the night we were flying back from LA and heading to New York. We were just under 100 miles from the airport and were preparing for our final approach into Kennedy.
We received a weather advisory from ACARS that the airport was under a severe snowstorm warning. Heavy snow was expected to start falling within the next hour. We were about a 30-40 minutes from touchdown. Whatever was going to happen, we knew the airport would still be open when we got there, but would the runways be open, especially our’s?
I kept in touch with the tower because I wanted to know if 31R would be available. This is Kennedy’s longest runway at 14,500 feet in length. We were flying a B-767, which is a fairly large plane, loaded to full GTOW minus maybe 500 pounds. So, we needed a long runway because we would probably be touching down at around 165-180 mph and with any snow at all on the runway, we wanted some cushion to be able to slowly slow the plane before turning onto the taxiway. Jamming on the brakes was not an option.
I decided that I would land the plane and the F/O, who had been flying the plane, quickly agreed. We had the plane configured for landing and advised the F/A’s to prepare the cabin for arrival. I then advised the passengers that we may be landing on a partially snow covered runway, so we may need to travel a little further down the runway that some of them may not be used to, so please don’t worry, we are doing what we are trained to do to keep everyone safe.
By now, we were in short final. The tower did advise us that there was some light snow on our runway and that we could either switch runways or divert. We decided to continue on with our planned landing. Just as the plane touched down, I felt the nose wheel wanting to go hard right. It kind of shook me for a few seconds. I had to apply a little more pressure on the brakes than what I wanted, so as to keep the plane straight. The plane responded as I hoped. We were able to stop well before the threshold lines on the runway and turn onto a taxiway. All was good.
Once the plane stopped at the gate, I bowed my head and gave thanks to the Lord. It wasn’t a critical or dangerous situation, but it could have been.
Thanks for reading.