Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Friendliest aviation Ccmmunity on the web
  • Modern site for PC's, Phones, Tablets - no 3rd party apps required
  • Ask questions, help others, promote aviation
  • Share the passion for aviation
  • Invite everyone to Flightinfo.com and let's have fun

Delta Pilots don't check for frost on wings

Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Modern secure site, no 3rd party apps required
  • Invite your friends
  • Share the passion of aviation
  • Friendliest aviation community on the web
I read your post multiple times and it seems to me to be nothing more than an angry rant that makes very little sence.

You know some of the post on here does make sense but your's just sound like it coming from guy who's wife is holding out on him. Uhhhh.....OK.

First your comment about more and more passengers these days are... I think the poster said that it was a passenger who passed the message of frost on the wing to the FA. Like a true professional the pilot came out to assessed it himself, and using prudent judgement elected to delay the departure (Clean wing policy). My question to you would be: How long have you flown for the airlines? I have been with NWA and now DAL for a long time. I have noticed over the past 8 or 10 years more and more pax are starting to bitch about things they know absolutely nothing about. Example: Flying into TPA last summer we went almost 100 miles out of the way to give the pax a smoother ride thru a serious line of weather. When we landed business traveler came up to the cockpit and said "You guys deliberatly flew thru a thunderstorm and I am going to the FAA". It is this type of passenger I am talking about. Not sure what your problem is with that if you are an airline pilot. I would just like to know how a pax could have picked out frost on the top of a shiny wing at night. The point of my post was that his stunk of BS.

Secondly, you were not present so be quiet.
Wow, so your saying I'm not entitled to defending my company, on a public forum, against an obvious flamebait post titled "Delta Pilots don't check for frost on wings"? Sounds to me like you don't have a dog in this fight so why don't you butt out?

Third, I have never known of a customer booking a connection. That's taken care of by the airline themselves. Please explain to me how the airlines work. This is my first day on the job. Are you familiar with Orbitz, Travelocity, Hotels.com, etc... All of them will allow tight connections. Not only that they will allow 30 min connections with an airline change. Also, apparently you have never booked a ticket with a 30 min connection. All the agent has to do is advise you it's less than the recommended connection time. Besides, time is money and it's only us pilots who like to sit around airports twiddling our thumbs. Fine, but don't come b_itching to me when you miss your flight because you planned a ridiculous itenerary.


Ok, we don't have to sympathize with them when all most really ever think about is a cheap fare and then get out to the plane expecting whatever.

Look, it sums up everything that is wrong with the system. The mentality that the climate will VFR, 59 degrees C and 29.92 inches of mercury, 365 days of the year so no need to provide the basic of equipment to efficiently conduct your business. A system that measures it's performance on the time it pushes pack from the gate. A system that has to subsidizes it's sale of cheap seats by cutting of most of its fingers. I read this 5 times and I honestly don't know what the He11 your trying to say here.

The question is had the passenger not told the FA about the frost on the wing would it have been a successful takeoff? We'll never know the answer to that but what we do no is that it doesn't take very long for the smallest issue to disrupt our daily patterns. A proper prefight requires visually checking the wing, and using ones understanding of existing limitations such as low light or visibility challenges, along with the knowledge of current atmospheric conditions it would be prudent to uses alternative methods like viewing through the cabin window or heck request a ladder. Fact is it needs to be checked as clean, and viewing limitations doesn't excuse it. Thank you for the informative tutorial on the clean wing policy and inspection techniques. Judging by your Screen name I would assume you either work for United or at least express. So let me ask you this: do you know where to find the ladders at ORD to do your Upper Wing inspections? I have been to ORD a lot and I've never seen a pilot on a ladder. Maybe I'm just there at the wrong times. Why don't you explain to me the NWA/DAL policy? Because I was under the impression that if ceretain conditions or parameters exist we have a QUALIFIED person come out to do an AUTHORIZED check of our wings to see if we need to get sprayed. So according to your logic if you can't see the top of the wing from the ground then just go to the cabin and look out? I'm pretty sure thats not an approved technique, at least on the DC-9. Come to think of it that wasn't approved on the 747 either.

You're exactly right, the wings do need to be checked as clean. Are you implying the crew didn't follow proper Delta Airlines proceedure? You told me I wasn't there so I should "just be quiet", well buddy, it sounds to me like between you and I, I'm the only one here who is actually qualified to comment on Delta's specific procedures. Sounds to me like your just looking for a reason to be an argumentative punk. Now if you'll excuse me I need to go find a ladder.

So you should be a bit forgiving to the poster.
So the poster has been outed as a pathological liar and a troll but I should be forgiving of him spewing Bu11SH1t about something he knows nothing about? Really?
 
You can't ignore or disregard a public comment like that, it has to be addressed by the crew and dealt with at that moment. If not, it opens the airline up to speculation and liability. The crew did the right thing. Hopefully the frost did form after the wing inspection and I'm sure that is getting looked into as well.

I would tell the FA to tell this a**clown that a tactile check had been done and is within limits. Passengers need to sit down and shut up and follow direction. Some folks just have to be in charge of everything! Even if they have no clue what they are talking about but they still think they do.





Abernathy said:
You mean if a pax notices frost or ice on the wing that would be illegal to depart with, you would just ignore it because it was noticed by a pax?

A passenger wouldn't know what is illegal or not.
 
I would tell the FA to tell this a**clown that a tactile check had been done and is within limits. Passengers need to sit down and shut up and follow direction. Some folks just have to be in charge of everything! Even if they have no clue what they are talking about but they still think they do.

"A passenger wouldn't know what is illegal or not.
"


...yeah, that passenger could have been a commuting crewmember or a pilot going somewhere on vacation or a FED, FAM or military aviator, charter pilot... You'd also be surprised at how well versed some frequent fliers are when it comes to stuff like this. Take it seriously and check it out. Delta did the right thing.
 
I read your post multiple times and it seems to me to be nothing more than an angry rant that makes very little sence.


So the poster has been outed as a pathological liar and a troll but I should be forgiving of him spewing Bu11SH1t about something he knows nothing about? Really?

Did you find the ladder?? I figured I would pop a CB but fug I didn't think I was capable of popping all except the red one. Lets see:

"How long have you flown for the airlines?"
Been for a while now but I can never stop learning...

"I have been with NWA and now DAL for a long time."
Ok,then use your experience to wisely discuss the posters question.

"we went almost 100 miles out of the way to give the pax a smoother ride thru a serious line of weather."
To give them a smooth ride or to avoid the serious line of weather? I'm certain that the smooth ride thing is not the basis of DAL or NWA policy. BTW I knew why your Captain really went around the thunderstorms?

I know the kind of passengers you are referring to but a professional pilot will not lower his character to match that of the passenger?

"Please explain to me how the airlines work."
Oh the managers wake in the morning scratch their heads and go right back to sleep smiling because they are making a killing.

"Defending my company...",
Well he sounds like he was simply asking a question. Not making an observation. Since you're the Delta guy to talk to then simply answer the question. SO now what's wrong with the SWA guys defending their company?

"Are you familiar with Orbitz, Travelocity, Hotels.com, etc..."
How do you know the the flight were not book at dal.com?

"All the agent has to do is advise you it's less than the recommended connection time."
Maybe the agent didn't think about that.

"do you know where to find the ladders at ORD to do your Upper Wing inspections?"
NO but for starters in ORD you touch base with operations and the ground deicing coordinator.

"Because I was under the impression that if certain conditions or parameters exist we have a QUALIFIED person come out to do an AUTHORIZED check of our wings to see if we need to get sprayed."
Ahhhh! That's in my manual too!

"So according to your logic if you can't see the top of the wing from the ground then just go to the cabin and look out? I'm pretty sure thats not an approved technique, at least on the DC-9. Come to think of it that wasn't approved on the 747 either."
Approved vantage point for viewing the wing. View the wing...
Boeing 747-400: ...from any of the first 4 windows aft of door 2L/2R.
Airbus A320: ...thru the second window forward of the overwing emergency exit and the sixth window aft of the overwing emergency exit
Airbus 319: ...thru the third window forward of the overwing emergency exit and the sixth window aft of the overwing emergency exit
Boeing 767/757 ...from the cabin windows offering the best vintage point
Boeing 777 ...from the first window aft of door 2L/2R
Now PM me if you want to know what to look for out the window.

"I would just like to know how a pax could have picked out frost on the top of a shiny wing at night. The point of my post was that his stunk of BS."
Good question! If the boss had to delay the flight then I believe he saw what the passenger saw. Now I don't think that is logical to you.

"between you and I, I'm the only one here who is actually qualified to comment on Delta's specific procedures."
That the problem. I don't think you really know DAL procedures well enough to make a comment on it because you haven't? You're just ranting...

"Are you implying the crew didn't follow proper Delta Airlines proceedure?"
No implication what so ever. I wasn't there. The poor guy was asking a question. I guess who feels it knows it.

Why waste your time trying to judge my screen name when all you can do is ask but you won't because you are the argumentative one with all that red going on.
 
"


...yeah, that passenger could have been a commuting crewmember or a pilot going somewhere on vacation or a FED, FAM or military aviator, charter pilot... You'd also be surprised at how well versed some frequent fliers are when it comes to stuff like this. Take it seriously and check it out. Delta did the right thing.

Bottom line is that there was not a d*mn thing wrong with that aircraft. Years ago we had guys taking off in snowstorms, after sitting on the ground over an hour after having been de and anti-iced without even turning on the friggin engine anti-ice system and they crash killing a bunch of people. Or others taking off with snow covering the whole wing and crash and kill a bunch of people.

So what do we have to do these days? We are getting aircraft who's performance wouldn't be affected at all, de and anti-iced for a few snowflakes falling out the air even when it's so cold the flakes are blowing off the wing like dandelion seeds. How many times have we shown up after a cold and windy night after having dry snow fall, and the whole plane is clear except a few shovels full of snow that accumulated at the wingroot and fuse fairing due to wind currents around the jet bridge and building, and we have to waste money and time de-icing over that BS. Fully knowing that isn't going to effect the performance of the aircraft in any way whatsoever. And by the time you taxi over to the deice pad, that few shovels full of snow is now about one shovel full, hanging on for dear life on the last foot or so of flap. And since most places don't let you do wings and tail, the whole friggin airplane which is as clean as a whistle, except for 1 square foot of flap area has to be deiced. Now that makes a lot of sense doesn't it? A clear example of taking safety to the extremes.

Yet the regionals will not only continue to hire 300 hour pilots, they will lobby congress to keep the 1500/500 proposal for new hires from coming to fruition. This industry never ceases to amaze me.
 
I would tell the FA to tell this a**clown that a tactile check had been done and is within limits. Passengers need to sit down and shut up and follow direction. Some folks just have to be in charge of everything! Even if they have no clue what they are talking about but they still think they do.







A passenger wouldn't know what is illegal or not.


You're right and I was wrong - what was I thinking? They're just stupid passengers, they know nothing and I should just disregard all their concerns as being worthless.

Yep, that's how I'm gonna role from now on!
 
"A passenger wouldn't know what is illegal or not."

Maybe, maybe not. But a call to the local FSDO from an all-knowing PPL, would create more headache for a pilot than his third divorce.

Common sense, good judgment and experience are no longer part of the equation. Which is why airlines feel they shouldn't have to PAY for these qualities. It's longer about what is SAFE. It's about covering your a$$.

I'm sure this captain saw the frost, made his decision (knowing full well the airplane would have flown with no problem) and went back up to the cockpit to stew over his coffee and rant to his F/O about how f#$@ed up aviation has become.

That's what I would have done.
 
UALRATT (you and yuppyguppy need to take a chill pill) are we really having a pissing match about who can check ice from where...I think bottom line this comes down to a personal preference of the PIC and IAW company policy and aircraft limitations.

Honestly my opinion is, if a PAX says ice/frost/whatever is on the wing...I am going to sit on the ground until the ice/frost/whatever is melted, because it is a ton easier to explain a 30 minute delay while taxiing out to wait for some frost to melt than to answer to the FAA and Chief Pilot two weeks later when the one passenger wrote a letter to the FAA and the airline about you departing with frost on the wing.

I actually had a situation in BDL where we were cleared into position and hold while a king air took off from the crossing runway, once he was through the intersection we were cleared for takeoff, immediately after our takeoff clearance the king air declared an emergency and they were coming back to the field, tower canceled our clearance and asked us to vacate the runway, which we did...the engines were spooled up but we didn't need to hit the brakes to clear the runway. King air returned, landed and we took off...two weeks later I get a call from the Chief Pilot asking about a runway incursion in BDL and was wondering why I almost took off without clearance...turns out a private pilot wrote a letter to the FAA and the company (actually to Delta it was a DAL Connection flight) and said we took the runway without clearance and almost took off without clearance...luckily it was a matter of the company calling BDL tower and they got the tapes which proved otherwise, but nevertheless not a fun situation to be in.
 
Last edited:

Latest resources

Back
Top