Over 50 passengers missing: Qantas Boeing 737 takes off with incorrect weight calculations

0
437
Over 50 passengers missing: Qantas Boeing 737 takes off with incorrect weight calculations
Qantas flight

A Qantas Boeing 737-800 aircraft departed from Canberra using take-off performance numbers based on an incorrect loadsheet after the aircraft diverted from Perth to Sydney.

An input error in Qantas’ departure control systems ultimately resulted in 51 passengers being listed as not onboard, which produced a calculated weight that was approximately 9,460 lbs (4,291 kg) below the aircraft’s actual weight, and take-off speeds were also slightly lower than expected.

Attempts to warn the flight crew were made before this departure, but they ultimately failed.

The crew later learned of this discrepancy after takeoff, and they coordinated with operations teams and placed the aircraft in a holding pattern until they were able to confirm the correct weights.

Advertisement

The flight then continued and landed safely at Sydney Airport (SYD).

● An error tracing back to one staff member’s mistake

This incident ultimately began when a staff member created the Canberra to Sydney additional stop and entered a configuration code for a Boeing 717 instead of the Boeing 737, which ultimately prompted the system to mechanically offload 11 business-class passengers and more than a dozen economy passengers that were on standby, according to reports published by the Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB).

Although the code was corrected, the system did not automatically reallocate those passengers, and the flight itself was later closed using this flawed data.

Load control was then issued into a load sheet that showed 51 passengers as not onboard and resulted in the massive fuel underread.

Before pushback, load control was quickly identified as the problem, and teams on the ground attempted to reach the crew by phone and were unsuccessful.

They were then reached out to by radio through movement control, but the message itself was not effectively delivered.

The aircraft then departed, and the crew was alerted, and the correct figures were quickly verified in flight.

● An invisible impact for passengers

For passengers, the most direct impact was effectively invisible in the cabin but meaningful in overall risk terms.

The aircraft was rotated using inappropriate take-off speeds that were originally calculated for a significantly lighter type of aircraft.

The ATSB found the incorrect weight ultimately produced speeds that were a bit lower than necessary, ultimately increasing the risk of degraded performance and unanticipated handling during take-off.

From the perspective of a traveller, this came after an already disruptive day. The service between Perth and Sydney was diverted to Canberra due to storms, and some customers left the flight there.

Once airborne, the crew received an air traffic control message that load control had to be corrected, and that the aircraft was to quickly enter a holding pattern while accurate weights were confirmed.

Despite this actually resulting in a safe outcome, these are the kinds of incidents that can ultimately erode confidence, as passenger accountability is also a major security issue; knowing who is actually onboard matters more than where they sit.

Ultimately, no injuries were reported, but the event underscores why headcounts and cross-checks are ultimately reassuring.

Credit: https://simpleflying.com/over-50-passengers-missing-qantas-boeing-737-incorrect-weight/

Stay ahead with the latest updates! Join The ConclaveNG on WhatsApp and Telegram for real-time news alerts, breaking stories, and exclusive content delivered straight to your phone. Don’t miss a headline — subscribe now!

Join Our WhatsApp Channel Join Our Telegram Channel








Leave a Reply