Flying Through Ash: It Isn’t Pretty
Last night the airspace above five European countries was blocked by thick clouds of ash spewing from a volcano in Iceland. On CNN, the story recounted what happened back in 1982 when a British Airways pilot had to fly through thick ash and smoke above Indonesia.
“Eric Moody was the pilot aboard a British Airways flight that managed to fly through volcanic ash thrown up by Mount Galunggung in Indonesia in 1982. All four of the engines stopped because of the ash, and the plane glided through the air for about 15 minutes, he told CNN on Thursday.
“The engines just ran down,” Moody said. “We couldn’t see out the windscreen and half the electronic aids to landing weren’t working, either.”
Passengers were told to prepare for an emergency crash landing, with Moody making this now-famous announcement to passengers: “Good evening, ladies and gentlemen, It’s Captain Eric Moody here. We’ve got a small problem in that all four engines have failed. We’re doing our utmost to get them going, and I trust you’re not in too much distress.”
Eventually at 13,000 feet, the engines started working again and the plane was able to land. That, said Moody, is why this Icelandic ash could be so dangerous.
“I don’t know how thick this ash is, but I wouldn’t go anywhere near it,” Moody said.
