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Nigeria bans older aircraft

Posted: 04 Sep 2006, 17:27
by Garry Russell
Nigeria seem to be getting stricter

http://aviation-safety.net/news/newsitem.php?id=1686

Garry

Posted: 04 Sep 2006, 17:42
by TobyV
They banned One Elevens a couple of years ago. Its not necessarily because teh a/c are dodgy but because teh govt. know that the maintenance standards are a joke there and thats why they have had so many accidents. Under the circumstances, its probably the best thing for them to do.

Posted: 05 Sep 2006, 22:44
by Vulcan_to_the_Sky!
While I do find it sad that the older aircraft are now banned, I have to agree with Toby on this, its probably for the best. But surely the new aircraft that may replace some of them will also have the maintainence problem?

Posted: 05 Sep 2006, 23:13
by TobyV
Well you have fewer things going wrong on a new aircraft, so they dont need as much maintenance and you can probably get away with less. That and new aircraft wont have been parked up idle for so long. Compare it to running a new car compared to a 10-15 year old one (and these aircraft are typically much much older than that).

Posted: 06 Sep 2006, 09:35
by Vulcan_to_the_Sky!
ah that makes sense. I suppose thats the case at the moment with less maintainence.

Posted: 06 Sep 2006, 10:00
by Garry Russell
Nigeria were crashing these aircraft when they were current types.

It's almost as if they are trying to divert from the fact that the standards over there have been lacking.

A lot of crashes have been pilot error and/or poor operational procedures and ban maintenance, nothing to do with aircraft defects.

After a One-Eleven crashed into a Mosque I suppose they had to be seen to do things.

The One-Eleven still had lots of life in it. The type was banned from Europe because of noise not because they were worn out.

Garry

Posted: 06 Sep 2006, 10:29
by TobyV
I think that the govt. will find it easier to police whether or not old/"banned" types are taking off than they would to police maintenance and operational procedures properly, thats why they've chosen this route. You ae of course quite right about the One Elevens Garry, but over there they just cant get it right sadly.

Posted: 06 Sep 2006, 10:31
by Garry Russell
Lets just hope it works!

Garry

Posted: 06 Sep 2006, 18:45
by Angus
Well I'm of the view that the age of a particular aircraft is irrelevant in determining how "safe" it is - maintenance is the most important factor. A brand new aircraft will still crash if it is poorly maintained, a 70-year old aircraft will be very safe if maintained to the necessary standard (or "very high standard" as it would be known today). All other factors being equal, poorly-maintained 737-300 manufactured in 2000 is more dangerous than a well-maintained 737-300 manufactured in 1984.