General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe FAA has ordered a ground stop for all Alaska Airlines flights.
https://www.reuters.com/business/aerospace-defense/us-faa-issues-ground-stop-advisory-alaska-airlines-2024-04-17/AllyCat
(16,263 posts)Maybe related to the passenger incident earlier?
Pretty Fly
(66 posts)Crazy time to do it, tho lol
MontanaMama
(23,367 posts)Updates happen all the time and we never hear about them. This one failed, apparently, and people in charge did the right thing by grounding the fleet.
Welcome to DU.
Pretty Fly
(66 posts)As someone who used to handle system updates for customer-facing systems, we always tried to schedule them around non-peak times to avoid mass-scale inconvenience.
But it sounds like this was an update related to a system issue which is different than just a random update.
gopiscrap
(23,768 posts)angrychair
(8,754 posts)To be any IT person in any way connected to that update.
Not sure what their QA and testing process was but it clearly wasn't enough.
Nittersing
(6,391 posts)That's the story.
Ocelot II
(115,984 posts)If it's wrong, takeoff speeds, runway requirements, etc., would be inaccurate and, worst case, could result in a crash.
hatrack
(59,602 posts)Like the Gimli Glider X 1,000,000.
Ocelot II
(115,984 posts)to figure the fuel load. Wrong weight and balance data is really a takeoff problem - airplane could be too heavy, runway too short, etc.
hatrack
(59,602 posts)767s were the first all-metric American-built aircraft, IIRC, but Air Canada was still using both metric and English measurements simultaneously (uggh).
Ocelot II
(115,984 posts)A screw-up was inevitable, and this was an especially bad one.
hatrack
(59,602 posts)Seriously, that and Sioux City (check pilot dead-heading as a passenger on the flight) are about as close as I let myself get to using the word "miraculous" regarding any in-flight failure.
Ocelot II
(115,984 posts)SUX was another one, also the A320 in the Hudson River. Ditchings are almost never successful.