Footage from inside Flight BW 1541 from Tobago shows an emergency landing at Piarco International Airport on Monday, January 27, 2025. CAL confirmed an emergency landing in a statement on Monday night but did not go into details about the scope and nature of the incident. However, passengers have claimed that the ATR 72-600 aircraft suffered an engine failure. According to CAL, the plane landed safely at Piarco International Airport after departing from Tobago and will be out of rotation pending inspection.
On a serious note, those ATR's go back and forth between the islands all day. I believe they are fueled before the first flight and they stay like that because turn around time is very important for those very short hops. Seems like a miscalculation since aircraft never carry the full amount of fuel that they can hold. This should've been spotted by the pilot or first officer on duty unless there was a fault with the fuel 'gauge'. Let's see what comes out of this.
Last edited by david12 on January 29th, 2025, 3:14 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Supposed to be monitoring fuel usage while flying to ensure it's going at an expected rate ... Any faster drop should indicate there is an over consumption or a leak . Fuel pump and line pressure should tell u if there is a leak. O2, temperature , thrust(?) should tell u if is an engine problem .
don’t think they really rely on a gauge like a car
generally planes are not fueled up to Full for a number of reasons pilots keep a log and determine how much fuel is required to suit and when to next fuel up plus they have to do calculation from gallons/liters(np) to weight
one has to remember a fully fueled plane is quite heavy, heavy plane needs more power to fly, more fuel burnt so hence the reason it is seldom filled to F
i recall a tristar pilot telling me the max takeoff weight on a tristar fully loaded with passengers and fuel was about half from fuel or something like that